Bless the Weather
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bless The Weather | ||
Studio album by John Martyn | ||
Released | 1971 | |
Recorded | ? | |
Genre | Folk Music | |
Label | Island Records | |
Professional reviews | ||
---|---|---|
John Martyn chronology | ||
The Road to Ruin (1970) |
Bless the Weather Tumbler (1971) |
Solid Air (1973) |
Bless the Weather is a 1971 album by John Martyn and marks his return as a solo artist having released two albums with his wife Beverley Martyn. When it was released it garnered his best reviews to date, and remains a firm favourite among fans, featuring such standards as 'Head And Heart' and the title track. The album is predominantly acoustic, although it does feature John's first real 'echoplex' moment in the track Glistening Glyndebourne.
Q magazine chose Bless The Weather among the dozen essential folk albums of all time in 1999. According to Q, the album was apparently recorded in three days!
[edit] Track listing
- "Go Easy" (J. Martyn) – 4:15
- "Bless The Weather" (J. Martyn) – 4:29
- "Sugar Lump" (J. Martyn) – 3:43
- "Walk On The Water" (J. Martyn) – 2:49
- "Just Now" (J. Martyn) – 3:39
- "Head And Heart" (J. Martyn) – 4:54
- "Let The Good Things Come" (J. Martyn) – 3:05
- "Back Down The River" (J. Martyn) – 2:40
- "Glistening Glyndebourne" (J. Martyn) – 6:30
- "Singing In The Rain" (Brown/ Freed) – 1:28