This Review And 225 Others Is Available In My AMAZON E-Book
BOTH SIDES NOW - FOLK & COUNTRY
And Genres Thereabouts
Your Guide To Exceptional CD Reissues and Remasters
For the 1960s and 1970s
All Reviews In-Depth and from the Discs Themselves
(No Cut And Paste Crap)
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"...The Time Has Come... "
In July 2020, it's easy to
be blasé about these British John Renbourn 60ts albums (originally on
Transatlantic and Fontana Records) and their digital availability (most of his
Solo LPs outside of Pentangle have been in the CD marketplace as Remasters
since 2001 and 2002).
But I worked as a Rarities
Buyer and Mail Order Manager at Reckless Records in Soho for near 20 years
servitude and while you would occasionally see "Bert And John" or
"Another Monday" or maybe even "Sir John Alot..." – the two
Dorris Henderson album collaborations never ever showed up. Both are listed in
the Record Collector Rare Record Price Guide at high three-figure sums – if you
can find copies. His first album debut too from March 1966 has always been
legendarily hard to find.
So this dinky little mother
load from Cherry Tree of the UK (part of the Cherry Red Group of labels -
Cherry Tree deals mostly with Folk) that rounds up six-albums plus eleven
bonuses is astonishingly good value for money for any newcomer to this giant of
British Acoustic Folk. And it sounds the biz-snitz too. So once more ye
Grene-horns unto the Merrie Knyghte and his Musyk Thyng...
UK released 31 May 2019 -
"Unpentangled: The Sixties Albums" by JOHN RENBOURN (with Bert Jansch
of Pentangle and Dorris Henderson) on Cherry Tree CRTREEBOX023 (Barcode
5013929692305) is a 6CD Mini Clamshell Box Set with Six Albums, Eleven Bonus
Tracks, Mini LP Card Sleeves and A 24-Page Booklet. Featuring First Generation
Master Tape Remasters from 1999, 2001 and 2005 Mastered in 2019 by OLI
HEMINGWAY - it plays out as follows:
CD1 (49:42 minutes): Doris
Henderson and John Renbourn – "There You Go!"
February 1966 UK LP on
Columbia SX 6001 in Mono (Tracks 1 to 17)
1. Sally Free And Easy [Side
1]
2. Single Girl
3. Ribbon Bow
4. Cotton Eyed Joe
5. Mr. Tambourine Man
6. Mist On The Mountain
7. The Lag's Song
8. American Jail Song
9. The Water Is Wide
10. Something Lonesome [Side
2]
11. Song (Falling Star)
12. Winter Is Gone
13. Strange Lullaby
14. You're Gonna Need
Somebody On Your Bond
15. One Morning In May
16. A Banjo Tune
17. Going To Memphis
BONUS TRACKS:
18. The Leaves Are Green
19. The Hangman
Tracks 18 and 19 are the
non-album A&B-sides of a May 1965 UK 45 Single on Columbia DB 7567. It was
first issued digitally January 1999 in the UK for the CD reissue of "There
You Go!" on Ace/Big Beat CDWIKD 186 (Barcode 029667418621). The 1999
Remaster for this whole album is licensed from Ace Records.
CD2 (54:20 minutes): John
Renbourn – "John Renbourn"
March 1966 UK LP on
Transatlantic TRA 135 in Mono (Tracks 1-15)
1. Judy [Side 1]
2. Beth's Blues
3. Song
4. Down On The Barge
5. John Henry
6. Plainsong
7. Louisiana Blues
8. Blue Bones
9. Train Tune [Side 2]
10. Candy Man
11. The Wildest Pig In
Captivity
12. National Seven
13. Motherless Children
14. Winter Is Gone
15. Nosh And Rabbit
BONUS TRACKS:
16. The Wildest Pig In
Captivity (Alternate Version)
17. Can't Keep From Crying
18. Blues Run The Game
19. Lucky Thirteen
Tracks 16 to 19 first issued
November 2001 in the UK as Bonus Tracks for the CD reissue of "John
Renbourn" on Castle Music CMRCD 359 (Barcode 5050159135929). Track 19
"Lucky Thirteen" also from the Bert Jansch UK album, "It Don't
Bother Me" – December 1965 on Transatlantic TRA 132 in Mono (it's written
by Renbourn and he plays second guitar on it too). The Remaster from 2001 is
used for this CD.
