Post Description
John Martyn – On The Cobbles (2004)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 303 Mb (incl 5%) |
Genre: British Folk-Rock, Blues, Psychedelic | Label: Independiente | # ISOM 43CD | Time: 00:45:20
John Martyn's On the Cobbles is the warmest of folky blues, consistently impressive despite being recorded in eight different studios across England, Ireland and the USA. Occasionally, as with the sparse and haunted Ghosts, he even reaches the atmospheric peaks of his classic Solid Air. As is the fashion, there are several auspicious guests--Mavis Staples, Paul Weller and the Verve's Nick McCabe--but, really, none of them add much to a set that's alternately tortured, spacey and hugely romantic. Martyn is unarguably the star of this show, excelling both as the gruff blues moaner and soft balladeer, but also testing different ground with the Pink Floyd ambience of "Go Down Easy", the spiritual jazz of "My Creator" and the dark, rootsy "Cobbles", the latter's mournful backing vocals recalling those of Nick Cave and his Bad Seeds.
John Martyn is truly a survivor. Having in the past overcome such setbacks as a burst pancreas and a head-on collision with a cow, 2003 saw him suffer an undiscovered cyst that led to his right leg being amputated below the knee. Yet still his comeback, begun with the classy Glasgow Walker, continues. Martyn's ongoing trials have clearly given him a deeper appreciation of life and love as well as a painful understanding of the blues. His losses are our gain.
Martyn's first album of new material in four years might be short (around 45 minutes), and one of the tracks has appeared before ("Baby Come Home," which was on a tribute to Scots singer Frankie Miller), but it's eminently satisfying, especially when you take into account that most of the vocals and guitar work were laid down after Martyn had his right leg amputated in spring 2003. He revisits his own past with "Go Down Easy," which was originally on Solid Air, although in this guise it's barely recognizable, transformed from an acoustic frippery into a meandering, atmospheric electric piece (this version was originally recorded in 1992 for a ballet). To the joy of longtime fans, there's plenty of Martyn's acoustic fretboard work on On the Cobbles, although it's not as prominent as it was in the '70s. But the free-and-easy love song "One for the Road" is a joy, as is the wistful "Back to Marseilles." A couple of guests do show up: Paul Weller on "Under My Wing," (arguably the best song Weller never wrote) where the former Jam man sounds nervous in the presence of the Big Man, and Mavis Staples roars on a cover of Leadbelly's "Goodnight Irene," although Martyn really doesn't need her help, putting forth a large, extremely soulful sound himself. His voice is the central thing here, and it continues to become a glorious instrument, slipping and slurring like a tenor horn, and fashioning beautiful lines. That's nowhere more apparent than on the album's two key tracks, "Ghosts" and "My Creator." The former is a meditation of mortality, full of trademark Martyn phrases and ideas, but executed with glowing restraint. "My Creator" is a kind of creed, truly words to live by, and the spiritual heir of "Solid Air." The jazziest cut on the album (former foil Danny Thompson plays double bass on it), it's dominated by horns to create an atmosphere of midnight blue, with Martyn wafting over the top in an irresistible manner. While On the Cobbles might be worth the price for that cut alone, the whole disc is a testament to a man who will never go gently into the good night.
Tracklist:
1. Baby Come Home
2. Under My Wing
3. Ghosts
4. Back to Marseilles
5. Cobbles
6. My Creator
7. One for the Road
8. Go Down Easy
9. Walking Home
10. Goodnight Irene
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Laatst zijn de Island uitgaves gepost, een Box met 17 albums.
Bijzonder mooie box waar extra tracks op toegevoegd zijn en een aantal albums zijn geremasters.
Om het volledig te krijgen heb ik nog een aantal exemplaren gevonden die niet op Island uitgebracht zijn.
Enjoy
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