 |
Pentangle - Basket of Light
List Price: $11.98Our Price: $6.33You Save: $5.65 (47%)Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Category: Music CD See more CD details
CD DetailsArtist: Pentangle Edition: Music CD Audio: English (Unknown) Format: Extra tracks CD Release Date: 2008-11-24 Music Label: Sanctuary Soundtracks: - Light Flight
- Once I Had A Sweetheart
- Springtime Promises
- Lyke-Wake Dirge
- Train Song
- Hunting Song
- Sally Go Round The Roses
- The Cuckoo
- House Carpenter
- Sally Go Round The Roses (Alternate Version)
- Sally Go Round The Roses (Alternate Version)
- Cold Mountain (B-Side Single)
- I Saw An Angel (B-Side Single)
Music reviews of Basket of LightMusic Review: Pentangle's best and one of the great albums of the era Rating: 5 Stars
Pentangle were a ridiculously good band, but, as with many so-called "cult" musicians, you might say that they take time to grow on you.
That's how I felt before I heard Basket of Light. But then I heard Basket of Light, which is as awesome, and as accessible, as the band could get.
Pentangle were always a little bit out of time. They were classified as a folk-rock band, but they were really more of a traditional folk band with a jazz rhythm section and, occasionally, some classically sophisticated harmonies and rhythms.
On Basket of Light, the Pentangle still sound like an odd fusion between medieval folk and '40s jazz, but they remind listeners that this music was made in that special decade called the Sixties. Yet the Pentangle were only subtly effected by their era. There are still no fuzzy electric guitars or lyrics about freeing your mind, just a little sitar here, a little echoing harmonies there, and a general sense of experimentation. It's as if they had only picked up the most subtle trends of their time.
The Pentangle were always eclectic, and this album is about as eclectic as they can be. On their debut, they could be described as a "melting pot" of styles, and on Sweet Child, they could be described as both a melting pot and a bargain bin. On Basket of Light, they're a continuous musical journey that spans centuries and continents.
If albums were thrift stores, Sweet Child would be a large Goodwill, but Basket of Light would be an ideal thrift store in London's Camden Town that is small enough to navigate, full of clothes that wouldn't be uncomfortable to wear, and probably doesn't actually exist. Perhaps it was a blessing that this imaginative band of multi-instrumentalists was produced by Shel Talmy, the simple-minded studio genius who also produced the early albums of the Kinks. The songs sound complex without sounding overwhelming and dense. Instruments are just distinct enough without sounding too separate from the whole. A "simple" producer takes this complicated band a long way.
And as for the individual songs? Let's talk about a few of them.
"Light Flight" is a fast, upbeat song with simple lyrics, a classical melody, and a complicated rhythm.
"Once I Had a Sweetheart," is an Anglo-American folk song that, with the help of a glockenspiel, sitar, and some consistent, tight drumming, gets launched into somewhere in outer space. High, clear vocals by Jacqui, and some haunting and unexpected backing vocals by Bert and John at the end, top it all off.
"Springtime Promises" is a song about the changing of moods with the seasons. Like many songs from the sixties, it's about flowers and sunshine. But it doesn't come off like an ode to smoking grass while sitting on grass- it's not in that tradition as much as it is in the tradition of ancient songs and prayers from an era without heat or air-conditioning, when agriculture was supreme. It also features a deep, full, melodic, and enunciated vocal by Bert Jansch. Unlike many critics, I've always thought Bert Jansch has a great, if inconsistent singing voice, and this is certainly one of his most impressive vocal performances.
After "Springtime Promises" comes "Lyke Wake Dirge," which is a pagan/early Christian chant with no real embellishment that manages to sound like it was recorded in a 13th century abbey yet, with the addition of some spare drums and guitar, doesn't sound out of place with the eclecticism of the rest of the album.
"Train Song" has an even more complex rhythm than "Light Flight," and is done without any exotic instruments, because, if it had merely one note of droning sitar or glockenspiel, it would probably be too complex and psychedelic to function.
With "Hunting Song," we're back to the feudal era, although not back quite as far as "Lyke Wake." It's genteel and creepy in a uniquely British way.
Then comes "Sally Go Round the Roses." It's a cover of a '60s girl group song that manages to be both energetic and restrained. If the song came on in a coffee shop, everyone in the place would immediately feel infinitely cooler. Danny Thompson's prominent jazzy bass is key to this effect, but everyone else does their share as well. On this remastered CD edition, we get to hear this one three times!
"The Cuckoo" is a lullaby in which Terry Cox takes out his glockenspiel again, and "House Carpenter" sounds like many of the traditional songs on Sweet Child, but with the key difference that Bert and John trade their guitars for a banjo and a sitar, respectively.
I don't often choose favorites in any subject, and, when I do, I often change my mind. But I doubt that any other Pentangle album will replace this one as my favorite. Pentangle were an always interesting group and just about everything they recorded is worthwhile. But, as much as I like their other albums, if I had to choose only one, I would choose this one without hesitation.
More Basket of Light free music reviews: 1 2
Description of Basket of LightUK remastered reissue of the British folk super-group's 1969 album. Includes 4 bonus tracks, two alternate versions of 'Sally Go Round The Roses', 'Cold Mountain' (B-side single) & 'I Saw An Angel' (B-side single). 2001 release.
|
 |