CD3 (30:15 minutes): Bert
Jansch and John Renbourn - "Bert And John"
September 1966 UK LP on
Transatlantic TRA 144 in Stereo (Tracks 1-12)
1. East Wind [Side 1]
2. Piano Tune
3. Goodbye Pork Pie Hat
4. Soho
5. Tic-Tocative
6. Orlando
7. Red's Favourite [Side 2]
8. No Exit
9. Along The Way
10. The Time Has Come
11. Stepping Stones
12. After The Dance
BONUS TRACK:
13. The Waggoner's Lad -
from the September 1966 Bert Jansch UK LP "Jack Orion" on
Transatlantic TRA 143 – John Renbourn plays Second Guitar on this album
opener.
CD4 (27:59 minutes): John
Renbourn – "Another Monday"
November 1966 UK LP on
Transatlantic TRA 149 (Tracks 1 to 12)
1. Another Monday
2. Ladye Nothinge's Toye Puffe
3. I Know My Babe
4. Waltz
5. Lost Lover Blues
6. One For William
7. Buffalo [Side 2]
8. Sugar Babe
9. Debbie Anne
10. Can't Help From Crying
11. Day At The Seaside
12. Nobody's Fault But Mine
All tracks written by Renbourn
except 3, 5, 8, 10 and 12 which are Traditional Songs and Blues covers.
Tracks 1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 9 and
11 are instrumentals
Renbourn sings Lead Vocals
on Tracks 3 and 8 and duet vocals with Jacqui McShee [later with Pentangle] on
Tracks 5, 10 and 12
CD5 (41:16 minutes): Dorris
Henderson with John Renbourn – "Watch The Stars"
February 1967 UK LP on
Fontana STL 5385 in Stereo (Tracks 1-15)
1. When You Hear Them
Cuckoos Hollerin' [Side 1]
2. It's Been A Long Time
3. 30 Days In Jail
4. No More My Lord
5. Watch The Stars
6. There's Anger In This
Land
7. Mosaic Patterns
8. Tomorrow Is A Long Time
9. For Lovin' Me [Side 2]
10. Come Up Horsey
11. God Bless The Child
12. The Time Has Come
13. Poems Of Solitude: Poems
Of My Heart/Eighteen Tedious Ways/Magic String
14. Lonely Mood
15. Gonna Tell My Lord
BONUS TRACK:
16. Message To Pretty -
March 1967 Non-Album A-side of a UK 45 on Fontana TF 811 ("Watch The
Stars" album track was the B-side). "Message To Pretty" first
issued as a Bonus Track in September 2005 for the CD reissue of "Watch The
Stars" on Fledg'ling Records FLED 3055 (Barcode 5020393305525). The 2005
Remaster is used for all of this CD.
CD6 (37:47 minutes): John
Renbourn - "Sir John Alot Of Merrie Englandes Musyk Thyng & Ye Grene
Knyghte"
June 1968 UK LP on
Transatlantic TRA 167 in Stereo (Tracks 1-10)
1. The Earle Of Salisbury
[Side 1]
2. The Trees They Do Grow
High
3. Lady Goes To Church
4. Morgana
5. Transfusion [Side 2]
6. Forty-Eight
7. My Dear Boy
8. White Fishes
9. Sweet Potato
10. Seven Up
BONUS TRACKS:
11. The Earle Of Salisbury
(Alternative Version)
12. Transfusion (Alternative
Version)
13. Forty-Eight (Alternative
Version)
Tracks 11 to 13 are Album
Outtakes first UK released digitally in November 2002 for the CD reissue of
"Sir John Alot..." on Castle Music CMRCD 597 (Barcode 5050159159727).
Terry Cox of Pentangle plays percussion instruments on the album and outtakes.
The 2002 Remaster is used for this CD.
As you can see from the
detailed list provide above – all six have been out on CD before with Remasters
licensed from Ace, BMG (who handled Sanctuary) and Fledg'ling Records. Dating
from 1999, 2001, 2002 and 2005 – all are newly mastered in 2019 by OLI
HEMINGWAY for Cherry Tree. The Sanctuary, Ace and Fledg'ling reissues were all
remastered from original Mono and Stereo tapes and as fans will have known for
years – the audio is gorgeous – Bill Leader and his original production values
shining through. Each of these albums is filled with a mixture of Sixties UK
Folk, Acoustic Folk, Acoustic Blues, World Music, Acoustic Old Timey Country,
Ancient Instrumentals and Traditionals of all sorts. This is lovely music to
listen to on CD and at about four-quid an album – amazing value for money too.
