Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta (p)Joe Boyd. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta (p)Joe Boyd. Mostrar todas las entradas

No Sleep Blues - The Incredible String Band


Rola: No Sleep Blues
Traducción: Blues de no dormir
Intérprete: The Incredible String Band
Compositor: Robin Williamson
Disco: The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion
Productor: Joe Boyd
Orden al bat: 066

HISTORIA

Williamson spent several months studying music in Morocco, and Palmer left the group to travel to Afghanistan. For the String Band's second album, The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion, exotic touches such as the Middle Eastern oud, Indian sitars, and tambouras began to permeate the group's sound. The band's lyrics also became more whimsical; highlights include Williamson's tale of insomnia No Sleep Blues

DATOS DE LA GRABACIÓN

Duración: 03:52
Año: 1968
Formato: 7"
A la venta: 01/07/1967
Lado B: Painting Box
Disquera: Elektra


MÚSICOS

Robin Williamson - voz, guitarra, mandolina, ud, flauta y percusión (batería, cascabeles)
Mike Heron - voz, guitarra y armónica
Licorice McKechnie - voz y percusión
Danny Thompson - doble bajo
John Hopkins - Piano
Soma (Nazir Jairazbhoy) - sitar y tamboura


ESCUCHA NO SLEEP BLUES



LETRA

No Sleep Blues
Blues de no dormir
Cracks rack the windows,
Howls hold the floor;
Rains rot the rafters,
And do you just have to snore?
It's a most inclement climate,
for the season of the night,
Is that mouse playing football, oh
I thought they didn't like the light?

And the dawn comes sneaking up
When it thinks I'm not looking;
I am starting to grieve, man,
I used to know but now I believe, man.
They tell me sleep is a gas,
and if I want to lay down,
But I'm sorry I woke you,
I mean I've got the no sleep blues.

There's mayhem in this mansion,
Since the cows were coming home,
With delirium no sleepum,
In a cloud of nylon foam.
But release scours the outhouse,
And a hard rain sears the sky,
But if you let the pigs decide it,
They will put you in the sty.

And the dawn comes sneaking up
When it thinks I'm not looking;
I am starting to grieve, man,
I used to know but now I believe, man.
They tell me sleep is a gas,
and if I want to lay down,
But I'm sorry I woke you,
I mean I've got the no sleep blues.

I think I'll get a picture,
And I think I'll put it on a nail.
I think I'll get another one,
And put it in a pail.
But the pail got so rusty
I called it red, red, red for fun,
And I laughed like a leaver
till you ought to seen it run.

And the dawn comes sneaking up
When it thinks I'm not looking;
I am starting to grieve, man,
I used to know but now I believe, man.
They tell me sleep is a gas,
and if I want to lay down,
But I'm sorry I woke you.
I mean I've got the no sleep blues.

The size of the future declared itself no part,
Aloof like a Sultan in the autumn of your heart,
But the heart got so hearty,
that it pulled for the shore,
And the sailors fired a big salute,
and it made my ears quite sore.

And the dawn was sneaking up
When it thinks I'm not looking;
I am starting to grieve, man,
I used to know but now I believe, man
They tell me sleep is a gas,
and I want to lay down,
But I'm sorry I woke you,
I mean I've got the no sleep blues.

I mixed stones and water
just to see what it would do.
And the water it got stoney,
and the stones got watery too.
So I mixed my feet with water
just to see what could be seen,
And the water it got dirty,
and the feet they got quite clean.

And the dawn comes sneaking up
When it thinks I'm not looking;
I am starting to grieve, man,
I used to know but now I believe, man.
They tell me sleep is a gas,
and if I want to lay down,
But I'm sorry I woke you,
I mean I've got the no sleep blues



NO SLEEP BLUES VIENE EN EL L.P. THE 5000 SPIRITS OR THE LAYERS OF THE ONION


LADO A
1. "Chinese White"
2. "No Sleep Blues"
3. "Painting Box"
4. "The Mad Hatter's Song"
5. "Little Cloud"
6. "The Eyes of Fate"



LADO B
1. "Blues for the Muse"
2. "The Hedgehog's Song"
3. "First Girl I Loved" (Williamson)
4. "You Know What You Could Be"
5. "My Name Is Death"
6. "Gently Tender"
7. "Way Back in the 1960s"


The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion was the second LP by The Incredible String Band, released in July 1967.

Since recording their debut album the previous year, the original trio had been reduced to two, Mike Heron and Robin Williamson. They recorded The 5000 Spirits... in London in early 1967. The album also featured Pentangle's Danny Thompson on double bass, Williamson's girlfriend Licorice McKechnie on vocals and percussion, master sitar player Nazir Jairazbhoy (credited as "Soma"), and, on piano, counter-culture activist John "Hoppy" Hopkins, who had just set up London's UFO Club with the album's producer, Joe Boyd.

The album demonstrated considerable musical development and a more unified ISB sound. It displayed their abilities as multi-instrumentalists and singer-songwriters, and gained them wide acclaim. As well as winning favourable reviews in the music press, it was received enthusiastically by the DJ John Peel, who regularly featured tracks from the album on his influential Perfumed Garden programme on the pirate radio ship Radio London. The 5000 Spirits... went to Number One in the UK folk chart, and was named by Paul McCartney as one of his favourite records of that year.

The lyrics, the band's various Indian and Arabian instruments, and the striking cover art by The Fool, led to it being placed as a psychedelic work. Much of the music itself, however, draws more widely on traditional British folk music. The album included Heron's "The Hedgehog's Song", Williamson's "First Girl I Loved", later recorded by Judy Collins, Jackson Browne and Don Partridge, and his "The Mad Hatter's Song". With its mixture of musical styles, the album paved the way for the band's more extended forays into psychedelia, while also containing whimsical references to talking clouds and a magic Christmas tree.

In 2002, Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, chose "The Hedgehog's Song" for his appearance on the BBC radio programme Desert Island Discs. He described the chorus - "Oh, you know all the words, and you sung all the notes / But you never quite learned the song, she sang / I can tell by the sadness in your eyes / That you never quite learned the song" - as "a powerful summing-up of life and relationships".

The Album was seen in the 2009 Philip Seymour Hoffman movie Pirate Radio as the last item Bob Silver attempts to rescue from the sinking broadcast platform that was the vessel Rock Radio. (Doctor Dave declares "Oh dear, that is not a good record." and throws it back.)

INTÉRPRETE

The Incredible String Band: Glasgow

The Incredible String Band (sometimes abbreviated as ISB) were a psychedelic folk band formed in Scotland in 1966.[1] The band built a considerable following, especially within British counterculture, before splitting up in 1974. The group's members are musical pioneers in psych folk and, by integrating a wide variety of traditional music forms and instruments, in the development of world music. The group reformed in 1999 and continued to perform until 2006.

