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Posted - 03/10/2012 : 16:16:27 Bert Jansch-L.A. Turnaround 1974
Fresh As A Sweet Sunday Morning http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sMpeYhViua0
A brilliant album with the help of Michael Nesmith producing and on guitar, & Red Rhodes on the pedal steel...very nice. Still has that signature Bert sound that he infused in Pentangle and everything he did. Rest in peace, Bert.
L.A. Turnaround-a short film with Bert, Nez & Red on the estate recording
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7JfkbmO611M
L.A. Turnaround is the ninth album by Scottish folk musician Bert Jansch, released in 1974. Two of the songs were recorded in Paris in 1973, and the others were recorded in Los Angeles in 1974. The album was produced by former Monkee and Country rock artist Michael Nesmith, who also played guitar. Other guest musicians include Red Rhodes (steel guitar), Byron Berline (fiddle, mandolin) and Jesse Ed Davis (guitar).
Track listing
All tracks composed by Bert Jansch; except where indicated
1. "Fresh as a Sweet Sunday Morning" 2. "Chambertin" 3. "One for Jo" 4. "Travelling Man" 5. "Open Up the Watergate (Let the Sunshine In)" 6. "Stone Monkey" 7. "Of Love and Lullaby" 8. "Needle of Death" 9. "Lady Nothing" 10. "There Comes a Time" 11. "Cluck Old Hen" (traditional) 12. "Blacksmith"
Personnel
* Bert Jansch - guitar, piano, vocals * Michael Nesmith - guitar * Red Rhodes - steel guitar * Byron Berline - fiddle, mandolin * Klaus Voorman - bass * Danny Lane - drums * Jesse Ed Davis - guitar * Jay Lacy - guitar * Michael Cohen - electric piano
After the demise of Pentangle, Jansch signed with Tony Stratton-Smith’s Famous Charisma Label in 1973 and recorded L.A. Turnaround in Sussex and Sepulveda, CA. It was primarily produced by Mike Nesmith (two of the album’s original 12 tracks were recorded in Paris by Thompson a year earlier) and released in 1974, the first of three albums Jansch cut for Charisma. The album was hailed at the time as an exemplary work, and its reputation certainly holds in the 21st century. Nesmith quite naturally captured Jansch’s expert, idiosyncratic guitar style, and added himself on rhythm guitars and pedal steel guitarist O.J. “Red” Rhodes, who provided a wonderful sense of ballast and earthiness. Other than the two Thompson-produced cuts -- an instrumental called “Chambertin” and a reading of former bandmate John Renbourn’s “Lady Nothing” -- the set walks through a lush garden that stands between the traditional English folk that Jansch had mastered and a sort of easy-breathing country-rock. Check the breezy flow of “Open Up the Watergate,” with Jesse Ed Davis on acoustic slide guitar, drummer Danny Lane, and bassist Klaus Voormann. Even the moodier “Needle of Death,” a duet between Rhodes and Jansch, carries a certain lightness of feeling despite its lyric's darkness. “The Blacksmith” acknowledges quite openly Jansch’s debt of influence to Doc Watson, while the lithe rocker “Stone Monkey” features Nesmith in place of Davis; the backroom jamming style accentuates the influence of American players on Jansch as well as his own English traditions. All the while Nesmith, whether with the mobile unit at Stratton-Smith’s home or in his own studio in L.A., keeps the proceedings laid-back, flowing, and liquid. This is not to say there aren’t more traditional numbers here; the set opener, “Fresh as a Sweet Sunday Morning,” with Voormann and Rhodes, and “Of Love and Lullabye” could have been recorded by Pentangle. Simply put, this is one of Jansch’s masterpieces, and a singular type of album in his long and storied career. -All Music Guide, 4 Stars!
Of Love & Lullaby http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mgAADRs9CDg
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Only after the last tree has been cut down, Only after the last river has been poisoned, Only after the last fish has been caught, Only then will you find money cannot be eaten.
~ Cree Prophecy |
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