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Unhalfbricking
 
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Unhalfbricking [Extra tracks, Original recording reissued, Original recording remastered]

Fairport Convention Audio CD
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
Price: £4.99 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Unhalfbricking + What We Did On Our Holidays + Liege And Lief
Price For All Three: £16.53

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Product details

  • Audio CD (3 Mar 2003)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Extra tracks, Original recording reissued, Original recording remastered
  • Label: Universal Island Records Ltd
  • ASIN: B00007J36V
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 2,608 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         

Samples
Song Title Time Price
Listen  1. Genesis Hall 3:35£0.69
Listen  2. Si Tu Dois Partir 2:18£0.89
Listen  3. Autopsy 4:20£0.69
Listen  4. A Sailor's Life11:08Album Only
Listen  5. Cajun Woman 2:42£0.69
Listen  6. Who Knows Where The Time Goes? 5:06£0.69
Listen  7. Percy's Song 6:47£0.69
Listen  8. Million Dollar Bash 2:54£0.69
Listen  9. Dear Landlord 4:06£0.69
Listen10. The Ballad Of Easy Rider 4:55£0.89


Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

Unhalfbricking marked a turning-point for Fairport Convention and is a definitive amalgam of their influences. The three Bob Dylan songs featured look to their past as a band predominantly influenced by American folk, rock & roll and singer-songwriters such as Joni Mitchell and Dylan himself. "Si Tu Dois Partir", a French-language version of Dylan's "If You Gotta Go Go Now", was their only hit single and their shared singing on a rave-up version of "Million Dollar Bash" provides a fitting finale to the album. Sandy Denny and Richard Thompson were quite possibly the best female vocalist and best guitarist the UK has ever produced, but at this stage they were also budding songwriters of extraordinary potency. They each contributed two songs, showcasing a lyrical and musical vision beyond their years. Thompson's spellbinding "Genesis Hall" opens the album, his "Cajun Woman" provides a raunchy diversion into authentically swampy music. Denny contributes "Autopsy" and "Who Knows Where The Time Goes"; the first is an early jazz-influenced number, the second one of the most stunning songs she ever wrote. The final part of the jigsaw is the 11-minute "A Sailor's Life", representing the future of the band. A folk song that Sandy knew, they transmuted it to stunning effect, showcasing Thompson's guitar playing alongside the searing violin of eclectic folkie Dave Swarbrick in a long electric workout to close the tune. Swarbrick enjoyed the result so much that he joined the band. An authentically timeless album and quite possibly the place to start (though not to stop) if you have never before heard any Fairport Convention. --James Swift

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
49 of 49 people found the following review helpful
By Tim Edmonds VINE™ VOICE
Format:Audio CD
This was Fairport's third album, recorded in the early part of 1969 and, in what was fast becoming a tradition, it emerged during a period of personnel changes. Ian Matthews was on the way out (but sings on "Percy's Song") and Dave Swarbrick was on the way in (making guest appearances on "Si Tu Dois Partir", "A Sailor's Life", "Cajun Woman" and "Million Dollar Bash" prior to joining as a permanent member). The core band here comprises Sandy Denny, Richard Thompson, Ashley Hutchings, Simon Nicol and Martin Lamble (killed in the van accident before the album was released).
In its original form the tracks comprised three Dylan covers and a 'trad/arranged', with the balance being original compositions by band members Richard Thompson and Sandy Denny. The album thus exemplifies the three strands of Fairport repertoire at the time. The Dylan songs are representative of the early reliance on American material, while to choose to sing one in French shows the Fairport trait not to take themselves too seriously. In contrast, songs like Thompson's "Genesis Hall"and Denny's "Autopsy" are early evidence of the songwriting skills that were to blossom fully in solo careers.
Amongst all these good things, however, for me two tracks stand above the rest in showing how this band collectively was more than the sum of its members. Fairport take the traditional "A Sailor's Life" and give it the epic treatment, with the whole band rocking together in a superb performance that matches the song perfectly. In my view this stands above anything on "Liege and Lief". The performance of "Who Knows Where the Time Goes" is sublime, with gentle acoustic guitar, bass and drums complementing the interplay between Richard Thompson's electric guitar and Sandy Denny's voice.
This is essential Fairport and, having bought it on vinyl when originally released then replaced when it was reissued on CD, what did I get for my money this time? The first CD version included minimal packaging, but here we have a booklet with notes by Ashley Hutchings and illustrated with numerous photos. I'm no expert on remastering, but the sound is crisp and fresh (complete with the perfectly-timed broken bottle in "Si Tu Dois Partir") and the original tracks still sound as exciting as when I first heard them. Then there are the two bonus tracks. Dylan's "Dear Landlord" was recorded in the same sessions as the rest of the original album and has been released twice before, on Volume 1 of Ashley Hutchings' "The Guv'nor" and more recently on the "Fairport Unconventional" boxed set. This differs from both those in that the backing track includes piano - presumably played by Sandy Denny although this is not stated. The last track is an unexpected gem, a beautiful rendering of "The Ballad of Easy Rider" which, although recorded by the "Liege and Lief" line up, is very much in the style of the early Fairport. This is a good value package and worth five stars.
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17 of 17 people found the following review helpful
By William J. Walker VINE™ VOICE
Format:Audio CD
The problem with this album is that it always seemed to suffer, slightly, when compared to "What We Did on Our Holidays". Stylistically the albums form a natural pairing, but whereas its predecessor is a near perfect album, with every track complimenting each other perfectly, it always seemed to me that "Unhalfbricking" was by comparison a rather fractured affair with its various parts pulling the listener, a little too sharply, in different directions. In an odd way, it always felt as if it was only half a great record, but saying which bits are lacking is hard, as they all seem good or great when taken in isolation.