In 1963, acoustic musicians Robin Williamson and Clive Palmer began performing together as a traditional folk duo in Edinburgh, particularly at a weekly club run by Archie Fisher in the Crown Bar which also regularly featured Bert Jansch. There they were seen in August 1965 by Joe Boyd, then working as a talent scout for the influential folk-based label Elektra Records. Later in the year, the duo decided to fill out their sound by adding a third member, initially to play rhythm guitar.[2] After an audition, local rock musician Mike Heron won the slot. The trio took the name "The Incredible String Band". Early in 1966 Palmer began running an all-night folk club, Clive's Incredible Folk Club, on the fourth floor of a building in Sauchiehall Street in Glasgow, where they became the house band.[3] When Boyd returned in his new role as head of Elektra's London office, he signed them up for an album, beating off a rival bid from Transatlantic Records.

They recorded their first album, titled The Incredible String Band, at the Sound Techniques studio in London in May 1966. It was released in Britain and the United States and consisted mostly of self-penned material in solo, duo and trio formats, showcasing their playing on a variety of instruments. It won the title of "Folk Album of the Year" in Melody Maker's annual poll, and in a 1968 Sing Out! magazine interview Bob Dylan praised the album's "October Song" as one of his favourite songs of that period.

The trio broke up after recording the album. Palmer left via the hippie trail for Afghanistan and India, and Williamson and his girlfriend Licorice McKechnie went to Morocco with no firm plans to return. Heron stayed in Edinburgh, playing with a band called Rock Bottom and the Deadbeats. However, when Williamson returned after running out of money, laden with Moroccan instruments including a gimbri which was much later eaten by rats, he and Heron reformed the band as a duo.

In November 1966 Heron and Williamson embarked on a short UK tour, supporting Tom Paxton and Judy Collins.[5] In early 1967, they performed regularly at London clubs, including Les Cousins. Joe Boyd became the group's manager as well as producer, and secured a place for them at the Newport Folk Festival, on a bill with Joni Mitchell and Leonard Cohen.

The duo were always credited as separate writers, maintaining their individual creative identities, rather than working as a writing partnership. Boyd wrote: "Mike and Robin were Clive's friends rather than each other's. Without him as a buffer, they developed a robust dislike for one another. Fortunately, the quality and quantity of their songwriting was roughly equal. Neither would agree to the inclusion of a new song by the other unless he could impose himself on it by arranging the instruments and working out all the harmonies."

In July, they released their second album, The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion, accompanied by Pentangle's Danny Thompson on double bass and Licorice on vocals and percussion. The album demonstrated considerable musical development and a more unified ISB sound. It displayed their abilities as multi-instrumentalists and singer-songwriters, and gained them much wider acclaim. The album included Heron's "The Hedgehog's Song", Williamson's "First Girl I Loved" (later recorded by Judy Collins, Jackson Browne, Don Partridge and Wizz Jones) and his "The Mad Hatter's Song", which, with its mixture of musical styles, paved the way for the band's more extended forays into psychedelia. Enthusiastic reviews in the music press were accompanied by appearances at venues such as London's UFO Club (co-owned by Boyd), the Speakeasy Club, and Queen Elizabeth Hall. Their exposure on John Peel's Perfumed Garden radio show on the pirate ship Radio London, and later on BBC's Top Gear, made them favourites with the emerging UK underground audience. The album went to Number One in the UK folk chart, and was named by Paul McCartney as one of his favourite records of that year.

1968 was the band's annus mirabilis with the release of their two most-celebrated albums, The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter and the double LP Wee Tam and the Big Huge (issued as two separate albums in the US). Hangman's reached the top 5 in the UK album charts soon after its release in March 1968 and was nominated for a Grammy in the US. Robert Plant of Led Zeppelin said his group found their way by playing Hangman's and following the instructions. A departure from the band's previous albums, the set relied heavily on a more layered production, with imaginative use of the then new multi-track recording techniques.[4] The album featured a series of vividly dreamlike Williamson songs, such as "The Minotaur's Song", a surreal music-hall parody told from the point of view of the mythical beast, and its centrepiece was Heron's "A Very Cellular Song", a 13-minute reflection on life, love and amoebas; its complex structure incorporated a Bahamian spiritual ("I Bid You Goodnight") and an adaptation of a Sikh hymn (by "may the pure light within you"). Williamson and Heron in this album had added their girlfriends, Licorice McKechnie and Rose Simpson to the band to contribute additional vocals and a variety of instruments, including organ, guitar and percussion. Despite their initially rudimentary skills, Simpson swiftly became a proficient bass guitarist, and some of McKechnie's songs were recorded by the band.

By early 1968 the group were capable of filling major venues in the UK. They left behind their folk club origins and embarked on a nationwide tour incorporating a critically acclaimed appearance at the London Royal Festival Hall. Later in the year they performed at the Royal Albert Hall, at open-air festivals, and at prestigious rock venues such as the Fillmore auditoriums in San Francisco and New York. After their appearance at the Fillmore East in New York they were introduced to the practice of Scientology by David Simons (aka "Rex Rakish", once of Jim Kweskin's Jug Band). Joe Boyd, in his book White Bicycles – Making Music in the 1960s and elsewhere,[7] describes how he was inadvertently responsible for their "conversion" when he introduced the band to Simons who, having become a Scientologist, persuaded them to enrol in his absence. The band's support for Scientology over the next few years was controversial among some fans, and seemed to coincide with what many saw as the beginning of a decline in the quality of their work.[citation needed] In an interview with Oz magazine in 1969 the band spoke enthusiastically of their involvement with it, although the question of its effect on their later albums has provoked much discussion ever since.

Their November 1968 album Wee Tam and The Big Huge recorded before the US trip, was musically less experimental and lush than Hangman's but conceptually even more avant-garde, a full-on engagement with the themes of mythology, religion, awareness and identity. Williamson's otherworldly songs and vision dominate the album, though Heron's more grounded tracks are also among his very best, and the contrast between the two perspectives gives the record its uniquely dynamic interplay between a sensual experience of life and a quest for metaphysical meaning. The record was released as a double album and also simultaneously as two separate LPs, a strategy which lessened its impact on the charts.

Arnold Layne - Pink Floyd


Arnold Layne tiene una extraña manía
robando ropa
de los tendederos a la luz de la luna
que lo visten bien

En la pared cuelga un gran espejo
vision distorsionada, ver a través de una nena triste
la enterró
Oh, Arnold Layne
no es lo mismo, lleva dos veces saberlo
dos veces saberlo, dos veces saberlo, dos veces saberlo
Por qué no lo puedes ver?



GUIÓN RADIOFÓNICO

El personaje central de Arnold Layne es un travesti, cuyo pasatiempo consiste en robar ropa de mujeres encontrada en tendederos. Según Roger Waters, Arnold Layne está basada en una persona real: Mi madre y la de Syd Barret tenían alumnos como inquilinos y habían colegialas que constantemente colgaban sus bras y bragas en los tendederos y Arnold, ó quienquiera que fuera, los descolgaba.

Pese a llegar al número 20 en los listados de música del Reino Unido, Arnold Layne, al tratar un tema inusual como el travestismo, atrajo la ira de la emisora Radio London, que retiró después de poco tiempo la canción de su programación.

Su productor, Joe Boyd, mencionó que Arnold Layne regularmente duraba entre 10 y 15 minutos en concierto, pero Pink Floyd decidió grabar una versión corta para usarla como sencillo. También dijo que la complejidad de la grabación los llevó a realizar ciertos trucos de edición, resaltando que la parte media de la sección instrumental, concretamente el solo de órgano de Richard Wright fue grabado como una pieza editada al margen y empalmada en la canción durante la mezcla final.


