LIVE FOLK
VA - Folk Music from The Red Herring Fall Folk Festival 1969 [1969]
The sense of place comes through quickly. A few tracks into this recording, the atmosphere of the festival begins to settle, not as a large event, but as a smaller gathering where the music carries without much distance between performer and listener. Issued in 1969, the album holds onto that setting rather than reshaping it.
The performances are direct and lightly framed. Acoustic guitars lead, voices sit forward, and the arrangements remain simple, allowing the songs to carry their own weight. There is little separation between styles. Traditional material sits alongside more contemporary writing, and the shift between them feels natural rather than defined.
What begins to stand out is the pacing. Tracks arrive without much build, often starting mid-flow, then moving on before they fully settle. That gives the set a sense of continuity, closer to a live sequence than a constructed album. Applause and brief pauses appear, but they do not interrupt the movement.
As it plays through, the differences between performers become clearer, phrasing, tone, and approach vary, but the setting keeps them connected. Nothing feels isolated.
The album holds as a document of a moment rather than a statement. It doesn’t shape the material beyond what was there, it lets it pass through, steady, unadorned, and tied closely to the space it came from. (B)
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Track list
01 Peter Lippincott - Marigold 3:47
02 Kathi Bennett - Song for David 5:09
04 Nancy Fetters - Reticent Reflection 2:49
03 Gary Levinson - The Day Passed 2:47
05 Leigh Carter - Crucifixion 2:22
06 Dan Fogelberg - The Actress and The Artist 2:08
07 Sue Hynds - Babe, I'm Going to Leave You 5:02
08 Morrow Plots - Shady Grove 3:13
09 Pete Swinnerton - Happy Song No. 1 7:12
10 Elliott Delman, Lee Buch & Friends - Rocky Road 3:45
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Music weaves itself into the fabric of our emotions, dances through the corridors of memory, and whispers to the soul of who we are. Sharing these stories deepens the connection, turning the experience into something timeless and profound.
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Thanks Butterboy, I quite like listening to some folk music, I remember back in the 60s when it was huge and I used to go to coffee shops and wine bars to listen to folksingers, but there's not much of it around these days.
ReplyDeleteHi Bob Mac,
DeleteThose coffee shops and wine bars were something in the 60s, the kind of rooms where a single voice and guitar could hold everyone still. Folk had a real presence then, and you’re right, you don’t stumble across it as easily these days. Sets like this help keep that spirit close, small stages and honest songs. Hop it brings some of that feeling back for you.
Cheers.
thank you B.B
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome, Aussie
DeleteCheers.
Gotta miss those folky sixties.
ReplyDeletethanks Butter
Hi D,
DeleteThose folky sixties had a way of settling into the bones, gentle voices drifting over bright chords, everything feeling open and possible. The scene may be long gone, but the warmth of those songs still reaches out...
Cheers.