Watched Ian Campbell in the sixties at the jug o punch Birmingham
@MichaelBailey-b9k3 күн бұрын
As a Jamaican Brit, always loved British folk music and quality reggae and ended up here via UB4. The Campbells definitely inherited some great musical genes from dad and Swarby was just brilliant as usual!!. The best of British Folk. Thanks for the post.
@jimmaculate57 күн бұрын
Not exsactly a slave to fashion. Wears street clothes to a performance.
@DjNikGnashers7 күн бұрын
Fantastic stuff Jon, thank you, and I hope you have a great Christmas.
@kinkade9997 күн бұрын
Absolutely brilliant Jon Thank you so much!!! Love this song!! Very best wishes Mike
@Acoustic1118 күн бұрын
Lovely Jon, more Pentangle please
@stevewest49949 күн бұрын
Great transcription, as ever. Thank you!
@simonmason858211 күн бұрын
Galaxy Lin.
@Ibrian888813 күн бұрын
Watching on Friday the 13 , 2024 Be blessed a million times everyone 🤗🙏look up DADGAD ….tuning Your welcome
@Ibrian888813 күн бұрын
Watching on Friday the 13 , 2024 Be blessed a million times everyone 🤗🙏
@Scion3Sevens16 күн бұрын
absolutely essential !!! things were breaking out all over - and soon Pentangle, Fairport, and Steeleye would form, along with all the other associated acts and solo artists that made the English Folk-Rock such a superb musical movement !!
@dlanodrelda18 күн бұрын
This is a treasure.
@MichaeldelaBedoyere-c5i20 күн бұрын
Fantastic tab, thank you Jon!
@limeplasterer276620 күн бұрын
Aside from his natural genius on the guitar - Bert had a soulfullness and humanity in his singing which touched many of ys on a deeper level than merely having great 'chops'.
@paultreadaway1026 күн бұрын
One of my Fave Xmas Songs.His version the best glad i have it Merry Xmas and Happy Holidays to all over Our World 🌎🌍
@jime140223 күн бұрын
Vine acá por el hijo de Ian ❤
@robertnewell505723 күн бұрын
Thanks for this one, Jon. I remember Cliff as I think he was the only left-handed acoustic guitarist I saw in my youth (I'm left handed). Later I saw him on a triple bill in the 80s with Bert Jansch and Ralph McTell in a horrible community centre up the Holloway Road. I believe he had a difficult life, but was certainly also ill-served by management. I have heard 'Lady from Baltimore', but almost none of it is recognisable as the bloke I saw, being larded with arrangements that are very middle of the road and don't suit his style or showcase his playing, with the possible exception of the two Dylan tracks.
@Jonpriley23 күн бұрын
Yes, read his biog for the sad (even outrageous) tale of mismanagment: www.45cat.com/biography/cliff-aungier#google_vignette. And listen to the story he tells about being "awarded" his silver disc by Pye (at the beginning here): kzbin.info/www/bejne/r6m2lJmEebaVgKM
@arranwalker429223 күн бұрын
Is there any mire footage of this performance
@Jonpriley23 күн бұрын
This was his only solo performance on this episode of the show.. He appeared in other episodes, usually singing or playing with other guests. He rarely sang solo on the show, but I think there might be another one on another episode - as I remember, it wasn't as memorable a performance as this one, but I'll check it out. You can find other clips from the show elsewhere on my channel, Acoustic Roors playlist: kzbin.info/aero/PL21R3ncK2cpRXW9GGCyYkTaSdfrVR4l93 :
@arranwalker429223 күн бұрын
@Jonpriley Thank you 🙏🙏
@Jonpriley22 күн бұрын
@@arranwalker4292 Your wish is granted: kzbin.info/www/bejne/e3zRmn2efq-WfMU 😀
@miketownsend927Ай бұрын
Thanks for this. A great tutorial more please.
@JonprileyАй бұрын
On Wizz specifically? I do have a two or three other songs of his tabbed out, so I'll definitely consider it! In the meantime, as I hope you spotted, I have plenty of lessons on Bert Jansch's music... 😉
@MichaeldelaBedoyere-c5i20 күн бұрын
@@Jonpriley Your transcriptions of Bert Jansch are fantastic (I have both volumes). Do you think you could ever be persuaded to get involved with a similar project on John Martyn?
@Jonpriley19 күн бұрын
@@MichaeldelaBedoyere-c5i I have a few John Martyn transcriptions on file. But (unlike Bert) there is a site dedicated to his guitar style: johnmartyn.com/guitar/ with tunings info at least. And if he is just strumming (or improvising) that may be all you need. And of course, tabs are online here and there. As for a transcription project ... well, that came about via the Bert Jansch Foundation. I offered my services - as did a few other enthusiasts - and they ended up paying me...;-) (well under the minimum wage given the time I spent, but it was enough...) I love John Martyn's music, of course, but it wasn't the same kind of thing as Bert's. Bert's was largely composed, meaning transcribing it was rewarding. Martyn tended to improvise. Some of his greatest songs are two chords! All you really need to do is get the tuning, and strum along with the recording. Have you seen Danny Thompson's anecdote about Inside Out? kzbin.info/www/bejne/Z36qgYSnaa6co8U
@workingclassicalАй бұрын
What is the name of this program?
@JonprileyАй бұрын
Details in my comments under the video
@JonprileyАй бұрын
I just noticed, the 6th string has got partially cut-off at 2:11. Hopefully you can tell that it's 0 in the 1st bar, then 2 to 1 in the second bar - and 0 again in the last bar of course. Sorry about that!