DATOS TÉCNICOS DE LA ROLA

Título: Arnold Layne
Traducción: Arnold Layne
Compositor: Syd Barrett
Intérprete: Pink Floyd
Productor: Joe Boyd
A la venta: 01/02/1967
Formato: Sencillo
Lado B: Candy and a Currant Bun
Incluída en el L.P. Relics
Disquera: Tower Records
Orden al bat: 047

POPULARIDAD POR VENTAS (BILLBOARD - HIT PARADE)

En las listas semanales de popularidad y ventas de la revista Billboard Arnold Layne llegó al número 20


DISCO SENCILLO Y/O EP


LETRA

Arnold Layne
Arnold Layne
Arnold Layne had a strange hobby
Collecting clothes
Moonshine washing line
They suit him fine

On the wall hung a tall mirror
Distorted view, see through baby blue
He dug it
Oh, Arnold Layne
It's not the same, takes two to know
Two to know, two to know, two to know
Why can't you see?

Arnold Layne, Arnold Layne, Arnold Layne, Arnold Layne

Now he's caught - a nasty sort of person.
They gave him time
Doors bang - chain gang - he hates it

Oh, Arnold Layne
It's not the same, takes two to know
two to know, two to know, two to know,
Why can't you see?

Arnold Layne, Arnold Layne, Arnold Layne, Arnold Layne
Don't do it again.

Arnold Layne tiene una extraña manía
robando ropa
de los tendederos a la luz de la luna
que lo visten bien

En la pared cuelga un gran espejo
vision distorsionada, ver a través de una nena triste
la enterró
Oh, Arnold Layne
no es lo mismo, lleva dos veces saberlo
dos veces saberlo, dos veces saberlo, dos veces saberlo
Por qué no lo puedes ver?

Arnold Layne, Arnold Layne, Arnold Layne, Arnold Layne

Ahora el se encuentra atrapado un tipo de persona desagradable
Le dieron tiempo
Golpe de puertas, de pandillas de cadeneros, él lo odia
Oh, Arnold Layne
no es lo mismo, lleva dos veces saberlo
dos veces saberlo, dos veces saberlo, dos veces saberlo
Por qué no lo puedes ver?

Arnold Layne, Arnold Layne, Arnold Layne, Arnold Layne
No lo hagas de nuevo


MÚSICOS

Syd Barrett - voz principal y guitarra
Richard Wright - órgano y voz
Roger Waters - bajo
Nick Mason - batería y percusión


INTÉRPRETE

Pink Floyd: Cambridge


ARNOLD LAYNE VIENE EN EL L.P. COMPILATORIO RELICS

VERSIÓN INGLESA

LADO A
1. "Arnold Layne"
2. "Interstellar Overdrive"
3. "See Emily Play"
4. "Remember a Day"
5. "Paintbox"




LADO B
1. "Julia Dream"
2. "Careful With That Axe, Eugene"
3. "Cirrus Minor"
4. "The Nile Song"
5. "Biding My Time"
6. "Bike"


VERSIÓN ESTADOUNIDENSE

LADO A



LADO B

Relics es un album recopilatorio con dos portadas distintas y una visión tridimensional de un dibujo de su baterista Nick Mason.

Hasta la aparición de The Early Single, en 1992, Relics destacaba porque contenía los sencillos de Pink Floyd en la era de Syd Barret, así como sus lados B.

OTRAS VERSIONES

David Gilmore & David Bowie; The Damned

A Very Cellular Song - The Incredible String Band


Rola: A Very Cellular Song
Traducción: Una canción muy celular
Intérprete: The Incredible String Band
Compositor: Mike Heron
Disco: The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter
Productor: Joe Boyd

HISTORIA

When people talk of this record, they are usually talking the 13-minute opus "A Very Cellular Song" which can be easily seen as the inspiration of the rock student theatre of The Who and the Kinks and Lou Reed. The way it lilts between motifs is ingenious. Harpsichords and handclaps and hornpipes and kazoos co-mingle in festive abandon, encompassing the run of human emotion from revelry to despair within its walls. Such is the schizoid way of The Incredible String band, but there is no greater example of it than in "A Very Cellular Song." The Hangman's Beautiful daughter is both an exhilarating and exhausting listen. You welcome the calliope and water sounds interplay of "The Water Song" after the encyclopedic psychedelia before it. By the time "Swift as the Wind" hits toward the end, you are as spent and howling as the singer is against the rising breeze of the guitars.


DATOS DE LA GRABACIÓN

Duración: 13:09
Año: 1968
Formato: L.P.
A la venta: 01/03/1968
Disquera: Elektra


MÚSICOS

Robin Williamson - vocals, guitar, gimbri, penny whistle, percussion, pan pipe, piano, oud, mandolin, Jew's harp, chahanai, water harp, harmonica
Mike Heron - vocals, sitar, Hammond organ, guitar, hammered dulcimer, harpsichord
Dolly Collins - flute organ, piano
David Snell - harp
Licorice McKechnie - vocals, finger cymbals


ESCUCHA A VERY CELLULAR SONG



LETRA

A Very Cellular Song
Una canción muy celular
Winter was cold and the clothing was thin
But the gentle shepherd calls the tune
Oh dear mother what shall I do
First please your eyes and then your ears Jenny
Exchanging love tokens say goodnight

Lay down my dear sister
Won't you lay and take your rest
Won't you lay your head upon your saviours breast
And I love you but Jesus loves you the best
And I bid you goodnight, goodnight, goodnight,
And I bid you goodnight, goodnight, goodnight.
One of these mornings bright and early and fine.

Goodnight, goodnight
Not a cricket not a spirit going to shout me on
Goodnight, goodnight
I go walking in the valley of the shadow of death
Goodnight, goodnight
And his rod and his staff shall comfort me
Goodnight, goodnight
Oh John the wine he saw the sign
Goodnight, goodnight
Oh John say I seen a number of signs
Goodnight, goodnight
Tell A for the ark that wonderful boat
Goodnight, goodnight
You know they built it on the land getting water to float
Goodnight, goodnight
Tell B for the beast at the ending of the wood
Goodnight, goodnight
You know it ate all the children when they wouldn't be good
Goodnight, goodnight
I remember quite well, I remember quite well
Goodnight, goodnight
I was walking in Jerusalem just like John
Goodnight, goodnight, goodnight.

Who would lose and who would bruise
Or who would live quite prettily?
And who would love what comes along
And fill the air with joyous song

Who would go and who would come
Or who would simply linger
And who would hide behind your chair
And steal your crystallised ginger

Nebulous nearnesses cry to me
At this timeless moment
Someone dear to me wants me near, makes me high
I can hear vibrations fly
Through mangoes, pomegranates and planes
All the same
When it reaches me and teaches me
To sigh

Who would mouse and who would lion
Or who would be the tamer
And who would hear directions clear
From the unnameable namer

Who would skip and who would plod
Or who would lie quite stilly
And who would ride backwards on a giraffe
Stopping every so often to laugh

Amoebas are very small

Oh ah ee oo there's absolutely no strife
living the timeless life
I don't need a wife
living the timeless life
If I need a friend I just give a wriggle
Split right down the middle
And when I look there's two of me
Both as handsome as can be
Oh here we go slithering, here we go slithering and squelching on
Oh here we go slithering, here we go slithering and squelching on
Oh ah ee oo there's absolutely no strife
living the timeless life

Black hair brown hair feather and scale
Seed and stamen and all unnamed lives that live
Turn your quivering nerves in my direction
Turn your quivering nerves in my direction
Feel the energy projection of my cells
Wishes you well.

