Misplaced Pages

All That Moody

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "All That Moody" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (May 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
1976 studio album by Davey Graham
All That Moody
Studio album by Davey Graham
Released1976
StudioTrident Studios, London
GenreFolk, blues, jazz
LabelEron Enterprises (ERON 007)
ProducerDavey Graham
Davey Graham chronology
Godington Boundary
(1970)
All That Moody
(1976)
The Complete Guitarist
(1978)

All That Moody is an album by British musician Davey Graham, released in 1976. It was his first album in six years after the release of Godington Boundary and is the first with his name spelled Davey instead of Davy. It was released on an imprint called Eron Enterprises, a small label based in Deal, Kent, set up 4 years previously to demonstrate how good South East England's folk music scene was. Graham had known Ron Milner, the label's boss, since Holly Gwinn-Graham had been on the label's first release, Folk In Sandwich (ERON 001).

All That Moody was reissued in 1999 on 10" album and CD by Rollercoaster Records, the CD containing six additional tracks.

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic

Writing for Allmusic, music critic Brian Downing wrote of the album "Graham effectively and impressively showed why he not only is considered the father of the modern British folk movement, but also a real innovator in bringing world music to a traditionally Western form. And while the remakes don't completely render the originals obsolete, they do give listeners some nice alternative versions. The instrumentals, as usual, work best, as Graham's vocals are not his strongest point. Likewise, the numbers that dabble in blues, jazz, or ragtime, while adding a touch of variety, really don't impress as much as the genre-fusing ones"

Original track listing

Side One

  1. "La Morena" – 4:32
  2. "Anji" – 1:26
  3. "Travelling Man" – 1:57
  4. "Sunshine Raga" – 3:46
  5. "A Smooth One" – 2:12
  6. "Kim" – 2:24
  7. "Jenra" – 2:04

Side Two

  1. "No Preacher" – 2:37
  2. "To Find the Sun" – 2:23
  3. "Tristano" – 3:38
  4. "Blues for Geno" – 3:05
  5. "Fingerbuster" – 1:53
  6. "Blue Raga" – 4:38

Track listing of reissue

All songs by Davey Graham unless otherwise noted.

  1. "Anji" – 1:26
  2. "La Morena" – 4:32
  3. "Travelling Man" – 1:57
  4. "Sunshine Raga" – 3:46
  5. "A Smooth One" – 2:12
  6. "Kim" – 2:24
  7. "Jenra" – 2:04
  8. "No Preacher" – 2:37
  9. "To Find the Sun" – 2:23
  10. "Tristano" – 3:38
  11. "Blues for Geno" – 3:05
  12. "Fingerbuster" – 1:53
  13. "Blue Raga" (Ravi Shankar and Ali Akbar Khan)– 4:38
    1999 reissue bonus tracks:
  14. "La Morena" – 3:45
  15. "All of Me" (Gerald Marks, Seymour Simons) – 2:21
  16. "Suite in D Minor" (Arr. Graham, Robert de Visée) – 3:56
  17. "Happy Meeting in Glory" (Traditional Arranged by Davey Graham) – 2:07
  18. "The Gold Ring" (Traditional Arranged by Davey Graham) – 2:34
  19. "For a Princess" – 2:37

Personnel

References

  1. ^ Downing, Brian. "All That Moody > Review". Allmusic. Retrieved 2 August 2011.

External links

Davey Graham
Studio albums
Compilations
Compositions
Categories: