Fairport Convention is a group that has always beaten the odds -- that's
why a version of the band is working in the 21st century. By the time
of this, the group's fifth album, key members Ashley Hutchings and Sandy
Denny had exited the lineup, yet the group continued here without skipping
a beat, for the first time without a female singer -- and it turned out
not to make a major difference. Richard Thompson and Dave Swarbrick took
over as singers, and Dave Pegg (more recently of Jethro Tull) joined on
bass, and the resulting album was actually more viscerally exciting than
its predecessor, Liege and Lief, if not quite as important as that record,
since it came first. Even vocally, this version of the group needed offer
no apologies. Thompson, Swarbrick, Pegg, and Simon Nicol harmonize beautifully
around strong lead vocals. Not only does the singing here retain the high
standard of the earlier incarnation of the group (check out the harmony
singing on "Sir Patrick Spens" and "Flowers of the Forest"),
but the playing throughout has greater urgency and punch, from the rousing
Thompson-Swarbrick opener "Walk Awhile" to the haunting, moody,
dazzling nine-minute "Sloth," which remained part of the group's
live set for years. An indispensable recording, and one that anybody who
wants to truly know this band, or to take in some of the best work of
Richard Thompson's career, must own (his playing on "Sloth"
and "Doctor of Physick" makes it worthwhile). Swarbrick's fiddle
and viola playing is also among the best of his career. Ironically, Thompson
would make this his last full-time studio venture with Fairport, but what
a way to go!
(by Stephen Winnick & Bruce Eder, www.allmusic.com)