On the other hand the quality of most of its parts (if not the sum) is at a level most artists can only dream of. I should also point out that none of the above prevented this from becoming, and remaining, one of my best loved albums.

I believe that with the release of this version, the album has finally attained the balance it always needed, with the addition of the bonus tracks added for this release. They give the album that little more time required to absorb its disparate elements. With the addition of 'The Ballad of Easy Rider'(the best version of this song I have heard) the album finally has the majestic closing number it always needed and acts as a counterweight to the mighty 'A Sailor's Life' which seemed overly dominant at the center of the disc .

I already owned the previous CD version so it was with some reservations that I bought this one (only, in the end, because I needed to hear Sandy Denny's take on 'The Ballad of Easy Rider'), but I am glad I took the gamble. I always loved this album but now it's better than ever.
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16 of 17 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
It begins with a burst of psychedelic guitar bending - care of the young Richard Thompson - and ends with a rousing and raucous version of Dylan's Million Dollar Bash. The 2003 re-issue offers two extra tracks - also associated with Dylan - which somehow manage to make this version of the album feel more "complete" than the original eight-track release from 1969. It helps that one of these songs is a cover of The Ballad of Easy Rider, which finds the ethereal vocals of Sandy Denny whispering hushed tales of rivers flowing to the sea, while outside the hippie dream lays dying in a ditch (shot by hillbillies on a road to nowhere). The rest of the album rides a similar wave, tip-toeing between drunken sing-along folk rockers like the French-language Dylan update Si Tu Dois Partir, the rousing Cajun Woman and the aforementioned Million Dollar Bash, with more reflective, melancholic numbers, like Genesis Hall, Percy's Song and that gorgeous classic, Who Knows Where the Time Goes?

Though well received and well-respected amongst fans of 60's rock and folk, Unhalfbricking is, regardless, an album that sometimes gets overlooked within the wider aspects of the Fairport cannon (...perhaps because it was sandwiched between their pivotal second album, What We Did on Our Holidays, and their landmark fourth release, Liege and Leif... or perhaps due to the various tragedies that would befall the band immediately after it's initial release?). For me, it is the album that would really establish the classic Fairport sound, fusing the psychedelic rock inflections of their earlier Jefferson Airplane-inspired phase with the traditional folk style that would become more refined on the albums that followed. The bridge between these two very different musical worlds would be the music of Bob Dylan, with three of the songs on the original album stemming from Dylan's formidable collection of outtakes and cast offs. It is to the credit of the band that they purposely chose material that was less familiar to listeners than the likes of Chimes of Freedom, The Girl from North Country, Blowin' in the Wind, All Along the Watchtower and It Ain't Me, Babe. Like The Byrds, Hendrix and subsequently Bryan Ferry, the Convention take Dylan's originals and advance on them... bringing a sound, style and musical ideology of their own... so, instead of feeling like obvious cover versions, they blend beautifully with the more traditional numbers, and the fine songs of Thompson and Denny.

