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Organized by Trevor Lucas and Sandy Denny following the breakup of Fotheringay,
The Bunch features an all-star cast from the British folk-rock scene paying
homage to their roots before they began their musical trek down the traditional
path of Francis James Childs and Cecil Sharp. Recorded in January of 1972,
The Bunch was just that, a one-off by a bunch of friends getting together
to play the music of some of their early idols, including Buddy Holly,
Elvis Presley, Hank Williams and Chuck Berry. Lucas, Denny, Richard Thompson,
Linda (Thompson) Peters, Ashley Hutchings and various other members of
the extended Fairport Convention family, treat the music with a certain
reverence while at the same time injecting it with a playfulness and ragged
British charm. Sandy Denny, who is touted in the liner notes as "Britain's
first lady of song," delivers two of her finest performances on record,
a lovely duet with Peters on the Everly Brothers' "When Will I Be
Loved" (which predated Linda Ronstadt's cover by two years), as well
as her tender reading of the Buddy Holly obscurity "Learning the
Game." Other highlights include Richard Thompson's spirited working
of Dion's "My Girl the Month of May," Ashley Hutchings' deadpan
"Nadine" and Linda Peters' "Loco-motion." The original
U.K. release included a flexi-single of ex-Fotheringay drummer Gerry Conway
performing "Let There Be Drums."
(by Brett Hartenbach, All
Music Guide)
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