Another Monday
Download links and information about Another Monday by John Renbourn. This album was released in 1967 and it belongs to Rock, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 27:10 minutes.
Artist: | John Renbourn |
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Release date: | 1967 |
Genre: | Rock, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist |
Tracks: | 12 |
Duration: | 27:10 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Another Monday | 1:49 |
2. | Ladye Nothinge's Toy Puffe | 1:29 |
3. | I Know My Babe | 3:26 |
4. | Waltz | 1:57 |
5. | Lost Lover Blues (featuring Jacqui McShee) | 1:55 |
6. | One for William | 2:49 |
7. | Buffalo | 2:32 |
8. | Sugar Babe | 4:29 |
9. | Debbie Anne | 1:39 |
10. | Can't Keep from Crying | 2:00 |
11. | Day At the Seaside | 1:10 |
12. | Nobody's Fault But Mine (featuring Jacqui McShee) | 1:55 |
Details
[Edit]Renbourn's second album was very much in character with many of the records he would release throughout the rest of his career, the only difference being that his approach here was perhaps somewhat more tentative. The guitar playing is not tentative; it's excellent folk-blues, virtuosic but full of heart and imagination, and open to other influences from jazz and world music, though not as much so as he would be in many subsequent efforts. The vocals (when he takes them; some tracks are instrumental) are more perfunctory, but they don't detract from the performances. His inclination toward early music is evident on "Ladye Nothinge's Toye Puffe" and "One for William," the latter of which also features oboe. More typically, though, he drifted into the blues idiom, two of the standouts being his interpretation of the oft-covered "I Know My Babe" (more frequently titled "I Know You Rider" when recorded by other artists) and his bottleneck playing on "Nobody's Fault but Mine." For Pentangle fans, the album is especially interesting for the recording debut of Jacqui McShee as accompanying vocalist on three numbers, although her singing is far more subordinate and less assertive than it would be in Pentangle. The album's biggest flaw, actually, is its short running time of a mere 28 minutes, with seven of the 12 pieces clocking in under the two-minute barrier.