You know you're in the presence
of class when the 24-page booklet features the Royal Festival Hall poster for
27 May 1967 where Marquee Productions invite you to an evening of the Blues
with the first appearance from 'The Pentangle' – Bert Jansch and John Renbourn
on Guitars, Jacqui McShee on Vocals, Danny Thompson on Bass and Terry Cox on
Drums. Many of these band-mate troubadours would of course join Renbourn on
these solo albums. With an essay by DAVID WELLS that acknowledges COLIN HARPER
(a world authority on Pentangle and Solo releases) – the booklet compliments
the text with double-page spreads of period stuff - trade adverts for gigs, the
Sir John A lot LP release, pictures of the beautiful Dorris Henderson and a
smiling Jacqui McShee, LP labels on Transatlantic and Fontana, demo copies of
the rare 45s and so on. The CD label designs reflect the original Transatlantic
and Fontana British LP colourings where relevant and the Singular Mini LP
sleeves give full track lists (including bonuses) and discography info on the
rear. It's all very tasty and thoughtfully done...
It opens on the very Joan
Baez meets Judy Henske meets Doris Troy vocals of Dorris Henderson as she goes
booms her way through "Sally Free And Easy" - a Cyril Tawney cover
accompanied by the quiet Simon & Garfunkel acoustic guitar of Renbourn.
They then go after three Traditionals - "Single Girl" (with leaking
shoes), "Ribbon Bow" (own true love) and "Cotton Eyed Joe"
(came for to show you my diamond ring) - before hitting the American Folk Man
of the moment - Dylan and his hey "Mr. Tambourine Man". Other goodies
include the beautiful Traditional "The Water Is Wide", a welcome
acoustic Blues of Robert Johnson's "You're Need Somebody On Your
Bond" while a convict sitting in the buck house playing guitar dreams of
"Going To Memphis" - Renbourn's playing fabulous.
Future Pentangle cohort Bert
Jansch plays on two tracks of John Renbourn's self-titled solo LP issued in
March 1966 - "Blue Bones" and "Noah And Rabbit". Produced
by Transatlantic's main man Nathan Joseph – the styles are mixed and genre
cool. We go from Blind Boy Fuller's sugar woman in "Beth's Blues"
through a John Donne poem put to music in "Song" – the American
lonesome cry "John Henry" ballad done in bottleneck style - while
Iain Matthews of Matthews Southern Comfort (after he left Fairport Convention)
would name his 1972/1973 band after the gorgeous instrumental
"Plainsong". The two Jansch collaborations feel so much better for
the duelling guitars especially "Noah And Rabbit" and amongst the Bonus
cuts is the truly gorgeous early Paul Simon song "Blues Run The
Game" - a tune Jackson C. Frank
would cover of his Paul Simon-produced debut album in 1965 on Columbia Records.
It never featured on an officially released S&G LP but an outtake of this fab
little acoustic roller turned up on the Simon and Garfunkel "Old
Friends" and subsequent "The Collection" Box Sets (Frank and
S&G are both reviewed in this e-book). Hell even the collaboration
instrumental "Lucky Thirteen" from the Bert Jansch December 1965
album "It Doesn't Bother Me" tagged on to Disc 2 as a Bonus is
exactly that - an actual worthy extra.
"East Wind" opens
with rattling strings as acoustic guitars do battle – the instrumental actually
feeling like the ebb and flow of its title. But there is lay a problem.
Reviewers had heard this type of short strummers album before and had deemed
that neither Jansch nor Renbourn possessed a voice decent enough to carry a
tune (I'd disagree). But, despite its mainly instrumental pieces being described
at the time as "...a pleasant unmemorable record... " by some such
reporter – softly-softly melodies contained within tunes like "Song"
and "Along The Way" and their September 1966 simplicity - feels like
a breath of acoustic Folk air in the clutter of July 2020. In much the same
way, "Stepping Stones" string-pings out of your speakers with a
subtle muscularity – great playing that is still musical. I love it. And how
cool is it to hear the lovely Anne Briggs ballad "The Time Has Come"
be given such a sympathetic rendering. The singular bonus is a genuine gem –
"The Waggoner's Lad". The opening cut to the Bert Jansch solo album
"Jack Orion" is a banjo-driven strummer like say 1970's "Gallows
Pole" that I'm sure Jimmy Page 'borrowed' (instrument and all) for some
Zeppelin song somewhere down the line. Simple, sweet and subtle - "Bert
And John" is an album worth rediscovering in my book.
