"Babbacombe" Lee
"Babbacombe" Lee | ||||
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Studio album by Fairport Convention | ||||
Released | November 1971 | |||
Recorded | August–September 1971 at Sound Techniques, London | |||
Genre | Folk rock | |||
Length | 41:20 | |||
Label | Island | |||
Producer | John Wood & Simon Nicol | |||
Fairport Convention chronology | ||||
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Professional ratings | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
"Babbacombe" Lee is the seventh album by English folk rock group Fairport Convention. Released in 1971, it tells the life story of John "Babbacombe" Lee, a Victorian-era alleged murderer who was condemned to death but reprieved after the gallows failed on three occasions to work properly. After the commercial and chart success of its predecessor, Angel Delight, the album sold disappointingly, and although critically acclaimed, it has its place in musical history as the first "folk rock opera".
Concept
The album is a concept album that follows John "Babbacombe" Lee's life story. The events of his life are described in song, from his boyhood through his conviction for murder, sentence of death, and the failure to carry out the sentence. The songs describe his boyhood poverty, his time in the Royal Navy, and his being invalided out. The album then describes how Lee went to work in the service of a Miss Keyes. While Lee was in her service, she was murdered, and he was accused, tried and convicted of the crime, and sentenced to death; however, when authorities attempted to hang him, the gallows failed three times, resulting in his release. These events are all told in song, and all but one of those songs are originals.
Dave Swarbrick has explained that he conceived the album after discovering a file of old newspaper clippings in a junk shop; this file contained John Lee's own copies of the newspaper articles and was bound by him, signed and dated 30 January 1908.
Because of its relatively complete narrative structure, "Babbacombe" Lee has been called a rock opera, and because of the band's musical style, in particular the first folk rock opera.[2]
Track listing
Songs written by Fairport Convention
The original album listed tracks episodically rather than as discrete tracks, reflecting the structure of the narrative.
Side one
- "John's reflection on his boyhood, his introduction to Miss Keyes and The Glen, his restlessness, and his struggles with his family, finally successful, to join the navy." – 6:19
- "This was the happiest period in his life. All locked set fair for a career until he was stricken with sickness and invalided out of his chosen niche in life. Reluctantly and unhappily he turned to a number of menial occupations and finally returned to the services of Miss Keyes." – 10:12
- "Tragedy now strikes hard. The world's imagination is caught by the brutal senseless[ness] of the apparent criminal who slays his kind old mistress." – 3:57
Side two
- "John was hardly more than a bewildered observer at his own trial, not being allowed to say more than a few words. The tides of fate wash him to the condemned cell where he waits three sad weeks for his last night on earth." – 7:32
- "When it comes, he cannot sleep, but when he does, a strange, prophetic dream comes to him, and helps him to bear the strain of his next day's ordeal as scaffold and its crew try in vain three times to take his life." – 13:20
Each of the five sections is composed of a number of songs and fragments of songs that were not listed separately on the original album.
2004 Compact Disc listing
The later release of the album abandoned the original five-part division of the album and lists the songs as separate tracks complete with songwriting credits, as follows:
- "The Verdict" (read by Philip Sterling-Wall) – 0:28
- "Little Did I Think" (Dave Swarbrick) – 2:19
- "I Was Sixteen (Part 1)" (Simon Nicol, Dave Pegg) – 1:29
- "John My Son" (Nicol, Pegg) – 0:44
- "I Was Sixteen (Part 2)" (Nicol, Pegg) – 1:17
- "St Ninian's Isle" (Ronald Cooper) / Trumpet Hornpipe (trad. arr. Swarbrick) – 1:14
- "Sailor's Alphabet" (trad. arr. A.L. Lloyd) – 5:50
- "John Lee" (Swarbrick) – 3:04
- "Newspaper Reading (read by A.L. Lloyd) – 0:46
- "Breakfast in Mayfair" (Nicol) – 3:09
- "Trial Song" (Swarbrick, Pegg) – 3:55
- "Cell Song" (Swarbrick) – 3:35
- "The Time Is Near" (Pegg) – 2:31
- "Dream Song" (Swarbrick, Pegg) – 5:24
- "Wake Up John (Hanging Song)" (Swarbrick, Pegg) – 5:25
Two additional bonus tracks appear on some post-2004 CD releases:
- "Farewell to a Poor Man's Son" (Swarbrick) – 4:55
- "Breakfast In Mayfair" (Nicol) 3:59
These tracks were recorded in late 1974 for the BBC 2 documentary about John Lee narrated by Melvyn Bragg. The programme was broadcast in the BBC 2 2nd House series as "The Man They Couldn't Hang – John Lee" on 1 February 1975. The tracks are performed by a different line-up of the band than on the original album, one formed after the departure of Simon Nicol and the return of lead singer Sandy Denny.
2011 "Babbacombe" Lee Live Again
In 2011, to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the original album, Fairport performed "Babbacombe" Lee in its entirety on both their Winter Tour and at the Cropredy Festival in August. The performance was released as a CD & digital download in 2012.[3] Personnel: Simon Nicol, Dave Pegg, Ric Sanders, Chris Leslie, Gerry Conway.
Personnel
- Simon Nicol – vocals, guitar, dulcimer (12)
- Dave Mattacks – drums, electric piano (12), harmonium (6,7)
- Dave Swarbrick – vocals, fiddle, mandolin
- Dave Pegg – vocals, bass, mandolin
on 16 and 17 (without Simon Nicol):
- Trevor Lucas - rhythm guitar
- Jerry Donahue - lead guitar
- Sandy Denny – vocals on "Breakfast in Mayfair"
References
- ↑ Eder, Bruce. "Babbacombe" Lee at AllMusic
- ↑ Laing, David; Denselow, Robin; Shelton, Robert (1975). The Electric Muse. London: Eyre Methuen Ltd. p. 162. ISBN 0-413-31860-5.
- ↑ Fairport Convention
External links
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