May the long time sun shine upon you
All love surround you
And the pure light within you
Guide you all the way on.



A VERY CELLULAR SONG VIENE EN EL L.P. THE HANGMAN'S BEAUTIFUL DAUGHTER

VERSIÓN INGLESA

LADO A
1. "Koeeoaddi There"
2. "The Minotaur's Song"
3. "Witches Hat"
4. "A Very Cellular Song"





LADO B
1. "Mercy I Cry City"
2. "Waltz of the New Moon"
3. "The Water Song"
4. "Three Is a Green Crown"
5. "Swift as the Wind"
6. "Nightfall"










The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter was the third album by The Incredible String Band, released in March 1968. It is regarded by many critics[who?] as a quintessential example of hippie culture, with its promotion of ideas such as communal living, eastern mysticism and rationalistic pantheism.

The album was a major commercial success in the UK, staying in the charts for 27 weeks with a peak of #5. It has sold 800,000 copies in the UK to date.[citation needed] In the U.S., the ISB always remained underground and the album struggled to #161 on the Billboard 200. However, it was nominated for a Grammy in the folk music category.

The album featured a series of vividly dreamlike Robin Williamson songs, such as "The Minotaur's Song", a surreal music-hall parody told from the point of view of the mythical beast, and its centrepiece was Mike Heron's "A Very Cellular Song", a 13-minute reflection on life, love and amoebas; its complex structure incorporated a Bahamian spiritual ("I Bid You Goodnight", originally recorded by the Pinder Family) and an adaptation of a Sikh hymn ("May the pure light within you"). It had a layered production, using multi-track recording techniques and a very wide array of instruments from all corners of the world, including sitar, gimbri, shenai, oud, harpsichord, panpipes and kazoo.

The album's cover art - which on original LP issues was the back cover, as the front showed just Williamson and Heron - consists of a photograph taken on Christmas Day 1967. It shows both musicians, their girlfriends Licorice McKechnie and Rose Simpson, friends Roger Marshall and Nicky Walton, several children of their friend Mary Stewart, and Robin's dog Leaf.

Regarding the title, Mike Heron said at the time:- "The hangman is death and the beautiful daughter is what comes after. Or you might say that the hangman is the past twenty years of our life and the beautiful daughter is now, what we are able to do after all these years. Or you can make up your own meaning - your interpretation is probably just as good as ours."

INTÉRPRETE

The Incredible String Band: Glasgow

The Incredible String Band (sometimes abbreviated as ISB) were a psychedelic folk band formed in Scotland in 1966.[1] The band built a considerable following, especially within British counterculture, before splitting up in 1974. The group's members are musical pioneers in psych folk and, by integrating a wide variety of traditional music forms and instruments, in the development of world music. The group reformed in 1999 and continued to perform until 2006.

In 1963, acoustic musicians Robin Williamson and Clive Palmer began performing together as a traditional folk duo in Edinburgh, particularly at a weekly club run by Archie Fisher in the Crown Bar which also regularly featured Bert Jansch. There they were seen in August 1965 by Joe Boyd, then working as a talent scout for the influential folk-based label Elektra Records. Later in the year, the duo decided to fill out their sound by adding a third member, initially to play rhythm guitar.[2] After an audition, local rock musician Mike Heron won the slot. The trio took the name "The Incredible String Band". Early in 1966 Palmer began running an all-night folk club, Clive's Incredible Folk Club, on the fourth floor of a building in Sauchiehall Street in Glasgow, where they became the house band.[3] When Boyd returned in his new role as head of Elektra's London office, he signed them up for an album, beating off a rival bid from Transatlantic Records.

They recorded their first album, titled The Incredible String Band, at the Sound Techniques studio in London in May 1966. It was released in Britain and the United States and consisted mostly of self-penned material in solo, duo and trio formats, showcasing their playing on a variety of instruments. It won the title of "Folk Album of the Year" in Melody Maker's annual poll, and in a 1968 Sing Out! Magazine interview Bob Dylan praised the album's "October Song" as one of his favourite songs of that period.

The trio broke up after recording the album. Palmer left via the hippie trail for Afghanistan and India, and Williamson and his girlfriend Licorice McKechnie went to Morocco with no firm plans to return. Heron stayed in Edinburgh, playing with a band called Rock Bottom and the Deadbeats. However, when Williamson returned after running out of money, laden with Moroccan instruments including a gimbri which was much later eaten by rats, he and Heron reformed the band as a duo.

In November 1966 Heron and Williamson embarked on a short UK tour, supporting Tom Paxton and Judy Collins.[5] In early 1967, they performed regularly at London clubs, including Les Cousins. Joe Boyd became the group's manager as well as producer, and secured a place for them at the Newport Folk Festival, on a bill with Joni Mitchell and Leonard Cohen.

The duo were always credited as separate writers, maintaining their individual creative identities, rather than working as a writing partnership. Boyd wrote: "Mike and Robin were Clive's friends rather than each other's. Without him as a buffer, they developed a robust dislike for one another. Fortunately, the quality and quantity of their songwriting was roughly equal. Neither would agree to the inclusion of a new song by the other unless he could impose himself on it by arranging the instruments and working out all the harmonies."

In July, they released their second album, The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion, accompanied by Pentangle's Danny Thompson on double bass and Licorice on vocals and percussion. The album demonstrated considerable musical development and a more unified ISB sound. It displayed their abilities as multi-instrumentalists and singer-songwriters, and gained them much wider acclaim. The album included Heron's "The Hedgehog's Song", Williamson's "First Girl I Loved" (later recorded by Judy Collins, Jackson Browne, Don Partridge and Wizz Jones) and his "The Mad Hatter's Song", which, with its mixture of musical styles, paved the way for the band's more extended forays into psychedelia. Enthusiastic reviews in the music press were accompanied by appearances at venues such as London's UFO Club (co-owned by Boyd), the Speakeasy Club, and Queen Elizabeth Hall. Their exposure on John Peel's Perfumed Garden radio show on the pirate ship Radio London, and later on BBC's Top Gear, made them favourites with the emerging UK underground audience. The album went to Number One in the UK folk chart, and was named by Paul McCartney as one of his favourite records of that year.