It's a further testament to the band that both Thompson and Denny could pen songs that far surpassed anything of Dylan's early period; with Thompson contributing the rousing opening track Genesis Hall and Denny offering her signature song, the aforementioned Who Knows Where the Time Goes? Added to this, we also have the traditional piece, A Sailor's Life; a folk rock standard that finds the band moving more towards the sound of The Doors than The Dubliners, with Fairport stretching things to the eleven minute mark as Denny's peerless vocals merge with the wild guitar playing of Thompson, which in turn, would blend seamlessly with the ace fiddling skills of Dave Swarbrick and the impeccable performances of the rest of the band. The song is one of the most astounding things Fairport Convention ever committed to record, with the song becoming more and more hypnotic in its approach and never pulling back... just continuing to escalate into a real muscular groove (and who said folkies couldn't be funky?). It sets the template for their next album, the hugely successful Liege and Leif and for epic songs like Matty Groves and Tam Lin, which both take the idea of tradition folk ballads performed with a 60's rock flavour, and pushed them that little bit further with the inventive arrangement skills of the band and the achingly beautiful voice of the wonderful Sandy Denny.

Unhalfbricking is perhaps less complete in its structure than later albums like Liege and Leif and the equally great (though much less talked about) Full House, and yet, it remains my personal favourite LP (of the ones I own). The first time I heard this album I was wandering aimlessly around the village where I live in the pouring rain. The combination of the pastoral setting, the melancholic mood, the carelessness of walking in a sudden downpour and the full splendour of the sound of Fairport Convention came together to create one of my most treasured moments of solitude!! Ulhalfbricking is a great album, and is probably (along with What We Did on Our Holidays) one of the best introductions to the wonders of Fairport Convention, as well as a fine introduction into the fantastic worlds of Richard Thompson and the late, great Sandy Denny. The great (and quite iconic) covert art, with the band sat in the back garden of the house of Denny's parents (devoid of any typeface or 60's iconography) is well worth the price of purchase alone.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
No-one but no-one
Dusty Springfield only wishes she had half the vocal talent of Sandy Denny, in my opinion the greatest british female vocalist of all time. forget your winehouses, adeles etc. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Dixa
Turn, turn, turn again
Unhalfbricking is a strange album. It has some absolutely brilliant tracks and some that are not much more than pub singalongs - they`re pretty good singalongs but not really up to... Read more
Published 11 months ago by Dangerous Dave
So where has the time gone?
Since I really enjoy very depressing songs, this album does it for me with two numbers. On first listening, I was certain "Autopsy" couldn't be bettered - but it is. Read more
Published 15 months ago by H. Llewelyn
A drum-roll for Martin Lamble
Much of this album serves for me as a testimony to the wonderful drumming of Martin Lamble, that feathery touch and those rolls, often playing underneath the music, or just riding... Read more
Published on 6 Aug 2007 by Paul Callick
Fairport Transition
As Ashley Hutchings says in the notes, this 3rd Fairport album contains various different styles that somehow, by luck?, hang very well together. Read more
Published on 17 Sep 2006 by Morten Vindberg
The birth of folk/rock
This album is credited with kick-starting the whole folk/rock boom of the late 60's but really, it was the addition of Dave Swarbrick on just a couple of tracks that made the... Read more
Published on 24 May 2004 by Midwich Records
Not quite their best but still pretty special
Fairport Convention's third album saw them playing the same laid-back, West-Coast-styled music as on their previous LPs. The traditonal folk-rock still lay in the future. Read more
Published on 17 Mar 2004 by C. C. Williams
GREAT STYLISTIC VARIETY
For a folk band, this album displays a remarkable variety of interesting styles, from the catchy folk of Si Tu Dois Partir with its delightful fiddle, through the amazing guitar... Read more
Published on 17 May 2003 by Pieter
The best of the Sandy Denny/Fairport Convention albums
Fairport Convention was far and away the best British folk-rock band of the late Sixties, combining elegant covers of other artists, such as Bob Dylan, who wrote three of the ten... Read more
Published on 8 Jan 2003
A Fairport Novice writes
Please before I am beseiged by Ramant Fairport Nuts for daring to give this a mere 4 stars please let me explain why. Read more
Published on 5 Feb 2002 by M. A. Kelly
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