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Saturday, December 09, 2006

Davy Graham "Midnight Man" 1965

Graham went into a somewhat harder-rocking bluesy groove on this record, though a strong jazz feel was always present in the rhythm especially. More than any other Graham LP, this offers proof that the guitarist would have established himself as a major star on the folk circuit in the '60s -- if only his singing was better. As a guitarist, he's simply wonderful, combining folk, jazz, and blues styles into an invigorating, idiosyncratic style that can both swing and attain a delicate sadness. As an interpreter, he's relentlessly imaginative, breathing new vigor into overdone R&B standards, or devising fresh folk arrangements for Beatles and Paul Simon tunes. But as a vocalist, he's adequate at best; if he had even possessed the modest expressiveness of a Bert Jansch, the material would be that much more striking. Almost none of these tracks are available on Graham compilations, and this rare LP is definitely worth seeking by those who are familiar with some of his other '60s work. Especially excellent are the jazzy "Hummingbird" and the instrumental cover of Lalo Schifrin's "The Fakir," which blends the rhythmic drive of Charles Mingus with hypnotic raga-esque riffs. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide

Sample pic: Click

4 comments:

  1. Great one again!!!!!!!
    Thank you very much for another outstanding post

    Greetings
    bobdylan(Frank)

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  2. Many thanks for this one - Only problem is that track 8 is damaged and will not open.

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  3. The above review must be about 10 years old since my introduction to Davy's music came via the FIRE IN MY SOUL CD comp from 1999 that started with no less than 7 tracks from this 1966 album...yeah, and not 1965.
    it's great to hear the whole album as it came out.
    thank you!

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  4. Thank you! Downloaded this for an old friend of Davy's. Will make his Christmas

    ReplyDelete