Martin Carthy featuring Dave Swarbrick - Prince Heathen (1969)

Artist: Martin Carthy, Dave Swarbrick
Title: Prince Heathen
Year Of Release: 1969
Label: Topic
Genre: Folk
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 45:00
Total Size: 258 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Prince Heathen
Year Of Release: 1969
Label: Topic
Genre: Folk
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 45:00
Total Size: 258 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Arthur Mcbride and the Sergeant (3:24)
2. Salisbury Plain (2:51)
3. Polly on the Shore (3:55)
4. The Rainbow (2:49)
5. Died for Love (1:55)
6. Staines Morris (3:26)
7. Reynardine (3:14)
8. Seven Yellow Gypsies (5:14)
9. Little Musgrave and Lady Barnard (9:37)
10. Prince Heathen (6:59)
11. The Wren (1:42)
Review by Bruce Eder
An astonishingly good album coming toward the end of Carthy's original partnership with Dave Swarbrick (they were to join the lineups of Fairport Convention and Steeleye Span, respectively, within a year). The singing is, as always, first rate, nowhere better than on the haunting a cappella songs "Salisbury Plain" and the nine-minute "Little Musgrave and Lady Barnard." Carthy's playing by this time had become less self-consciously complex and more confident, allowing him to accomplish more with less on his guitar. The resulting sound is spare but powerful, particularly on "Arthur McBride and the Sergeant" and "Polly on the Shore" -- his notes seem to chime like little bells on the latter. His playing on "Seven Yellow Gypsies" seems like the work of more than one guitar, and gives one a reason to listen to the song several times, taking in the playing and singing separately. Even more remarkable is the fact that the title track is another of Carthy's cut-and-paste jobs, assembled from fragments and melodies of several incomplete traditional songs.
An astonishingly good album coming toward the end of Carthy's original partnership with Dave Swarbrick (they were to join the lineups of Fairport Convention and Steeleye Span, respectively, within a year). The singing is, as always, first rate, nowhere better than on the haunting a cappella songs "Salisbury Plain" and the nine-minute "Little Musgrave and Lady Barnard." Carthy's playing by this time had become less self-consciously complex and more confident, allowing him to accomplish more with less on his guitar. The resulting sound is spare but powerful, particularly on "Arthur McBride and the Sergeant" and "Polly on the Shore" -- his notes seem to chime like little bells on the latter. His playing on "Seven Yellow Gypsies" seems like the work of more than one guitar, and gives one a reason to listen to the song several times, taking in the playing and singing separately. Even more remarkable is the fact that the title track is another of Carthy's cut-and-paste jobs, assembled from fragments and melodies of several incomplete traditional songs.
Download Link Isra.Cloud
Martin Carthy - Prince Heathen FLAC.rar - 258.6 MB
Martin Carthy - Prince Heathen FLAC.rar - 258.6 MB