1968 was the band's annus mirabilis with the release of their two most-celebrated albums, The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter and the double LP Wee Tam and the Big Huge (issued as two separate albums in the US). Hangman's reached the top 5 in the UK album charts soon after its release in March 1968 and was nominated for a Grammy in the US. Robert Plant of Led Zeppelin said his group found their way by playing Hangman's and following the instructions. A departure from the band's previous albums, the set relied heavily on a more layered production, with imaginative use of the then new multi-track recording techniques.[4] The album featured a series of vividly dreamlike Williamson songs, such as "The Minotaur's Song", a surreal music-hall parody told from the point of view of the mythical beast, and its centrepiece was Heron's "A Very Cellular Song", a 13-minute reflection on life, love and amoebas; its complex structure incorporated a Bahamian spiritual ("I Bid You Goodnight") and an adaptation of a Sikh hymn (by "may the pure light within you"). Williamson and Heron in this album had added their girlfriends, Licorice McKechnie and Rose Simpson to the band to contribute additional vocals and a variety of instruments, including organ, guitar and percussion. Despite their initially rudimentary skills, Simpson swiftly became a proficient bass guitarist, and some of McKechnie's songs were recorded by the band.

By early 1968 the group were capable of filling major venues in the UK. They left behind their folk club origins and embarked on a nationwide tour incorporating a critically acclaimed appearance at the London Royal Festival Hall. Later in the year they performed at the Royal Albert Hall, at open-air festivals, and at prestigious rock venues such as the Fillmore auditoriums in San Francisco and New York. After their appearance at the Fillmore East in New York they were introduced to the practice of Scientology by David Simons (aka "Rex Rakish", once of Jim Kweskin's Jug Band). Joe Boyd, in his book White Bicycles – Making Music in the 1960s and elsewhere,[7] describes how he was inadvertently responsible for their "conversion" when he introduced the band to Simons who, having become a Scientologist, persuaded them to enrol in his absence. The band's support for Scientology over the next few years was controversial among some fans, and seemed to coincide with what many saw as the beginning of a decline in the quality of their work.[citation needed] In an interview with Oz magazine in 1969 the band spoke enthusiastically of their involvement with it, although the question of its effect on their later albums has provoked much discussion ever since.

Their November 1968 album Wee Tam and The Big Huge recorded before the US trip, was musically less experimental and lush than Hangman's but conceptually even more avant-garde, a full-on engagement with the themes of mythology, religion, awareness and identity. Williamson's otherworldly songs and vision dominate the album, though Heron's more grounded tracks are also among his very best, and the contrast between the two perspectives gives the record its uniquely dynamic interplay between a sensual experience of life and a quest for metaphysical meaning. The record was released as a double album and also simultaneously as two separate LPs, a strategy which lessened its impact on the charts.

The Lobster - Fairport Convention


Rola: The Lobster
Traducción: La langosta
Intérprete: Fairport Convention
Compositor: George Painter, Ashley Hutchings, Richard Thompson
Disco: Fairport Convention
Productor: Joe Boyd, Tod Lloyd

DATOS DE LA GRABACIÓN

Duración: 04:49
Año: 1968
Formato: L.P.
A la venta: 01/06/1968
Disquera: Polydor


MÚSICOS

Judy Dyble - lead vocals, electric and acoustic autoharps, recorder, piano
Ian MacDonald - lead vocals, Jew's harp
Richard Thompson - vocals, lead electric and acoustic guitars, mandolin
Simon Nicol - vocals, electric 12 and 6 string and acoustic guitars
Ashley Hutchings - bass guitar, jug, double bass
Martin Lamble - Percussion, violin


ESCUCHA THE LOBSTER



LETRA

The Lobster
La langosta
Like a lobster I can swim
And can grow another limb
Where a powerless stump you saw
I have grown a powerful claw

When you'd thought me safely drowned
In the depths I swim around
Dither when you do descend
With my claw I'll tear you, friend



THE LOBSTER VIENE EN EL L.P. FAIRPORT CONVENTION


LADO A
1. "Time Will Show the Wiser"
2. "I Don't Know Where I Stand"
3. "If (Stomp)"
4. "Decameron"
5. "Jack O'Diamonds"
6. "Portfolio"


LADO B
1. "Chelsea Morning"
2. "Sun Shade"
3. "The Lobster"
4. "It's Alright Ma, It's Only Witchcraft"
5. "One Sure Thing"
6. "M1 Breakdown"


Fairport Convention is Fairport Convention's debut album. The band formed in 1967, with original line-up Judy Dyble and Ian MacDonald (later known as Iain Matthews) (vocals), Richard Thompson and Simon Nicol (guitars), Ashley “Tyger” Hutchings (bass) and Sean Frater, replaced after their first gig by Martin Lamble (percussion). In this form they made their major London stage debut in one of Brian Epstein’s Sunday concerts at the Saville Theatre.

With a rock approach strongly influenced by Jefferson Airplane's first two albums (as opposed to the traditional English folk fusion they would later become famous for), the debut album features covers of songs by Emitt Rhodes, Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell, Jim & Jean, and an adaptation of a poem by George Painter, as well as original material.

This is the only Fairport Convention studio album to feature Judy Dyble. She was replaced in 1968 by Sandy Denny, but during her short time with the band she managed to make a noticeable impression, particularly through her on-stage habit of knitting dishcloths and scarves when not actually singing.

The album should not be confused with the A&M Records' "Fairport Convention", the USA release/re-titling of their second UK album, What We Did On Our Holidays. The first album, listed a product of Polydor-England, was finally released in the U.S. on Cotillion Records in 1970.

INTÉRPRETE

Fairport Convention: Londres

Fairport Convention was the most famous British folk revival band, even if they were probably the less artistically skilled. They embodied the quintessence of this movement, who rarely could depart from its revival trait.

The band was formed in 1967, in the underground clubs of London, by a group of folk musicians, Richard Thompson (guitarist), Ian Matthews (singer) and Ashley Hutchings (bassist). Their first album was Fairport Convention (Polydor, 1968), a mixture of original songs and covers from American folksingers. Following the suggestions of their producer, Joe Boyd, the band recruited singer Sandy Denny (who had formerly played in the Strawbs), abandoned all Byrds’ clichés and gave preference to the writing of original songs. Denny’s Fotheringay and Thompson’s Meet On The Ledge enhanced their repertoire in What We Did On Our Holidays (Island, 1968), while Who Knows Where The Time Goes (Denny) and Genesis Hall (Thompson) where the main gems of Unhalfbricking (1970). This album also included a "progressive" arrangement of the traditional A Sailor’s Life. By her own side, Denny had one of the most peculiar voice of his era, inventing a style that will influence the following generations (for example, Kate Bush and Tori Amos). Other material (mainly covers) is included in Heyday (Hannibal, 1987 - Island, 2002).

Violinist Dave Swarbrick (a folk veteran, who had also worked with Martin Carthy) filled the gap left by Matthews’ departure. This talented group turned to play traditional songs, and produced a concept album Liege And Lief (A&M, 1970), that can be considered the British folk-rock manifesto. Modern arrangements, sharp-witted rhythms, and the duets between Swarbrick and Thompson transformed this traditional folk songs into something original and meaningful, in particular in the grand folk suites like Matty Groves and Tam Lin. Undeniably it’s a great folk album, but a poor rock album.

The band soon lost Denny and Hutchings who began independent careers (Fotheringay and Steeleye Span). So, Full House (1970) is primarily a Swarbrick’s and Thompson’s effort. This folk rock album (more folk than rock) contains the catchy Walk Awhile and the best grand folk suite of the band, Sloth, two gems of Thompson’s repertoire. In the same year, bass player Dave Pegg joined the band.

