Sir John Alot...

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Sir John Alot... album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 31:39

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Guitar virtuosity...

Weegee

Is it traditional? Is it folk? Is it jazz? That and more. It’s guitar virtuosity. An all instrumental album of traditional and original pieces recorded with help of a fellow Pentagle bandmate. It starts off with the Medieval/early music, “Merry Englandes Musyk Thynge” (the album’s subtitle) sound and then gets up-tempo and jazzy/bluesy. Different sounds, but he’s a master at both. I especially like Terry Cox’s accompanying percussion - African Drums, Finger Cymbals, Glockenspiel… This album never gets old. It has energy and no distracting vocals.

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just what I was looking for

Spencerrr

This is a good reference point for seeing what role Renbourn played in Pentangle. Required listening for Pentangle fans. It's worth downloading if only for his excellent treatment of "The Trees They Do Grow High"

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MrE

I love John Renbourn. One of the few artists I can just put on and listen to all day. And this is my favorite album of his. Some great guitar playing here.

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They Say 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. – Bruce Eder

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