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The Best of Bert Jansch
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The Best of Bert Jansch
Current price: $19.99
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Barnes and Noble
The Best of Bert Jansch
Current price: $19.99
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This collection proves that
Bert Jansch
isn't only one of the great guitar players, but also a writer of astonishing depth and complexity.
"Needle of Death,"
"Running, Running From Home,"
and so many others have added to the canon of
British folk
songs, going on to become part of the standard repertoire of
singer/songwriters
. He is also a superb interpreter on an instrumental level, taking
Davy Graham
's
"Angi"
to heights its composer never imagined, and making the Irish song
"Blackwaterside"
(learned from girlfriend
Anne Briigs
) into a classic that would be transmuted by
Led Zeppelin
into
"Black Mountain Side"
-- which speaks volumes about the extent of
Jansch
's influence (
Jimmy Page
use to come and watch him play in London
folk
clubs, studying his technique). While this focuses on his solo work, which has continued to be a mainstay of his long career, his duets with
John Renbourn
and his work in
Pentangle
have made him into an icon (albeit with feet of clay, given the alcoholism he eventually beat). Few can match his delicacy on the fretboard or his somewhat wistful way with his voice -- casual, almost tossed-off on
"It Don't Bother Me,"
then ruminating and caressing on a cover of
Ewan MacColl
"The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face."
Here, then, are all the facets of
-- the singer, the writer, the player, the interpreter. He is indeed a man of many facets, each one glittering and gem-like. For once, this is a best-of that truly lives up to its name, and someone who truly deserves one. ~ Chris Nickson
Bert Jansch
isn't only one of the great guitar players, but also a writer of astonishing depth and complexity.
"Needle of Death,"
"Running, Running From Home,"
and so many others have added to the canon of
British folk
songs, going on to become part of the standard repertoire of
singer/songwriters
. He is also a superb interpreter on an instrumental level, taking
Davy Graham
's
"Angi"
to heights its composer never imagined, and making the Irish song
"Blackwaterside"
(learned from girlfriend
Anne Briigs
) into a classic that would be transmuted by
Led Zeppelin
into
"Black Mountain Side"
-- which speaks volumes about the extent of
Jansch
's influence (
Jimmy Page
use to come and watch him play in London
folk
clubs, studying his technique). While this focuses on his solo work, which has continued to be a mainstay of his long career, his duets with
John Renbourn
and his work in
Pentangle
have made him into an icon (albeit with feet of clay, given the alcoholism he eventually beat). Few can match his delicacy on the fretboard or his somewhat wistful way with his voice -- casual, almost tossed-off on
"It Don't Bother Me,"
then ruminating and caressing on a cover of
Ewan MacColl
"The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face."
Here, then, are all the facets of
-- the singer, the writer, the player, the interpreter. He is indeed a man of many facets, each one glittering and gem-like. For once, this is a best-of that truly lives up to its name, and someone who truly deserves one. ~ Chris Nickson