At a piddly twenty-eight
minutes, Renbourn's official second solo album "Another Monday" is
hardly guilty of Prog excess when it comes to playing time, but it does
'...throw its arms around you like a circle around the sun...' as the great man
sings in "I Know My Babe". Platter no. 2 "Another Monday"
is a beautifully even-handed album - a cool breeze listen all the way through
and I for one love his voice even though there were those at the time that
slagged it off and would have paid him good money to never open his gob again
(one went ballistic generous, taking all of his might to describe JR as a
'pleasant enough singer'). That cruel assessment was balls IMO because when you
listen to his three duets with future Pentangle leading light Jacqui McShee on
"Lost Lover Blues", "Can't Keep From Crying" and
"Nobody's Fault But Mine" - the combo of their voices produced magic
to my ears. Throw in the instrumental "One For William" where he
accompanies himself on Oboe of all things using the ponderous pseudonym
'Jennifer d0e Montforte-Jones' and you get some trippy Acid Folk moments that
also touch on a slight Jazz vibe.
It opens with two short
instrumental originals - "Another Monday" and "Ladye Nothinge's
Toye Puffe" - loveliness that flows over you sweetly (he revisited
"Ladye..." on "The Nine Maidens" album in 1985). Renbourn
sings "I Know My Babe" - a Blues Traditional that James Taylor based
"Circle 'Round The Sun" on when he covered it too on his 1968 Apple
Records debut "James Taylor". Renbourn's picking, his warm-toned
vocal delivery and the "...sun's gonna shine..." lyrics all combine
to make a fast-paced Acoustic mini masterpiece out of "I Know My
Babe". But of all the instrumentals on the LP - his own "Waltz"
is by far the most hair-raisingly brilliant - feeling like some lost Blues
Speeder on some forgotten Folkways LP of the early Fifties (and you can so hear
where Page nicked a few licks for Zeppelin). A cover of Blind Boy Fuller's
"Lost Lover Blues" becomes the first of three featuring Jacqui McShee
on duet vocals with Renbourn - sure ain't got no lovin' baby now. Combined with
Renbourn moonlighting as the po-faced pseudonym Jennifer de Montforte-Jones the
'Oboe' player - the Acid Folk instrumental of "One For William" ends
Side 1 on a high.
"Watch The Stars"
is even harder to locate than their first Henderson & Renbourn LP outing
but is a much better album, so consequently listed for more (£200 and higher).
Henderson still had the Judy Henske stomping-woman power in her vocal range but
had wisely paired it back and the unplugged feel to the songs comes courtesy of
Danny Thompson of Pentangle being the only other musician on the LP (playing
his Double-Bass). Rod Stewart would cover the gorgeous Bob Dylan song
"Tomorrow Is A Long Time" on his 1971 masterpiece "Every Picture
Tells A Story" – maybe he heard the delicate Henderson and Renbourn
rendition on this February 1967 LP. The pretty continues with Henderson's own
"Lonely Mood" – a hugely accomplished ballad (why hasn't someone
covered this?). Amongst the covers she tackles Billie Holiday's "God Bless
The Child" – her tremulous voice sweetly controlled. She lets it rip a tad
with the Gordon Lightfoot cut "For Lovin’ Me" while she slurs drunk
and dirty on the incarceration tune "30 Days In Jail". Her beliefs
get her most passionate vocal for the Side 2 finisher "Gonna Tell My
Lord" – wake the dead – while the stand-alone single "Message To
Pretty" sounds like a Mamas & Papas pop-song outtake with harmonica
fills from a different time. Don't need you to help me find my way...sounds
great too.
Apart from a slew of
originals, Renbourn tackles Booker T. & The MG's and their "Sweet
Potato" on his wittily titled "Sir John Alot..." - the name of
the album actually all run into one word on original Transatlantic LP labels.
He co-writes the excellent "Forty-Eight" and "Seven Up"
with Drummer Terry Cox of Pentangle while "The Trees They Do Grow
High" is a ye-olde Traditional. Amidst the Bonus cuts my fave 'Alternative
Version' is that of the Side 1 opener "The Earle Of Salisbury" –
clever playing.
Dorris Henderson would join Eclection while both Jansch and Renbourn would enjoy long and prosperous solo careers outside of Pentangle into the Naughties.
True Renbourn loons will already have all six of the previously issued CDs, but those wanting to know why British Folk created so much excitement back in the day (and dare we say it, was even cool) should look no further than this ample bosom of Merrie Acoustic John-tasticness - one of only a handful of artists to release four albums in one year (1966). Brilliant and then some...
True Renbourn loons will already have all six of the previously issued CDs, but those wanting to know why British Folk created so much excitement back in the day (and dare we say it, was even cool) should look no further than this ample bosom of Merrie Acoustic John-tasticness - one of only a handful of artists to release four albums in one year (1966). Brilliant and then some...
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