The European release was on 15 June 2009, with the US release on 11 August 2009. It was simultaneously released as both the standard CD and a 'Special Limited Edition' 2-CD set, the latter being a double, slimline jewel-case. CD2 has ten tracks: four acoustic and six live. The acoustic tracks were produced by John Williams, who had produced the Proclaimers' debut album This Is the Story.
The album, including the bonus CD, was also released as a digital download.
Content
Musical style
The Guardian opined the band on Notes & Rhymes to be "stoutly sticking to their Celtic pop formula".[2]PopMatters detailed the "countrified sobriety" of "It's Always Easy" on what it observed was "otherwise a rock record".[3]
Singles and songs
On 11 June 2009, "I Know" was offered free by Amazon UK as a digital download 'sampler' for the album. "Love Can Move Mountains" was the single release, having its first play on Scotland's Forth 1 radio station on Wednesday 6 May. "Sing All Our Cares Away" is a cover of a Damien Dempsey song, which featured on his 2005 album "Shots". "It Was Always So Easy (To Find An Unhappy Woman)" is a cover of the title track of Moe Bandy's 1974 album.
Lyrical themes
The lyrics in Notes & Rhymes concerned a variety of topics including love ("Love Can Move Mountains", "Three More Days"),[4]unemployment ("Sing All Our Cares Away"),[4] and war ("I Know").[4]
The record received largely positive reception. Michael Quinn of BBC Music described Notes & Rhymes as an "elegant combination of country, pop, bluegrass and soapbox pontificating" with "not a note out of place or a lazy lyric in sight".[4]
In October 2009, PopMatters's Andrew Dietzel acknowledged the record was "not without its shortcomings", but was nevertheless largely praising, commenting that Notes & Rhymes "shows that the talent didn’t run completely dry two decades ago" and lauding the song "It's Always Easy" as "enough to make even Merle Haggard smile".[3]
Terry Staunton gave a mostly favourable review of Notes & Rhymes, particularly praising the lyrics; describing The Proclaimers as "lyrically astute as Chris Difford at his best".[5]
Touring
The Proclaimers embarked on an extensive worldwide tour following the release of Notes & Rhymes. The band played six dates in Australia and three in New Zealand alongside The B-52's.[6]
Track listing
All songs written by Craig Reid and Charlie Reid, except indicated