Forest - Forest / Full Circle (Reissue) (1969-70/1994)

  • 17 Jun, 09:23
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Artist:
Title: Forest / Full Circle
Year Of Release: 1969-70/1994
Label: BGO Records
Genre: Folk Rock, Psychedelic Rock
Quality: APE (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 45:46 + 43:10
Total Size: 529 Mb (scans)
WebSite:

Forest - Forest / Full Circle (Reissue) (1969-70/1994)


Tracklist:

Forest (1969):
1. Bad Penny
2. Glade Somewhere
3. Lovemakers' Ways
4. While You're Gone
5. Sylvie (We'd Better Not Pretend)
6. Fantasy You
7. Fading Light
8. Do You Want Some Smoke?
9. Don't Want to Go
10. Nothing Else Will Matter
11. Mirror of Life
12. Rain Is on My Balcony

Full Circle (1970):
1. Hawk the Hawker
2. Bluebell
3. Midnight Hanging of a Runaway Serf
4. To Julie
5. Gypsy Girl & Rambleway
6. Do Not Walk in the Rain
7. Much Ado About Nothing
8. Graveyard
9. Famine Song
10. Autumn Childhood

Line-up::
Derek Allenby - mandolin, whistle, harmonica, percussion, vocals
Hadrian Welham - guitar, violin, bass, cello, percussion, whistle, vocals
Martin Welham - guitar, 12 string guitar, piano, violin, whistle, harmonium, electric harpsichord, percussion, vocals
Guest musician:Gordon Huntley - steel guitar (1)

The Incredible String Band was nothing more than a cult act in the U.S., so it may come as a surprise to American listeners that the ISB actually spawned imitators on their home turf. Forest was the most faithful of these, releasing a couple albums of medieval-hippie minstrelsy in 1969-1970. Each member of the trio (Martin Welham, Derek Allenby, and Hadrian Welham) was a multi-instrumentalist, playing not just the expected guitars, but harmonium, harpsichord, pipes, whistle, organ, and mandolin. If the group lacked the electricity and drums associated with rock, at the same time they could not be associated with the straight folk scene; their lyrics were too strange, and their approach too eclectic.

Full Circle Through the recommendation of top British DJ John Peel, Forest found a home on Harvest, the pioneering U.K. progressive rock label. Their first, self-titled LP was an Incredible String Band clone; while it may have been somewhat less grating than the ISB at their most excessive, it also was not as innovative or imaginative as the ISB at their best. Their second and, as it turned out, final effort (Full Circle, 1970) was an improvement, finding their songwriting skills improving substantially, and their arrangements becoming more diverse and original.



  • tommy554
  •  21:55
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thanks a lot for lossless
  • mufty77
  •  11:53
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Many thanks for lossless.
  • whiskers
  •  13:45
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Many Thanks