Folk, Blues And Beyond

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (36 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 21   Total Length: 59:54

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Plucking Brilliant

rolf.b.mr

Wow - we are spoiled if Graham's vocals need an apology in every review of his stuff. Sure he was no Nic Jones or Dick Gaughan but so what? The title of the album nearly says it all. \"Ballad Of The Sad Young Men\" could have been left off in my view, but the rest of it is by turns playful, mysterious, dramatic, wistful. Somehow he manages to make these short songs seem longer than they are. That might sound like a strange compliment but a compliment it is.

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We have lost a legend, folks..

abosloveland

My heart always sinks when we lose someone, whose contibution to the music world, is still being felt thirty years on...he will live on through the everyday discovery of guitarists everywhere. RIP

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Classic

anorak

This is a reissue of the folk baroque classic plus the ep that first featured Angi. This is both historically important and a timeless slice of perfect music. No collection of 20th centuary music is complete without this gem. Try to forgive his rather thin vocals and let the music speak to you. Compare Davy's version of The Ballad of the Sad young Men with Art Pepper's on No Limit. If you ike good guitar playing then this is for you-it is amazing guitar playing.

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They Say All Media Guide

This was Graham’s most groundbreaking and consistent album. More than his solo debut The Guitar Player (which was pretty jazzy) or his previous collaboration with folk singer Shirley Collins, Folk Roots, New Routes, this established his mixture of folk, jazz, blues, and Middle Eastern music, the use of a bassist and drummer also hinting at (though not quite reaching) folk-rock. “Leavin’ Blues,” “Skillet (Good’n'Greasy),” and “Moanin’” are all among his very best folk-blues-rock performances, while on “Maajun” he goes full-bore into Middle Eastern music on one of his most haunting and memorable pieces. Covers of traditional folk standards like “Black Is the Colour of My True Love’s Hair” and “Seven Gypsies” combine with interpretations of compositions by Bob Dylan (“Don’t Think Twice, It’s Alright”), Willie Dixon (“My Babe”), Charles Mingus (“Better Git in Your Soul”), and Reverend Gary Davis (“Cocaine”) for an eclecticism of repertoire that wasn’t matched by many musicians of any sort in the mid-’60s. If there is one aspect of the recording to criticize, it is, as was usually the case with Graham, the thin, colorless vocals. The guitar playing is the main attraction, though; it’s so stellar that it makes the less impressive singing easy to overlook. Ten of the 16 songs were included on the compilation Folk Blues and All Points in Between, but Graham fans should get this anyway, as the level of material and musicianship is pretty high throughout most of the disc. – Richie Unterberger

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