Showing posts with label Nick Drake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nick Drake. Show all posts

Friday, March 22, 2024

The Top 60 Folk/Folk Rock Albums of All Time

Folk/Folk Rock:

The Top 60 Albums

Call it folk, folk-rock, roots music, country rock, or whatever else floats your fancy. Music typically driven by acoustic instruments or which harkens back to musical forms of a century ago has played a large role in shaping popular music and then responding to popular music trends. The DMDB aggregated more than 30 lists and then took those albums from 3 or more lists and ranked them according to overall DMDB points.

This has since been divided into two lists. This one focuses on folk and folk rock, roughly music from the 1930s through the 1980s. A second list has been been dedicated to what I’m calling “New Americana.” Like folk and folk rock, this is music which is roots-based, but tends to have a more modern spin as it is largely comprised of albums from the 21st century with representation of the ‘80s and ‘90s as well. In addition to Americana, this music is also referred to as indie folk and alt-country.

Make sure you also check out the DMDB list of top country albums as there is a lot ocross-polination between country, folk, and Americana. I’ve created three separate lists for these genres and allowed an album to only show up on one of the three lists. Check out those and other best-of-genre/category lists here.

1. Simon & Garfunkel Bridge Over Troubled Water (1970)
2. Bob Dylan Blonde on Blonde (1966)
3. Carole King Tapestry (1971)
4. Bob Dylan Highway 61 Revisited (1965)
5. Bob Dylan Blood on the Tracks (1975)
6. Van Morrison Astral Weeks (1968)
7. Joni Mitchell Blue (1971)
8. Neil Young After the Gold Rush (1970)
9. Neil Young Harvest (1972)
10. Love Forever Changes (1967)

11. The Band The Band (1969)
12. Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young Déjà Vu (1970)
13. Robert Johnson The Complete Recordings (1936-37)
14. Bob Dylan Bringing It All Back Home (1965)
15. Van Morrison Moondance (1970)
16. The Band Music from Big Pink (1968)
17. George Harrison All Things Must Pass (1970)
18. Creedence Clearwater Revival Cosmo’s Factory (1970)
19. Tracy Chapman Tracy Chapman (1988)
20. Grateful Dead American Beauty (1970)

21. Bob Dylan The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan (1963)
22. Crosby, Stills & Nash Crosby, Stills & Nash (1969)
23. Nick Drake Five Leaves Left (1969)
24. Bruce Springsteen Nebraska (1982)
25. Bob Dylan Love and Theft (2001)
26. Leonard Cohen The Songs of Leonard Cohen (1967)
27. Simon & Garfunkel Bookends (1968)
28. Neil Young Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere (1969)
29. The Byrds Younger Than Yesterday (1967)
30. The Byrds Mr. Tambourine Man (1965)

31. Grateful Dead Workingman’s Dead (1970)
32. Bob Dylan Time Out of Mind (1997)
33. Various Artists compiled by Harry Smith Anthology of American Folk Music (box set, recorded 1926-32, released 1952)
34. James Taylor Sweet Baby James (1970)
35. Bob Dylan John Wesley Harding (1967)
36. Bob Dylan Modern Times (2006)
37. John Cougar Mellencamp Scarecrow (1985)
38. Nick Drake Bryter Layter (1970)
39. Fairport Convention Liege and Lief (1969)
40. Nick Drake Pink Moon (1972)

41. Cat Stevens Tea for the Tillerman (1970)
42. Buffalo Springfield Again (1967)
43. Woody Guthrie Dust Bowl Ballads (1940)
44. Simon & Garfunkel Parsley, Sage, Rosemary & Thyme (1966)
45. Bob Dylan The Royal Albert Hall Concert (The Bootleg Series Volume 4) (live, 1966)
46. Richard & Linda Thompson I Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight (1974)
47. Neil Young On the Beach (1974)
48. Bob Dylan Nashville Skyline (1969)
49. Bob Dylan Another Side of Bob Dylan (1964)
50. John Prine John Prine (1972)

51. Richard & Linda Thompson Shoot Out the Lights (1982)
52. The Kingston Trio At Large (1959)
53. Randy Newman 12 Songs (1970)
54. Bob Dylan The Times They Are A-Changin’ (1964)
55. Indigo Girls Indigo Girls (1989)
56. Leonard Cohen Songs of Love and Hate (1971)
57. Tim Buckley Starsailor (1970)
58. Fairport Convention Unhalfbricking (1969)
59. Bob Dylan Rough and Rowdy Ways (2020)
60. Eagles Eagles (1972)


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First posted 3/4/2013; last updated 3/22/2024.

Saturday, March 30, 1985

The Dream Academy “Life in a Northern Town” charted

Life in a Northern Town

The Dream Academy

Writer(s): Gilbert Gabriel, Nick Laird-Clowes (see lyrics here)


First Charted: March 30, 1985


Peak: 7 US, 4 CB, 4 RR, 2 AC, 7 AR, 2 CO, 15 UK, 7 CN, 4 AU, 1 DF (Click for codes to singles charts.)


Sales (in millions): --


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): 1.0 radio, 11.6 video, 21.75 streaming

Awards:

Click on award for more details.

