Fairport Convention - Gladys' Leap (1986)

  • 24 Aug, 09:11
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Artist:
Title: Gladys' Leap
Year Of Release: 1986
Label: Talking Elephant Records
Genre: Folk Rock
Quality: mp3 320 kbps / flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 00:38:47
Total Size: 90 / 226 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. How Many Times
02. Bird From The Mountain
03. Honour And Praise
04. The Hiring Fair
05. Instrumental Medley '85
06. My Feet Are Set For Dancing
07. Wat Tyler
08. Head In A Sack

Though their annual reunion concerts meant that they never really went away, Fairport Convention (now down to a trio of guitarist/vocalist Simon Nicol, bassist Dave Pegg, and returning drummer Dave Mattacks) officially reconvened in 1985 for this, their first proper studio album in seven years. A good album in its own right, Gladys' Leap was also important for establishing a tradition that was adhered to on the following decade's worth of Fairport Convention releases (i.e., the tradition of bringing in modern British folk composers to help with the songwriting). On this album, it's legendary folk artist Ralph McTell who rises to the formidable challenge of writing with the band who practically invented British folk-rock; he ends up co-writing not one, but two genuine Fairport Convention classics, The Hiring Fair and Wat Tyler. Both these terrific story songs sound as authentically old English as any of the band's traditional numbers, and are sung and played with flair and passion. The rest of the album isn't bad either: former Fairport Convention member Richard Thompson stops by to write one number and play some hot guitar on another, Cathy LeSurf shows up to sing her own poppy My Feet Are Set for Dancing, and future bandmember Ric Sanders is on hand to play violin on several tracks, subbing for the absent Dave Swarbrick. About the only thing on the album that doesn't work, in fact, is the alternately boring and lumbering Instrumental Medley '85, in which Dave Mattacks' drums are way, way too far up in the mix. But other than that, Gladys' Leap is pretty good Fairport Convention -- which, as any British folk-rock fan knows, is high honor and praise indeed.


  • whiskers
  •  20:46
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Many Thanks
  • mufty77
  •  16:39
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Many thanks.