I was very sad to hear of Danny Thompson's passing a couple of weeks back, at the age of 86. Unless you've tried particularly hard to avoid him, it's difficult to imagine that you don't have something or other in your collection featuring this extraordinary double bassist, whose career goes back as far as the early 1960s. I was fortunate enough to see him play with Richard Thompson on a number of occasions, with whom he also recorded, but he's also all over records by the likes of John Martyn, Nick Drake, Talk Talk, Tim Buckley, Kate Bush, The Incredible String Band and, of course, Pentangle, amongst numerous others. His first appearance in my own record collection occurred as far back 1972, when I picked up Rod Stewart's marvellous 'Every Picture Tells a Story' LP and he popped up again in 1974 on T.Rex's 'Zinc Alloy & the Hidden Riders of Tomorrow'. These days I have any number of records featuring Danny's talents sitting of my shelves, including a couple by fellow Pentangler Bert Jansch. Chief among them is 1978's 'Avocet', an instrumental paean to a selection of various sea and wading birds. The title track is just sublime.
Monday, 13 October 2025
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Greatest Hits
-
Around this time last year, I optimistically expressed the hope that I'd have more of an online presence in 2025 than in 2024. Not a dif...
-
'...a photo, probably taken on my phone while out walking, or maybe an oldie retrieved from the family archive, perhaps even an anonymou...
-
The rarely attempted Triple Swedeface Between the summers of 2020 and 2021, John Dwyer (he of The Osees) together with a group of like minde...
-
Over the past few weeks, a succession of time and brain-space constraints did their utmost to put the kibosh on my attempts to pull toget...
-
Somehow, don't ask me exactly how it happened, I seem to have reached the grand old age of 57. Last time I checked, I could've sw...

1 comment:
17 minutes of sublime
Post a Comment