Barry Dransfield - Unruly (Reissue) (1997/2017)
BAND/ARTIST: Barry Dransfield
- Title: Unruly
- Year Of Release: 1997/2017
- Label: Spinney Records
- Genre: Folk, Folk Rock
- Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
- Total Time: 46:58
- Total Size: 114/285 Mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Haul Away
02. Grand Conversation
03. Glory / Biber
04. Silent Worship
05. Constant Lovers
06. Mittel Jigs
07. Logy Bay
08. Wher'er You Walk
09. An Culin / Tamlin
10. Harps In Heaven
11. Sweet Lovely Nancy
12. Chapel Kethick / Sleep Sound
01. Haul Away
02. Grand Conversation
03. Glory / Biber
04. Silent Worship
05. Constant Lovers
06. Mittel Jigs
07. Logy Bay
08. Wher'er You Walk
09. An Culin / Tamlin
10. Harps In Heaven
11. Sweet Lovely Nancy
12. Chapel Kethick / Sleep Sound
Known for his unique way of holding his fiddle across his chest rather than under his chin, allowing him to sing at the same time, Barry Dransfield has played a seminal role in the evolution of British folk music since the late '60s. He recorded several memorable albums with his brother, Robin, including Rout of the Blues, which was named Best Folk Album of 1970 by the British music magazine Melody Maker. He played with the Albion Band and was featured on the groundbreaking 1972 collection, Morris On. Dransfield was equally successful as a soloist. He composed the scores of films, including S.O.S. Titanic, and British television plays, including Play Away, Samson and Delilah, and Ballymena Opera House, and portrayed blind fiddler Michael Byrne in the Mel Gibson, Daniel Day-Lewis, and Anthony Hopkins-starring film The Saga of H.M.S. Bounty. His self-titled debut solo album remains a highly valued collector's item, voted Rarest Folk Album by Record Hunter magazine.
Taught to play fiddle by friends who lived in the Irish community of Leeds, Dransfield performed in Yorkshire pubs before his 15th birthday. Together with his friends, he spent three years in a semi-professional New Lost City Ramblers-like bluegrass/old-timey trio, the Crimple Mountain Boys. Resigning from his harp-building job in 1969, Dransfield convinced his brother to leave a teaching career and join him in a full-time duo. Building a following with tradition-rooted performances at the Harrogate Folk Club, where they shared the stage with Martin Carthy, Ewan MacColl, and the Watersons, they continued to evolve. By 1971, they had expanded into a four-piece acoustic and electric folk band. Two years of nonstop work peaked with the release of two duo/band albums, Rout of the Blues and Lord of All I Behold, and Barry Dransfield's first solo album. The Dransfields toured with British singer/songwriter Ralph McTell and were invited to tour with Steeleye Span. They signed a recording contract with Warner Bros.
The streak of good luck ran out, however, when reports of their energetic performances were conveyed to Steeleye Span, who withdrew their invitation. Instead, the Dransfields were forced to tour the United Kingdom as opening act for American singer/songwriter Tom Paxton. Frustrations during the tour led to heated arguments between Robin & Barry Dransfield, resulting in the group disbanding. Although Barry Dransfield credited the ambitious but poor-selling album The Fiddler's Dream, based on tales of a fictitious traveling fiddler and released on Transatlantic, to the band, it was primarily a solo effort. Separating for nearly a decade, Robin & Barry Dransfield reunited to record an acoustic duo album, Popular to Contrary Belief, in 1977. They soon resumed their solo careers.
After releasing a solo album, Bowin' & Scrapin', in 1984, Barry Dransfield announced his retirement from live performance and opened a violin and cello restoration business in Hastings, England. He returned to performing, with a vengeance, in the mid-'90s. Signaling his comeback with an impressive solo album, Be Your Own Man, in 1994, he became one of England's hardest working performers. A British tour as opening act for Steeleye Span kicked off a two-year period during which he appeared at nearly every club and festival in the United Kingdom. His fourth solo effort, Wings of the Sphinx, was released in 1996. A 39-track compilation spanning Robin & Barry Dransfield's discography (together and solo), Up to Now, was released on the Free Reed label in 1997. ~ Craig Harris
Taught to play fiddle by friends who lived in the Irish community of Leeds, Dransfield performed in Yorkshire pubs before his 15th birthday. Together with his friends, he spent three years in a semi-professional New Lost City Ramblers-like bluegrass/old-timey trio, the Crimple Mountain Boys. Resigning from his harp-building job in 1969, Dransfield convinced his brother to leave a teaching career and join him in a full-time duo. Building a following with tradition-rooted performances at the Harrogate Folk Club, where they shared the stage with Martin Carthy, Ewan MacColl, and the Watersons, they continued to evolve. By 1971, they had expanded into a four-piece acoustic and electric folk band. Two years of nonstop work peaked with the release of two duo/band albums, Rout of the Blues and Lord of All I Behold, and Barry Dransfield's first solo album. The Dransfields toured with British singer/songwriter Ralph McTell and were invited to tour with Steeleye Span. They signed a recording contract with Warner Bros.
The streak of good luck ran out, however, when reports of their energetic performances were conveyed to Steeleye Span, who withdrew their invitation. Instead, the Dransfields were forced to tour the United Kingdom as opening act for American singer/songwriter Tom Paxton. Frustrations during the tour led to heated arguments between Robin & Barry Dransfield, resulting in the group disbanding. Although Barry Dransfield credited the ambitious but poor-selling album The Fiddler's Dream, based on tales of a fictitious traveling fiddler and released on Transatlantic, to the band, it was primarily a solo effort. Separating for nearly a decade, Robin & Barry Dransfield reunited to record an acoustic duo album, Popular to Contrary Belief, in 1977. They soon resumed their solo careers.
After releasing a solo album, Bowin' & Scrapin', in 1984, Barry Dransfield announced his retirement from live performance and opened a violin and cello restoration business in Hastings, England. He returned to performing, with a vengeance, in the mid-'90s. Signaling his comeback with an impressive solo album, Be Your Own Man, in 1994, he became one of England's hardest working performers. A British tour as opening act for Steeleye Span kicked off a two-year period during which he appeared at nearly every club and festival in the United Kingdom. His fourth solo effort, Wings of the Sphinx, was released in 1996. A 39-track compilation spanning Robin & Barry Dransfield's discography (together and solo), Up to Now, was released on the Free Reed label in 1997. ~ Craig Harris
Year 2017 | Folk | Rock | FLAC / APE | Mp3
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