The Strawbs - The Man Who Called Himself Jesus video free download


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Duration: 03:27
Uploaded: 2010/09/18

The Strawbs had done an album with Sandy Denny handling many of the vocals, and had also done quite a bit of unreleased recordings (now on the double CD Preserves Uncanned) prior to 1969's Strawbs. This is still their first proper album, but their wealth of prior live and studio experience most likely helped make it sound more confident and fully formed than many a debut effort. The group distinguished itself among the burgeoning school of British folk-rockers by delivering bittersweet folk-rock with a storytelling flavor. Dave Cousins' songwriting was on the sober and occasionally over-earnest side, but nonetheless the record was strong and alluring enough to immediately establish the Strawbs as one of the better first-generation U.K. folk-rock outfits. Some of these songs had been around for a while, as the presence of some of them on Preserves Uncanned and Sandy Denny & the Strawbs attests. However, the group took big strides from bare-bones folk-rock in the studio by dressing these in arrangements -- sometimes with light recorder, choral backup vocals, and orchestration -- that gave the Elizabethan melodies a pastoral, quasi-classical feel at times, without losing sight of an acoustic base. "The Man Who Called Himself Jesus" and "Where Is This Dream of Your Youth" are among their best and most ambitious songs, and even if the compositions can sometimes take themselves too seriously, the music's never less than respectable.

by Richie Unterberger

Comments

7 years ago

Fernando Ferreira

como Demorei tanto pra conhecer The Strawbs!?!

10 years ago

Anne and Tony Carey

Heard this in the Bristol Troubadour in the '70's. Loved it then, still do.

11 years ago

cuzins9

ma dad had me listening to this in the car today. i like it.

11 years ago

Eddie Eldridge

10/10 wud bang frosty!

11 years ago

Sue Sutton

many years ago i went and bought a real cheap copy of Strawbs by choice just to hear Lay Down, never dreaming how magical all the other songs were, one of my favourite albums to this day!

11 years ago

gibb4711

and so do i

12 years ago

Markxist

Richard Wilson aka Victor Meldrew providing the talky bits

12 years ago

footie99uk

Saw these guys a few times at the Half Moon Pub, Putney, in the late sixties. Amazing !

12 years ago

lneranger4

I have this original LP from about 1970,its great

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