Fairport Convention es quizás la banda ícono del FolkRock Europeo, formada en Londres en mayo de 1967 se ha mantenido a través del tiempo y varios cambios en su formación hasta el día de hoy. Inicialmente la banda fue parte de la escena musical Undergroud de Londres, presentándose en salas como The Electric Garden, Middle Earth y el UFO Club, y llevaba solo algunos meses tocando cuando el visionario productor Joe Boyd les aseguró un contrato con Island Records.

Boyd les sugiere que integren a la banda un vocalista hombre que acompañase a la etérea voz de Judy Dyble, y así a fines de 1967 sacan al mercado su debut homónimo, con influencias y covers de Joni Mitchell, Bob Dylan y The Byrds. Luego de escazas ventas Judy Dyble abandona la banda y es reemplazada por Sandy Denny, ex Strawbs, quien otorgaría una voz de tono más bajo e intensa que su predecesora, y que se convertiría en uno de los elementos distintivos de la banda. Con ella sacarían al mercado los discos "What We Did On Our Holidays" y "Unhalfbricking", ambos en 1969. Con un creciente éxito comercial y un estilo musical cada vez más afiatado, la tragedia visitó a la banda cuando en Mayo de 1969, y a vuelta de un concierto en Birmingham, la van del grupo chocó en la autopista y el baterista Martin Lamble (19) y la novia del guitarrista Richard Thompson, murieron en el accidente. Se pensó en disolver la banda, pero finalmente recuperados de la desgracia volvieron al estudio para grabar el que sería su disco más aclamado: Liege And Lief, el cual se ha convertido en un ícono del FolkRock británico y convirtió a este en un género distintivo e influyente.

A pesar del triunfo de este album, Sandy Denny y Ashley Hutchings deciden dejar la banda para pasar a formar parte de Fotheringay y Steeleye Span respectivamente. Dave Pegg tomó el puesto al bajo, y la banda decidió que reemplazar a Denny sería imposible por lo que decidieron seguir solo con voces masculinas.

Así, en 1970 editan Full House, el cual es mi favorito de la banda, y uno de sus más reconocidos. Sin las voces femeninas el sonido de la banda se vuelve mas duro y de matiz rockero. Sandy Denny fue una de las voces más aclamadas del movimiento Folk inglés, en el cual la participación femenina encontró un nicho muy productivo y fue notoriamente superior que en otros movimientos musicales contemporáneos. Sin embargo personalmente encuentro que las voces femeninas del FolkRock no entregan la potencia del lado Rockero, y han pasado con mayor dificultad la barrera del tiempo.

The Water Song - The Incredible String Band


Rola: The Water Song
Traducción: La canción de agua
Intérprete: The Incredible String Band
Compositor: Robin Williamson
Disco: The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter
Productor: Joe Boyd

HISTORIA

You welcome the calliope and water sounds interplay of "The Water Song" after the encyclopedic psychedelia before it.

DATOS DE LA GRABACIÓN

Duración: 02:50
Año: 1968
Formato: L.P.
A la venta: 01/03/1968
Disquera: Elektra


MÚSICOS

Robin Williamson - vocals, guitar, gimbri, penny whistle, percussion, pan pipe, piano, oud, mandolin, Jew's harp, chahanai, water harp, harmonica
Mike Heron - vocals, sitar, Hammond organ, guitar, hammered dulcimer, harpsichord
Dolly Collins - flute organ, piano
David Snell - harp
Licorice McKechnie - vocals, finger cymbals


ESCUCHA THE WATER SONG



LETRA

The Water Song
La canción de agua
Water water see the water flow
Glancing dancing see the water flow
O wizard of changes water water water
Dark or silvery mother of life
Water water holy mystery heavens daughter

God made a song when the world was new
Waters laughter sings it is true
O, wizard of changes, teach me the lesson of flowing



THE WATER SONG VIENE EN EL L.P. THE HANGMAN'S BEAUTIFUL DAUGHTER

VERSIÓN INGLESA

LADO A
1. "Koeeoaddi There"
2. "The Minotaur's Song"
3. "Witches Hat"
4. "A Very Cellular Song"





LADO B
1. "Mercy I Cry City"
2. "Waltz of the New Moon"
3. "The Water Song"
4. "Three Is a Green Crown"
5. "Swift as the Wind"
6. "Nightfall"


VERSIÓN ESTADOUNIDENSE

LADO A



LADO B

The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter was the third album by The Incredible String Band, released in March 1968. It is regarded by many critics[who?] as a quintessential example of hippie culture, with its promotion of ideas such as communal living, eastern mysticism and rationalistic pantheism.

The album was a major commercial success in the UK, staying in the charts for 27 weeks with a peak of #5. It has sold 800,000 copies in the UK to date.[citation needed] In the U.S., the ISB always remained underground and the album struggled to #161 on the Billboard 200. However, it was nominated for a Grammy in the folk music category.

The album featured a series of vividly dreamlike Robin Williamson songs, such as "The Minotaur's Song", a surreal music-hall parody told from the point of view of the mythical beast, and its centrepiece was Mike Heron's "A Very Cellular Song", a 13-minute reflection on life, love and amoebas; its complex structure incorporated a Bahamian spiritual ("I Bid You Goodnight", originally recorded by the Pinder Family) and an adaptation of a Sikh hymn ("May the pure light within you"). It had a layered production, using multi-track recording techniques and a very wide array of instruments from all corners of the world, including sitar, gimbri, shenai, oud, harpsichord, panpipes and kazoo.

The album's cover art - which on original LP issues was the back cover, as the front showed just Williamson and Heron - consists of a photograph taken on Christmas Day 1967. It shows both musicians, their girlfriends Licorice McKechnie and Rose Simpson, friends Roger Marshall and Nicky Walton, several children of their friend Mary Stewart, and Robin's dog Leaf.

Regarding the title, Mike Heron said at the time:- "The hangman is death and the beautiful daughter is what comes after. Or you might say that the hangman is the past twenty years of our life and the beautiful daughter is now, what we are able to do after all these years. Or you can make up your own meaning - your interpretation is probably just as good as ours."

INTÉRPRETE

The Incredible String Band: Glasgow

The Incredible String Band (sometimes abbreviated as ISB) were a psychedelic folk band formed in Scotland in 1966.[1] The band built a considerable following, especially within British counterculture, before splitting up in 1974. The group's members are musical pioneers in psych folk and, by integrating a wide variety of traditional music forms and instruments, in the development of world music. The group reformed in 1999 and continued to perform until 2006.

In 1963, acoustic musicians Robin Williamson and Clive Palmer began performing together as a traditional folk duo in Edinburgh, particularly at a weekly club run by Archie Fisher in the Crown Bar which also regularly featured Bert Jansch. There they were seen in August 1965 by Joe Boyd, then working as a talent scout for the influential folk-based label Elektra Records. Later in the year, the duo decided to fill out their sound by adding a third member, initially to play rhythm guitar.[2] After an audition, local rock musician Mike Heron won the slot. The trio took the name "The Incredible String Band". Early in 1966 Palmer began running an all-night folk club, Clive's Incredible Folk Club, on the fourth floor of a building in Sauchiehall Street in Glasgow, where they became the house band.[3] When Boyd returned in his new role as head of Elektra's London office, he signed them up for an album, beating off a rival bid from Transatlantic Records.

