Important to read Beverley's autobiography as well as hear John's testament.
@ChrissHill-im7kj2 ай бұрын
Beautiful song. I have Hazy Jane on a compilation by Nick Drake. She could have been somebody too. The talent was there..Love the strings. Typical Nick Drake stylings for sure..
@allancopland17682 ай бұрын
Big Thank you for posting this.
@Scottishyacunt2 ай бұрын
High as mofo on tunes Davy boy! Jaws always swinging!!
@julianvickery83413 ай бұрын
Deserves to be better known. John's other half, for those who know, and a talented musician in her own right..
@stewartmcmanus39914 ай бұрын
I wonder, is she the same girl who made a single, Happy New Year in the sixties?
@uddentube4 ай бұрын
Great!
@93emmie5 ай бұрын
The song is haunting and so beautiful. I just love this song. Emma
@Mel-l9e7d8 ай бұрын
Wow beautiful song !
@paulemery73538 ай бұрын
Did Nick write it? Is he performing on this actual recording ?
@jamesrenz94759 ай бұрын
Wonderful film. He was a force to be reckoned with. Great and unique artist.
@oliveroneill13889 ай бұрын
Sounds like your struggling
@sharpskilz10 ай бұрын
size of the guitar on that cunt
@alexfletcher519210 ай бұрын
He almost invented it. They all shut up and listened to him.
@t_ruth55510 ай бұрын
Beautiful 🌟💐
@LiRa-yn3zl10 ай бұрын
:') no words to describe how much I feel u, mum
@lisabayliss339410 ай бұрын
Beautiful beverley xxxx thank you
@davidc755 Жыл бұрын
Lovely to see this. Davey and I used to live close to each other in Camden in London in the late 1970s. We became friends and we would regularly busk together at Camden Lock Market with me on banjo or mandolin and Davey on guitar. He was a gentle soul, hugely encouraging of others, and modest about his own playing. He had the knack of injecting quirky little riffs and runs into straightforward music and bringing out something new in the process. It was sad to see his decline in later years but great to know the power of his legacy.
@BartW-rt8zs Жыл бұрын
Wow mate! Cooks Kleek?
@davidcotton7180 Жыл бұрын
@@BartW-rt8zs Lost me there!
@thewordofgord Жыл бұрын
May I ask what caused his "decline in later years"? People refer but never explain.
@davidcotton7180 Жыл бұрын
@@thewordofgord He had lung cancer
@johnfraser2201 Жыл бұрын
mmmmmm thing is just like john martyn jack bruce being a drunk junky brian wasted ex folky siting nixt to bert jansch. its disrepectfull you have to know when to put the always a martin shit away. in his youth he was a truly great singer player with dadgad etc but dont show this. ffs have some respect.
@aranos6269 Жыл бұрын
I do not see any decline others comment on. Davy was absolutely disintrrested in playing his old stuff. Bert is playing stuff he copied of davy, not so well IMHO, and davy, who flatly refused to play blues in 80s (I've done all that) is forced to humor bert and camera. Yet when he sings he sounds more genuine and soulful
@richardcooper4206 Жыл бұрын
This is remarkable, what a player. Up till now the only piece I knew of his was Anjie a must play for any 60s player. (I tried it today but had forgotten it. More practice required!)
@aranos6269 Жыл бұрын
Met davy, from 3 pm he played in my friend's kitchen non stop, just for me, explaing tunes, tunings , guitars and so on. 7.45 he said :time for tbe gig. Gig was 8 to 10,amazing,you could hear a pin drop. First hour on oud. Than back to my friend's, he played non stop till 4 am, never repeated a tune. Again plenty advice on my guitar playing. Perfectly nice guy and a musical genius. Anything from renaissance music to Ellington, monk, from india to Ireland and all stuff in between. That is how i remember him. I was told by his brother and good friends, he had some mental issues hence periods of medication, sometimes self applied
@deja75m Жыл бұрын
And Britain is a masonic shitfest these daze
@deja75m Жыл бұрын
Music from protestant scum..eats CATHOLIC SHIT
@deja75m Жыл бұрын
Maybe..ya be a protestant scum bigot?
@badgerarmy966 Жыл бұрын
i love beverley's voice, always have <3
@badgerarmy966 Жыл бұрын
beautiful <3
@jazzmylife9649 Жыл бұрын
I knew Davy, me, a face on the scene, in late fifties, early sixties, London. Hanging out and jamming at the Gyre & Gimble and other, of the many, Soho venues. Also too, as an on and off resident, of a Notting Hill flat sharing, where Davy, was a member of the live-in conglomeration of musicians and artists. Angie was also a good friend. I remember, very distinctly, the morning when Davy came back to the flat, very elated, and told us he had, for the first time, taken hard drugs. At that time, hard drug users were not all that many in number. It was in fact, at that time, treated as a medical concern, and users, received prescriptions from their doctor. It was a pattern, correct me if I am wrong, of usage he followed for the remainder of his life. He was a great and original musician and performer who seemed to disappear from the public view. What makes a musician shine on a global level? There are quite a few, who do, in spite of obvious, though not obvious to the public, limitations. I was thinking about Davy earlier in the year when I heard of the passing of my old friend Victor Brox, another potential stadium filler, who did enjoy life, but had the talent and charisma to have achieved much more. It is not always the best who bubble to the top.
