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Sir John Alot...

Sir John Alot...

Average: (4 votes)

Review

by Bruce Eder, All Music Guide

An instrumental album (originally called Sir John Alot of Merrie England) featuring John Renbourn with his Pentangle bandmate Terry Cox on percussion and Ray Warleigh on flute. Originally released in England in 1968, the same year that Pentangle started to record, Sir John Alot was steeped largely in English folk music. Highlights include "The Trees They Do Grow High" (aka "Long A-Growing"), solo guitar miniatures such as "Lady Goes to Church," the epic "Morgana," with its sharply nuanced tempo and timbre changes, and the sprightly "My Dear Boy." Some parts of this album are surprisingly contemporary sounding, such as the bluesy "Transformation," which sounds like "What'd I Say" transposed for acoustic guitar and African drums; "White Fishes," which veers dangerously close to quoting George Gershwin's "It Ain't Necessarily So" and Rodgers & Hammerstein's "My Favorite Things"; and "Sweet Potato," which sounds like a folk-rock song without words, even as Renbourn quotes "Satisfaction" at one point.

  Listen Track Name Length Download
1. Listen  The Earle Of Salisbury 1:23 Download
2. Listen  The Trees They Do Grow High 3:37 Download
3. Listen  Lady Goes To Church 2:53 Download
4. Listen  Morgana 7:29 Download
5. Listen  Transfusion 2:02 Download
6. Listen  Forty-Eight 2:55 Download
7. Listen  My Dear Boy 1:19 Download
8. Listen  White Fishes 2:51 Download
9. Listen  Sweet Potato 3:23 Download
10. Listen  Seven Up 3:48 Download

Total Length: 31:40

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