Review Summary: An excellent acoustic work. Perfect for those who like folk acoustic stuff.
“Acoustic Strawbs Baroque & Roll” is the fifteenth studio album of Strawbs that was released in 2001. The line up on the album is Dave Cousins, Dave Lambert and Brian Willoughby. The album also had the participation of Howard Gott, Ruth Gottlieb, Sophie Sirotia, Sarah Wilson and Andy Waterworth.
“Acoustic Strawbs Baroque & Roll” is a true acoustic Strawbs’ album. “Acoustic Strawbs Baroque & Roll” is an album with a very interesting and curious story. All things began by accident with Dave Cousins and Brian Willoughby. Willoughby is a very well known British guitarist that worked with many musicians, notably with Cousins and Strawbs, were booked to perform as a duo in Twickenham in 2000. Unfortunately, Cousins damaged his wrist and Dave Lambert stepped in to cover him, while he was singing. The format was a very successful thing and some tours were arranged.
“Acoustic Strawbs Baroque & Roll” has fourteen tracks. Of all those fourteen tracks, eleven of them were released on the several studio albums of the band, until then, while the other three tracks were solo songs of the band’s members.
About the tracks previously released on Strawbs’ studio albums we have: “The Flower And The Young Man” and “Benedictus” from “Grave New World”, “Tears And Pavan”, “The River” and “Down By The Sea” from “Bursting At The Seams”, “Remembering”, “You And I (When We Were Young)” and “Ghosts” from “Ghosts”, “The Golden Salamander” from “Nomadness”, “Evergreen” from “Don’t Say Goodbye” and “There Will Come The Day” from “Blue Angel”.
About these tracks, Strawbs was able to perform excellent interpretations of the tunes from Strawbs’ catalog. Occasionally, they’re embroidered with string arrangements by Robert Kirby, famous for doing arrangements for Nick Drake, Strawbs and several other British folk-rockers. While this might lack the sense of fire and adventure in their best work, which is comprehensive since we are talking about of an acoustic performance, the songs do lend themselves well to spare, unplugged settings, particularly due to their somber lyrics, bittersweet melodies, and weathered, longing vocals. Many albums that combine remakes of the old songs with a new format are grotesque failures, destroying what made vintage material special and inadvertently highlighting a deceleration of songwriting acumen by placing superior efforts from the past next to inadequate ones from the present. However, this is a very welcome exception to that syndrome, proving that it’s perfectly possible to present an integrated vision of the old material with grace and dignity.
About the remaining three tracks, the solo songs of the band’s members, “Not All The Flowers Grow” is a very old song written by Dave Cousins and is a very powerful and emotional song that only was sung twice in public before and which was performed live on a very few occasions. It was written about the Aberfan tragedy, which was a catastrophic disaster of a colliery spoil tip in the Welsh village of Aberfan on 21 October 1966, killing 116 children and 28 adults. This is a song that clearly shows Cousins at his most emotional side. “Inside Your Hell Tonight” is a song written by Dave Lambert and where he does the vocals on his own composition. Lyrically, it’s a song about how things are permanently left on our conscience so deeply scared that they never possibly have been removed. The verses are about different things but it’s mainly about our own conscience. Musically, it’s probably a song that musically breaks up a little bit the general musical ambience of the album. “Alice’s Song” is a song written by Brian Willoughby and Cathryn Craig and appeared for the first time on Brian’s 1998 solo studio album “Black And White” and it was sung by Cathryn. It’s about Brian’s then seven year old niece, Alice who sadly suffers from problems of autism. It’s a song with nice banjo work and a beautiful string musical arrangement. This is in reality a very beautiful and a very emotional song. It was also released by Strawbs as a single. The “Alice’s Song” CD music contains a single disc with three songs, with “Alice’s Song” as the A side and “The Golden Salamander” and a previous unreleased bonus track “On My Way” as the B side.
Conclusion: “Acoustic Strawbs Baroque & Roll” represents basically an acoustic revisit of Cousins and friends to some of the classic studio material from Strawbs catalogue, with some new material in the same mood. Many albums that combine remakes of old songs are great failures, destroying what made so special the superior musical efforts from their past. With “Acoustic Strawbs Baroque & Roll” isn’t the case. I wish more bands would acoustically re-invent themselves if that is what it takes to highlight their strengths. And that is exactly what Strawbs have done on this excellent album. Songwriter Dave Cousins along with Brian Willoughby and the Strawbs band’s member Dave Lambert have produced an album that shows a breath of fresh air and an improvement on my recently chart assaulted ears. This is really a testament to the worthiness of the underlying composition of Strawbs as a prog perennial with its folk roots.
Music was my first love.
John Miles (Rebel)