@BartW-rt8zs Жыл бұрын
No. Trauma causes some artists to produce, others to seek drug relief. Tragedy of early experience overwhelming talent later on. Bites yer bum!
@julianvickery8341 Жыл бұрын
Beverly is the real deal . She can be seen in the picture in the background, which is the cover to Bert Janch's 1965 solo album "It Don't Bother Me." Besides being a talented singer-songwriter she was also a muse, friend or partner to some of the greatest recording artists of her age. At various times, she has worked with John Martyn (with whom she was married from 1969 to 1980), Levon Helm (of the Band), Jimmy Page, Dave Pegg, Richard Thompson, John Renbourn, Ralph McTell, Davy Graham, Nick Drake and Sandy Denny. Her early association with Donovan resulted in her recording his song "Museum" in 1967. Paul Simon invited her to New York in the very same year. On the Simon & Garfunkel album "Bookends", she contributed to the track "Fakin' It", in the middle of which she is heard saying "Good morning, Mr Leitch, have you had a busy day?" She later appeared at the Monterey Pop Festival on 16 June 1967, as did Simon & Garfunkel.
@sallybilzon3507 Жыл бұрын
I'd like a copy of the whole concert. I saw it on the BBC a few years ago and was blown away by this and several other performances to0, particularly Mara Carlisle's take on It Doesn't Bother Me.
@oldbladderhorn Жыл бұрын
You get that very odd feeling that maybe he was trying for much more in one voice than could be communicated as if, you don't have to wait for the whole of the sense of the idea to be known just an impression was enough or needs to be given. that you must try and hear that which is not said.. only hinted, in his conversational banter and that mumbled or even if it sounds so, his verbal short hand for his a over energetic mind, kind of work's maybe, nonverbal communication of ideas not said and the subject idea are spoken in a clipped way a private language if bothered to be learned as it stops the casual eavesdropping of the crowd they thinking he' a bit of an eccentric fellow that old manic magician musician and his wild humour and his guitar eccentricities that sounds so odd on the first listening.... But.... Brilliant His chatting guitar or even odd amalgam of philosophic hints of how to be really real amongst the synesthesia of lies of the everyday living we humans all endure.. Davey Graham just ordinary bloke no! extra extraordinary yes...extraordinary to the very end RIP
@gaenorbarker4910 Жыл бұрын
My Bev xx so proud
@JohnDavis-zd7co Жыл бұрын
Just heard this on Jazz Fm - brilliant. Will be seeking out more from Beverly Martyn
@dimitriwolfs9370 Жыл бұрын
Haha wot a legend ! I dont think I understood one word ol' Davey said tbh! Did u?
@daleskidmore1685 Жыл бұрын
I've known about Davy Graham since my teens, through collecting second hand vinyl. The telling thing is that I have never, ever found any of his records for sale. It is nice to see a collection of his performances here.
@elmomontecerin1735 Жыл бұрын
Daviy must be considered as legendary hero8n in realm of guitar vertouso.like deival tunes,bluescand folksy melodies..grea5 to you davy..rip.
@BelfastBoxingNBlues Жыл бұрын
Nigel Tufnell at 39:00
@BelfastBoxingNBlues Жыл бұрын
Nigel Tufnell at 39:00
@pamelasmith4594 Жыл бұрын
I love this guy!
@thebeans65342 жыл бұрын
It hurts to see people use this as an admonishment. People are human, artists more than most; the amount of drug use, mental illness and life problems in your heroes is astounding and you need to recognize them as human beings with or without the amazing contributions that Graham and others gave us. He's still 10X the guitarist most these folks in the comments are and it makes me angry. He's still a goddamned work of human art and you should treat him like it.
@dand9002 жыл бұрын
It's kind of discouraging when even the best guitarists in the world can only jam together playing 12 bar blues. That's why I play and write alone.
@philipjohnlewin61322 жыл бұрын
I sang this as a bedtime song to my young daughter. I would tell her to close her eyes and imagine she was running in a field at night. The field begins to slope downhill... run faster... then you realize, your feet have left the ground and you're flying. And that brought sleep. Who knows what dreams followed? Years later, my daughter Erica recorded the two of us playing the song on her cel phone. It is here on You Tube somewhere.
@rogerfindlay68362 жыл бұрын
The best doco I've seen in ages. Thanks. R.
@trevorpugh64752 жыл бұрын
Beautifully poignant, thank you Beverley.
@jamesrobert41062 жыл бұрын
Folk, Blues and beyond is a masterpiece of an album. Anybody that helped create the magic of Bert Jansch deserves his place in the honour room of legendary musicians.
@SuperAnimelover1002 жыл бұрын
Wow loved this and the guitarist rocks ! :)
@jipes2 жыл бұрын
Absolutely wonderful, such a brilliant and sensitive soul ! Thanks a lot for sharing this gem
@ianinter22 жыл бұрын
So sad I remember seeing agatha christie plays there in the 1960's when my auntie worked there it was a lovely place
@rogerferns97602 жыл бұрын
Amateur camera work but a nice update of a classic song!