His first guest spot was to provide guitar on Al Stewart's 'Love Chronicles' album, most notably the lovely solo at the end of 'Life And Life Only', and he also played on Nick Drake's 'Five Leaves Left' and 'Bryter Later' albums, from which I've picked the classic 'Time Has Told Me'. Marc Ellington is a Scottish folksinger and multi-instrumentalist who has guested with Fairport Convention, starting with providing some vocal support on the 'Unhalfbricking' album in 1969, and he also worked with Matthews Southern Comfort on their self-titled album in 1969, and when Ellington recorded his debut album that same year, he asked Thompson to help out guitar, and The Matthews Southern Comfort link carries on with Thompson's contribution to that self-titled album, for which he wrote and played on 'A Commercial Proposition'. By 1970 Gary Farr had left Gary Farr And The T-Bones to embark on a solo career, and Thompson was invited to play guitar on a few tracks from his second album 'Strange Fruit'. The following year he was on hand to assist John Martyn with his 'Bless The Weather' album, and in what was a very busy year for him, his guitar could also be heard on albums by Sandy Denny, Mike Heron, Iain Matthews, Stefan Grossman, Shirley Collins, and the undeservedly overlooked Shelagh McDonald. The one linking factor for most of these artists is that they operate in the genre of British folk music, which is undoubtedly Thompson's great love, and the fact that so many of our respected folk musicians wanted him on their records just shows the high regard in which he was, and still is, held by his peers.
Track listing
01 Life And Life Only (from 'Love Chronicles' by Al Stewart 1969)
02 Time Has Told Me (from 'Five Leaves Left' by Nick Drake 1969)
03 Four In The Morning (from 'Marc Ellington' by Marc Ellington 1969)
04 A Commercial Proposition (from 'Matthews Southern Comfort' by Matthews Southern
Comfort 1970)
05 Old Man Moses (from 'Strange Fruit' by Gary Farr 1970)
06 Sugar Lump (from 'Bless The Weather' by John Martyn 1971)
07 The Sea Captain (from 'The North Star Grassman And The Ravens' by Sandy Denny 1971)
08 Flowers Of The Forest (from 'Smiling Men With Bad Reputations' by Mike Heron 1971)
09 Odyssey (from 'Stargazer' by Shelagh McDonald 1971)
10 Desert Inn (from 'If You Saw Through My Eyes' by Iain Matthews 1971)
11 Blues Jump The Rabbit (from 'Those Pleasant Days' by Stefan Grossman 1971)
12 Poor Murdered Woman (from 'No Roses' by Shirley Collins 1971)
thanks for all your time and effort in sharing the music. Love your blog.
ReplyDeletebut...I need some help with this file - download is fine. The folder shows it has 119mb within after extraction using unarchiver with mac. But when I open folder extracted no files appear. Strange, never had this happen previously. I have dl it 3 times now - same problem. Do you know any secrets to be able to see and listen to the individual files? Any help is very appreciated. thanks
Sorry, forgot to add the note for Mac Users. Instructions under the link.
DeleteThank you for your quick response. It worked. I will probably forget what I did and have to ask again, thank for your patience.
ReplyDeleteBravo! I am loving these wonderful anthologies you're putting together.
ReplyDeleteReally enjoying this series, thanks. There's going to be a Peter Green one, I hope?
ReplyDeleteThanks for this - I look forward to more editions covering later years.
ReplyDeleteThe main reason Shelagh McDonald is undeservedly overlooked is that she vanished from public sight for 35 years just when her career was about to take off. She has recorded again in recent years.
What a fabulous treat to kill those Covid19 blues!
ReplyDeleteBest wishes,
Paul
You should add Shawn Colvoin's Tennessee to this list as well.
ReplyDeleteColvin
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