They recorded their first album, titled The Incredible String Band, at the Sound Techniques studio in London in May 1966. It was released in Britain and the United States and consisted mostly of self-penned material in solo, duo and trio formats, showcasing their playing on a variety of instruments. It won the title of "Folk Album of the Year" in Melody Maker's annual poll, and in a 1968 Sing Out! magazine interview Bob Dylan praised the album's "October Song" as one of his favourite songs of that period.

The trio broke up after recording the album. Palmer left via the hippie trail for Afghanistan and India, and Williamson and his girlfriend Licorice McKechnie went to Morocco with no firm plans to return. Heron stayed in Edinburgh, playing with a band called Rock Bottom and the Deadbeats. However, when Williamson returned after running out of money, laden with Moroccan instruments including a gimbri which was much later eaten by rats, he and Heron reformed the band as a duo.

In November 1966 Heron and Williamson embarked on a short UK tour, supporting Tom Paxton and Judy Collins.[5] In early 1967, they performed regularly at London clubs, including Les Cousins. Joe Boyd became the group's manager as well as producer, and secured a place for them at the Newport Folk Festival, on a bill with Joni Mitchell and Leonard Cohen.

The duo were always credited as separate writers, maintaining their individual creative identities, rather than working as a writing partnership. Boyd wrote: "Mike and Robin were Clive's friends rather than each other's. Without him as a buffer, they developed a robust dislike for one another. Fortunately, the quality and quantity of their songwriting was roughly equal. Neither would agree to the inclusion of a new song by the other unless he could impose himself on it by arranging the instruments and working out all the harmonies."

In July, they released their second album, The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion, accompanied by Pentangle's Danny Thompson on double bass and Licorice on vocals and percussion. The album demonstrated considerable musical development and a more unified ISB sound. It displayed their abilities as multi-instrumentalists and singer-songwriters, and gained them much wider acclaim. The album included Heron's "The Hedgehog's Song", Williamson's "First Girl I Loved" (later recorded by Judy Collins, Jackson Browne, Don Partridge and Wizz Jones) and his "The Mad Hatter's Song", which, with its mixture of musical styles, paved the way for the band's more extended forays into psychedelia. Enthusiastic reviews in the music press were accompanied by appearances at venues such as London's UFO Club (co-owned by Boyd), the Speakeasy Club, and Queen Elizabeth Hall. Their exposure on John Peel's Perfumed Garden radio show on the pirate ship Radio London, and later on BBC's Top Gear, made them favourites with the emerging UK underground audience. The album went to Number One in the UK folk chart, and was named by Paul McCartney as one of his favourite records of that year.

1968 was the band's annus mirabilis with the release of their two most-celebrated albums, The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter and the double LP Wee Tam and the Big Huge (issued as two separate albums in the US). Hangman's reached the top 5 in the UK album charts soon after its release in March 1968 and was nominated for a Grammy in the US. Robert Plant of Led Zeppelin said his group found their way by playing Hangman's and following the instructions. A departure from the band's previous albums, the set relied heavily on a more layered production, with imaginative use of the then new multi-track recording techniques.[4] The album featured a series of vividly dreamlike Williamson songs, such as "The Minotaur's Song", a surreal music-hall parody told from the point of view of the mythical beast, and its centrepiece was Heron's "A Very Cellular Song", a 13-minute reflection on life, love and amoebas; its complex structure incorporated a Bahamian spiritual ("I Bid You Goodnight") and an adaptation of a Sikh hymn (by "may the pure light within you"). Williamson and Heron in this album had added their girlfriends, Licorice McKechnie and Rose Simpson to the band to contribute additional vocals and a variety of instruments, including organ, guitar and percussion. Despite their initially rudimentary skills, Simpson swiftly became a proficient bass guitarist, and some of McKechnie's songs were recorded by the band.

By early 1968 the group were capable of filling major venues in the UK. They left behind their folk club origins and embarked on a nationwide tour incorporating a critically acclaimed appearance at the London Royal Festival Hall. Later in the year they performed at the Royal Albert Hall, at open-air festivals, and at prestigious rock venues such as the Fillmore auditoriums in San Francisco and New York. After their appearance at the Fillmore East in New York they were introduced to the practice of Scientology by David Simons (aka "Rex Rakish", once of Jim Kweskin's Jug Band). Joe Boyd, in his book White Bicycles – Making Music in the 1960s and elsewhere,[7] describes how he was inadvertently responsible for their "conversion" when he introduced the band to Simons who, having become a Scientologist, persuaded them to enrol in his absence. The band's support for Scientology over the next few years was controversial among some fans, and seemed to coincide with what many saw as the beginning of a decline in the quality of their work.[citation needed] In an interview with Oz magazine in 1969 the band spoke enthusiastically of their involvement with it, although the question of its effect on their later albums has provoked much discussion ever since.

Their November 1968 album Wee Tam and The Big Huge recorded before the US trip, was musically less experimental and lush than Hangman's but conceptually even more avant-garde, a full-on engagement with the themes of mythology, religion, awareness and identity. Williamson's otherworldly songs and vision dominate the album, though Heron's more grounded tracks are also among his very best, and the contrast between the two perspectives gives the record its uniquely dynamic interplay between a sensual experience of life and a quest for metaphysical meaning. The record was released as a double album and also simultaneously as two separate LPs, a strategy which lessened its impact on the charts.

Sloth - Fairport Convention


Rola: Sloth
Traducción: Hueva
Intérprete: Fairport Convention
Compositor: Richard Thompson, Dave Swarbrick
Disco: Full House
Productor: Joe Boyd

HISTORIA

Sloth, viene a ser la pieza más sorprendente de Full House, una fuerza improvisada, emergida de la pereza que supone dejar pasar las cosas y el tiempo solamente rolando mientras la guerra comienza.

Pieza que con el paso de los años permanece presente en el repertorio actual de Fairport Convention y que ha sido descrita como obsesionante, temperamental y deslumbrante, con la posibilidad de mantener su embeleso a lo largo de sus nueve minutos de duración.


DATOS DE LA GRABACIÓN


Duración: 09:17
Año: 1970
Formato: L.P.
A la venta: 01/07/1970
Disquera: A&M


MÚSICOS

Richard Thompson - voz y guitarra eléctrica
Dave Swarbrick - voz, violín, viola y mandolina
Dave Pegg - bajo, voz y mandolina
Dave Mattacks - batería, percusión, harmonium, bodhran
Simon Nicol - voz, guitarra acústica y eléctrica, bajo, dulcimer eléctrico


ESCUCHA LA ROLA



LETRA

Original
Traducción
Just a roll, just a roll
Just a roll on your drum
Just a roll, just a roll
And the war has begun

Now the right thing's the wrong thing
No more excuses to come
Just one step at a time
And the war has begun

She's run away, she's run away
And she ran so bitterly
Now call to your colours, friend
Don't you call to me

Don't you cry, don't you cry
Don't you cry upon the sea
Don't you cry, don't you cry
For your lady and me

Sólo un rol, sólo un rol
Sólo un rol en tu tambor
Sólo un rol, sólo un rol
Y la guerra ha comenzado.