About the Song:

The Dream Academy formed in 1983 in London, England. The new-wave trio was comprised of singer and guitarist Nick Laird-Clowes, multi-instrumentalist Kate St. John, and keyboardist Gilbert Gabriel. They released three albums from 1985 to 1991. Only their 1985 self-titled debut produced any charting singles, with “Life in a Northern Town” and “The Love Parade.” In 1986, they reached #83 in the UK with a cover of the Smiths’ “Please Please Please Let Me Get What I Want” from the soundtrack of Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.

“Life in a Northern Town” is the song which the group is best remembered. It was written as an elegy to Nick Drake, a British folk musician. Laird-Clowes explained that it wasn’t specifically about Drake, but dedicated to his memory. “We had the idea…to write a folk song with an African-style chorus…When we got to the verse melody, there was something about it that reminded me of Nick Drake.” SF One of the guitars used in the song is the same one on the cover of Drake’s album Bryter Layter. SF

David Gilmour, best known as the guitarist from Pink Floyd, co-produced the song. It took a year to record. WK The song also got an assist by Paul Simon, whom Laird-Clowes had befriended. He played it for Simon, saying it was called “Morning Lasted All Day.” Simon vetoed the title and Laird-Clowes came up with “Life in a Northern Town” instead, which Simon thought was a great title. SF

In 2008, the country group Sugarland released a version of the song from their album Love on the Inside. It featured Little Big Town and Jake Owen. It was nominated for Vocal Event of the Year by the Country Music Association and Academy of Country Music. It also received a Grammy nomination for Best Country Collaboration with Vocals.


Resources:


First posted 10/8/2022.

Monday, November 25, 1974

Nick Drake died: November 25, 1974

Originally posted November 25, 2012.

image from eachnotescure.com

Nick Drake was an English folk singer/songwriter born in Rangoon, Burma, on June 19, 1948. Only three albums were released during his lifetime and each sold less than 5000 copies upon initial release. However, after his death he emerged as a doomed romantic hero. In the mid-‘80s, musicians such as The Cure’s Robert Smith and R.E.M.’s Peter Buck cited him as an influence. The Dream Academy’s 1985 single “Life in a Northern Town” was about Drake.

Drake’s parents were musically inclined, even composing music. At an early age, Nick wrote songs and recorded them on reel-to-reel. He played piano in the school orchestra and learned clarinet and saxophone. In 1967, he won a scholarship to study English literature at Cambridge. He was a bright student who didn’t apply himself. He was more interested in playing and listening to music while smoking marijuana.

He discovered the folk scene via performers like Bob Dylan and Phil Ochs and began performing in clubs and coffee houses around London. With the help of college friend Robert Kirby and American producer Joe Boyd, Drake recorded Five Leaves Left in 1968.

In the autumn of 1969, Drake moved to London to concentrate on music. 1970’s Bryter Layter sported a more upbeat and jazzier sound and featured John Cale and members of Fairport Convention. In October 1971, Drake recorded songs over two nights for what would become 1972’s Pink Moon. Thinking that the sound of Bryter Layter was too elaborate, Drake opted for a stark collection of bleak songs in which his singing was accompanied solely by his own guitar with one piano overdub on the title track.

He visited a psychiatrist in 1971 and was prescribed antidepressants. He also suffered from insomnia and his friend Kirby worried at one point that Drake was showing early signs of psychosis. In 1972, Drake had a nervous breakdown and was hospitalized for five weeks. He returned home to live with his parents. Musician John Martyn, who wrote the title song of his 1973 album Solid Air about Drake, described him as the most withdrawn person he’d ever met. Nick died at age 26 on November 25, 1974, of an overdose of amitriptyline, a prescribed antidepressant. The death has largely been assumed to be a suicide although some have considered it an accidental overdose.

A Skin Too Few (documentary about Nick Drake)


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Award(s):


Friday, February 25, 1972

Nick Drake Pink Moon released

Pink Moon

Nick Drake


Released: February 25, 1972


Peak: --


Sales (in millions): -- US, 0.1 UK


Genre: British folk


Tracks:

Song Title (date of single release, chart peaks) Click for codes to charts.

  1. Pink Moon (13 DF)
  2. Place to Be
  3. Road
  4. Which Will
  5. Horn
  6. Things Behind the Sun
  7. Know
  8. Parasite
  9. Free Ride
  10. Harvest Breed
  11. From the Morning


Total Running Time: 28:22

Rating:

4.540 out of 5.00 (average of 25 ratings)


Awards:

(Click on award to learn more).