@SingleMalt77005Ай бұрын
Fantastic. Thanks a bunch.
@frankkkbard0n315Ай бұрын
If Bert was more popular, This could have been the birth of the new musical style, like Alternative Prog folk - Rock
@JonprileyАй бұрын
Well, it's a continuation of the unique Folk-Jazz genre invented by Pentangle, who remain pretty much the only exponents, as far as I know.... 😉
@SingleMalt77005Ай бұрын
Thanks for the lesson!
@woollybear3328Ай бұрын
Beautiful. Also this video helped me a lot when learning In the Bleak Midwinter so thank you :)
@ThomasEybyeАй бұрын
Thank you so much for doing this version, Jon! Wizz Jones plays so many great tunes!
@PremSingh-wj1nkАй бұрын
Great song
@ThomasEybyeАй бұрын
Such a fantastic version of this song! Thanks!
@JonprileyАй бұрын
Indeed! I'm putting together a lesson on it right now (part 3 of the series on this tune), so look out for that soon.😉
@arranwalker4292Ай бұрын
Amazing performance
@dandufeu7151Ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this Jon . Thats me happily struggling for the next few months then
@JonprileyАй бұрын
Remember not to take it too seriously note for note! Look out for follow-ups on Bert's later arrangements and Wizz's versions 😀 - all simpler (in different ways) and illustrating the balance between the essential motifs that identify the song, and the various ways one can improvise around it. Check what Steve Tilston does with it!
@tomFairhurstАй бұрын
Jansch's gloriously slovenly playing was the stuff of nightmare for the formally trained but sweet dreams for the attuned. With unerring instinct he might add or deduct a half-bar or so from a twelve-bar blues, the dictionary definition of 'mistake' becoming a personal statement; he took risks with all the split-second timing and casual aplomb of a high-wire act. See Donald's Encyclopedia of Popular Music.
@JonprileyАй бұрын
Thanks Tom - I hadn't seen that, but it's a perfect summary of Bert's style, at least for the way he approached the blues, and the way he played in general in the early days. But "gloriously slovenly" is not the phrase we'd use to describe his own compositions or folk song arrangements, right? They were really the opposite of that. 😉
@tomFairhurstАй бұрын
@@Jonpriley Exactly....it's mood and context dependent slovenliness! Contrast with the precision of his playing on Rosemary Lane.
@JonprileyАй бұрын
@@tomFairhurst Right. He seemed to treat the blues as a chance to just stretch out and relax. He knew enough blues licks and tropes (and invented some of his own), and tended to improvise lyrics. But it was home territory for him - he could put his feet up (as it were) and be as slovenly as he felt like.😃
@Ehzah8Ай бұрын
the cool thing about Bert's sense of time is that he dropped (or added) beats frequently, but always precisely in the same places - i imagine it wasn't a conscious decision but it wasn't an accident either if that makes sense.
@stevewest4994Ай бұрын
@@Ehzah8In the early days I think he must have spent a lot of time accompanying other folk singers. My recollection of folk singers of that era is that they were often used to singing unaccompanied and didn't like it if you tried to impose a 4/4 structure on them. That may have had a formative influence on his playing.
@dougallee7066Ай бұрын
Dunnottar, conventionally. But considering it's a German documentary, and charming, we'll forgive them!
@SingleMalt77005Ай бұрын
Can't thank you enough for your wonderful lessons. 👋👋👋
@ThomasEybyeАй бұрын
Thank you so much for doing this song, Jon!!
@box88Ай бұрын
Nice job!
@wvxyzАй бұрын
🔥
@Nachtuil36Ай бұрын
Unseen before. I enjoyed one of my favourite bands here ! How young and almost shy (Renbourn) they look. I met with John two times later, it was another person, haha ! Sadly, John and Bert already passed to the other side ...
@DevanBishopАй бұрын
Beautiful
@julianvickery8341Ай бұрын
Today would have been Bert's 81st birthday. Great to listen to still. Every musican would do well to listen to him and learn from the magic he created. Much missed, and I truly wonder if we shall ever see anyone of his ilk again. A truly unique and wonderful man with impeccable artistic integrity and a body of work that stands up with the very best.
@wilwassink5124Ай бұрын
👍😊
@julianvickery83412 ай бұрын
A masterful renditon of Art Blakey & the Jazz Messengers tune, written by Bobby Timmons.
@Mandrake5912 ай бұрын
This is incredible, and unexpected!
@Wolfspiderxl2 ай бұрын
Jacquie's voice is as smooth as silk.Could sit and listen to it all day long.....
@hni74582 ай бұрын
A bass is, and sounds like, a bass, one reasons... - until one hears a guy like Danny T. To me the Pentangle's sound very much was the DT bass. I saw him in duo with Richard Thompson in Stockholm quite a while ago. An unforgettable evening that was.
@deltabilly12 ай бұрын
Holy crap he made a mistake just he starts singing. Must have forgotten he was capoed only to fret 2
@The1Mustache32 ай бұрын
What a gem this is available
@FenceThis2 ай бұрын
really nice and convincingly Bert’ish !
@PremSingh-wj1nk2 ай бұрын
❤❤❤
@vecernicek22 ай бұрын
I can see that the cameraman wasn't a guitarist 😂
@hairysteven2 ай бұрын
This really blows
@rickwest-zv3yo27 күн бұрын
Blow moi
@inregionecaecorum2 ай бұрын
My dad, who started the first folk club in Coventry knew them well.