Ahora lo correcto es lo incorrecto
No pongas más excusas
Sólo un paso a la vez
Y la guerra ha comenzado.

Ella ha escapado, se ha escapado
Y ella corrió con tanta amargura
Busca ahora a tus colores, amigo
No me busques a mi.

No llores, no llores
No llorar sobre el mar
No llores, no llores
Por tu dama y por mi.

EL L.P. QUE CONTIENE LA ROLA


LADO A
1. "Walk Awhile"
2. "Doctor of Physick"
3. "Dirty Linen"
4. "Sloth"


LADO B
1. "Sir Patrick Spens"
2. "Flatback Caper"
3. "Poor Will And The Jolly Hangman"
4. "Flowers of the Forest"


En 1970 Fairport Convention edita Full House, su quinto álbum y el primero sin voces femeninas lo que vuelve su sonido más duro y cercano al rock. Tras una drástica renovación que implicó que Sandy Denny, una de las voces más aclamadas del Folk inglés, dejara a la banda para formar Fotheringay, Ashley ‘Tyger’ Hutchings, el bajista original del grupo, inicia su periplo cómo el Padrino del folk inglés al abandonar Fairport para fundar otro de los grupos esenciales del folk británico: Steeleye Span, al tiempo que el excelente guitarrista Richard Thompson decide iniciar su sorprendente carrera como solista. Ante tal desbandada llega al grupo quien se consolidará como su bajista de planta desde entonces a la fecha: Dave Pegg, quien por una larga temporada también tocó con Jethro Tull.

Como su predecesor, Full House contiene algunas canciones Folk tradicionales agrupadas en un par de potpurrís: "Dirty Linen" y "Flatback Caper". El disco posee constantes variaciones rítmicas encontrando temas de gran vitalidad como "Walk Awhile" y "Sir Patrick Spens", basadas en ritmos tradicionales, y otras más relajadas e instrospectivas como "Doctor of Physick" y "Flowers of the Forest" y la mítica Sloth.

Allmusic lo describe como un álbum más excitante y visceral que el mítico Liege & Lief, su antecesor aunque no tan importante como aquel. Full House entró a la lista de álbumes más vendidos en el Reino Unido el 18 de Julio de 1970, en donde se mantuvo por 11 semanas, alcanzando el puesto número 13. La revista Rolling Stone publicó entonces: "Fairport Convention mejor que nunca...el equivalente Inglés de The Band...ellos han integrado la tradición en su CountryFolk manteniendo raíces en el Rock".

Las notas del disco, a cargo de Richard Thompson, y describen una partida de cartas con distintos personajes, de allí el título del disco

INTÉRPRETE

Fairport Convention: Londres

Fairport Convention was the most famous British folk revival band, even if they were probably the less artistically skilled. They embodied the quintessence of this movement, who rarely could depart from its revival trait.

The band was formed in 1967, in the underground clubs of London, by a group of folk musicians, Richard Thompson (guitarist), Ian Matthews (singer) and Ashley Hutchings (bassist). Their first album was Fairport Convention (Polydor, 1968), a mixture of original songs and covers from American folksingers. Following the suggestions of their producer, Joe Boyd, the band recruited singer Sandy Denny (who had formerly played in the Strawbs), abandoned all Byrds’ clichés and gave preference to the writing of original songs. Denny’s Fotheringay and Thompson’s Meet On The Ledge enhanced their repertoire in What We Did On Our Holidays (Island, 1968), while Who Knows Where The Time Goes (Denny) and Genesis Hall (Thompson) where the main gems of Unhalfbricking (1970). This album also included a "progressive" arrangement of the traditional A Sailor’s Life. By her own side, Denny had one of the most peculiar voice of his era, inventing a style that will influence the following generations (for example, Kate Bush and Tori Amos). Other material (mainly covers) is included in Heyday (Hannibal, 1987 - Island, 2002).

Violinist Dave Swarbrick (a folk veteran, who had also worked with Martin Carthy) filled the gap left by Matthews’ departure. This talented group turned to play traditional songs, and produced a concept album Liege And Lief (A&M, 1970), that can be considered the British folk-rock manifesto. Modern arrangements, sharp-witted rhythms, and the duets between Swarbrick and Thompson transformed this traditional folk songs into something original and meaningful, in particular in the grand folk suites like Matty Groves and Tam Lin. Undeniably it’s a great folk album, but a poor rock album.

The band soon lost Denny and Hutchings who began independent careers (Fotheringay and Steeleye Span). So, Full House (1970) is primarily a Swarbrick’s and Thompson’s effort. This folk rock album (more folk than rock) contains the catchy Walk Awhile and the best grand folk suite of the band, Sloth, two gems of Thompson’s repertoire. In the same year, bass player Dave Pegg joined the band.

Fairport Convention es quizás la banda ícono del FolkRock Europeo, formada en Londres en mayo de 1967 se ha mantenido a través del tiempo y varios cambios en su formación hasta el día de hoy. Inicialmente la banda fue parte de la escena musical Undergroud de Londres, presentándose en salas como The Electric Garden, Middle Earth y el UFO Club, y llevaba solo algunos meses tocando cuando el visionario productor Joe Boyd les aseguró un contrato con Island Records.

Boyd les sugiere que integren a la banda un vocalista hombre que acompañase a la etérea voz de Judy Dyble, y así a fines de 1967 sacan al mercado su debut homónimo, con influencias y covers de Joni Mitchell, Bob Dylan y The Byrds. Luego de escazas ventas Judy Dyble abandona la banda y es reemplazada por Sandy Denny, ex Strawbs, quien otorgaría una voz de tono más bajo e intensa que su predecesora, y que se convertiría en uno de los elementos distintivos de la banda. Con ella sacarían al mercado los discos "What We Did On Our Holidays" y "Unhalfbricking", ambos en 1969. Con un creciente éxito comercial y un estilo musical cada vez más afiatado, la tragedia visitó a la banda cuando en Mayo de 1969, y a vuelta de un concierto en Birmingham, la van del grupo chocó en la autopista y el baterista Martin Lamble (19) y la novia del guitarrista Richard Thompson, murieron en el accidente. Se pensó en disolver la banda, pero finalmente recuperados de la desgracia volvieron al estudio para grabar el que sería su disco más aclamado: Liege And Lief, el cual se ha convertido en un ícono del FolkRock británico y convirtió a este en un género distintivo e influyente.

A pesar del triunfo de este album, Sandy Denny y Ashley Hutchings deciden dejar la banda para pasar a formar parte de Fotheringay y Steeleye Span respectivamente. Dave Pegg tomó el puesto al bajo, y la banda decidió que reemplazar a Denny sería imposible por lo que decidieron seguir solo con voces masculinas.

Así, en 1970 editan Full House, el cual es mi favorito de la banda, y uno de sus más reconocidos. Sin las voces femeninas el sonido de la banda se vuelve mas duro y de matiz rockero. Sandy Denny fue una de las voces más aclamadas del movimiento Folk inglés, en el cual la participación femenina encontró un nicho muy productivo y fue notoriamente superior que en otros movimientos musicales contemporáneos. Sin embargo personalmente encuentro que las voces femeninas del FolkRock no entregan la potencia del lado Rockero, y han pasado con mayor dificultad la barrera del tiempo.