Byker Hill

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Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 40:14

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Steve Hochman

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Steve Hochman has been a music critic since he was 7 -- when the Beatles came to America -- but didn't turn pro until he was 27. He covered pop music for the L....more »

04.22.11
The best starting point for the legendary Martin Carthy.
1993 | Label: Topic / IODA

The name Carthy figures heavily in modern English folk music, with Martin's 40-year presence as an unassuming titan foremost. All of his many albums and projects are rewarding, but this 1967 album with fiddler Swarbrick (later of Fairport Convention) may be the best starting point. In his voice and hands, the tales of working folk, farmers, punters and adventurers are not of some long-gone past, but of the moment. His odd-angled cadences and inflections, both with his masterful guitar work and in his naturale singing approach remain to this day instantly recognizable. At the time of this album he was a pioneer whose impact (Bob Dylan took Carthy's version of "Lord Franklin" as the basis for "Bob Dylan's Dream" and he taught Paul Simon "Scarborough Fair") far outstripped his own modest fame. Highlights of this album include the pastoral "Brigg Fair," the morose "Lucy Wan" and one of several crucial Topic versions of "John Barleycorn."

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The Real Thing

jmbailey

This guy is about as close to the source of British folk as you can get. His arrangements enhance the songs greatly, his guitar playing is clean, intricate and interesting, and his vocals are unusually musical compared to most folk "legends". You will be glad you downloaded this, one of his top early albums!

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By Steve Hochman, eMusic Contributor

"Music should be used as a tool of revolution, in a cultural and educational sense" is the stated mission of English folk-centric Topic Records, staking claim on the title of "probably the oldest independent record label in the world" with a 1939 gestation in the Socialist-leaning Workers Music Association. But the very first title released by Topic was not concerned with dry propaganda, but rather too-wet ale: Paddy Ryan's "The Man the Waters the Worker's… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Byker Hill was the first album on which Carthy and Swarbrick had more than two or three hours’ studio time, and, as a result, which was actually rehearsed and programmed weeks in advance. The results are less spontaneous than their earlier work, but also show a level of professionalism that few folk albums of the era ever demonstrated. The differences lie in the careful nuances, and the sophistication of the paired voice and instruments, which are much more studied than anything previously heard. The music is glorious in its own unassuming way–Carthy’s acapella performance on the haunting “Brigg Fair” (a Lincolnshire tune originally collected by Percy Grainger, and which was the basis for a classical piece by Frederick Delius), the interweaving of Carthy’s voice and Swarbrick’s violin on “The Bloody Gardener,” the dazzling title track, and maybe the best version of “John Barleycorn” ever recorded, are among 14 of the most prized songs in their careers. – Bruce Eder

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