About the Album:

British folk singer/songwriter Nick Drake died in 1974 from an overdose of antidepressants. He was only 26 years but had recorded three studio albums – Pink Moon was his last and “the bleakest of them all.” AM “After two albums of tastefully orchestrated folk-pop, albeit some of the least demonstrative and most affecting around,” AM nobody expected a third album. “Nick was crushed by the commercial failure of Bryter Layter and a complete lack of recognition from the general public…He apparently told his mother he’d thought he’d failed in everything.” AD While he was clearly being hard on himself, “making music this beautiful, pouring your heart and soul into it – to see it largely ignored…must have been truly soul-destroying.” AD

Going Down in a Haze of Obscurity

Pink Moon “is the sound of Nick Drake cracking up. That’s not exactly true – some have long thought that his death by an overdose of an anti-depressant was an accident, and not suicide – but this album, recorded over two late nights, certainly sounds like a fever dream.” AZ “It is not an easy album to live within, for the creator or the listener.” PM “It’s hard not to see his battle with depression within the haunting and desolate structure of Pink Moon.” PM

“This isn't at all an easy record… This is a unique record, a work of beauty and another fine testament to the talents of Nick Drake.” AD “The calm, focused anguish of this album [is] as harrowing as it is attractive.” AM “Drake’s elegant melancholia avoiding sounding pretentious in the least thanks to his continued embrace of simple, tender vocalizing.” AM “Meanwhile, the sheer majesty of his guitar playing…makes for a breathless wonder to behold. If anyone needs confirmation as to why artists like Mark Eitzel, Elliot Smith, Lou Barlow, or Robert Smith hold Drake close to their hearts.” AM It “made Drake the cult figure he remains.” AM

The Recording

He ”chose a radical change for what turned out to be his final album. Not even half-an-hour long, with 11 short song…he famously remarked…that he simply had no more to record.” AM

“Nick was a fan of blues music, and rather taken by Robert Johnson amongst others.” AD Nick even copied Johnson’s technique of recording with just his guitar, facing a fall, and no one else in the studio. AD There are no side musicians or outside performers on the album. “Aside from a splash of piano, the only instrumentation on this stark and spooky collection is Drake’s eloquent acoustic guitar.” AZ “If Bryter Layter for some was over-orchestrated, Pink Moon is too unadorned.” AD

It was “recorded by regular producer Joe Boyd but otherwise untouched by anyone else.” AM Engineer John Wood “captures Nick’s voice well, even though it appears he wasn’s singing with any great self-confidence. He’s almost mumbling in places” AD but “it becomes part of the overall mystique and appeal of Pink Moon.” AD


The Songs:


Here’s a breakdown of each of the individual songs.

“Pink Moon”
The lead-off title track is the only song on the album to feature any overdubs. AD It was“used in a Volkswagen commercial nearly 30 years later, giving him another renewed burst of appreciation – one of life’s many ironies, in that such an affecting song, Drake’s softly keened singing and gentle strumming, could turn up in such a strange context.” AM

“Place to Be”
Place to Be features “a beautiful vocal, reaching deep. The lyrics contain less of the imagery present on Five Leaves Left…but still are rooted in nature and emotion. It’s a lovely song.” AD

“Road”
Road has some of the most enjoyable guitar playing on the album, hypnotic and beautiful. Nick’s voice comes in, quiet and deep, lost in a world of its own. The guitar is crystal clear and the contrast between the guitar playing and the vocals is striking and very effective.” AD

“Which Will”
Which Will contains one of albums happiest guitar melodies, almost back to the kind of sound heard on Five Leaves Left only without all the overdubs and orchestra parts…But these songs are the pure essence of Nick Drake.” AD

“Horn”
Horn is sometimes described as filler. It’s an instrumental, just over a minute long. It’s very hard to explain or write about the sound of someone’s inner turmoil, however brilliantly and effectively it’s being expressed. A simple guitar figure, long sustained notes going off into the ground, before a new section comes in – a repetition re-iterating the message of the song. It’s a plea for help without any words…It is utterly haunting and possessing a strange kind of beauty.” AD

“Things Behind the Sun”
Things Behind the Sun is “even more striking. It sounds full thanks to Nicks guitar playing. The lyrics are back to the symbolic, poetic nature of Five Leaves Left and indeed, this song dates from that era, it’s a song Nick had been working on for a while, playing the guitar pattern to himself over and over. It’s a brilliant song.” AD

“Know”
Know “is typical of the stark pure beauty of Pink Moon.” AD “A bare, repeating guitar figure. Nick starts humming the melody of the lyric. It's a two and a half minute song. He doesn't start singing until it’s half-way over. When he does though…it’s effective, to say the least.” AD

“Parasite”
“More beautiful guitar playing, more quietly deep affecting vocals. The lyrical matter here comes across as bitter – reflects Nick’s state of mind at this time. That it’s still utterly beautiful, through the poetic nature of the lyrics and vocal work, says something to me about how developed Nick’s talent was.” AD

“Free Ride”
Critic Adrian Denning says this song, “is completely impossible to describe. I don’t know what's going on in the song, guitar wise, lyrically..... how do you translate such material as this?” AD

“From the Morning”
This “was a favourite of Nick’s parents and ends the album on an optimistic note. It’s a song full of spring-time and beautiful air. Wonderful lyrics, vocals and playing – and it does sound happy.” AD


Notes:

Drake’s three studio albums (Five Leaves Left, Bryter Layter, and Pink Moon) and a posthumous archival collection (Made to Love Magic) were gathered together on the box set Fruit Tree.

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Other Related DMDB Pages:


First posted 6/19/2011; last updated 6/15/2024.