DIVERSE AND ECLECTIC FUN FOR YOUR EARS - 60s to 90s rock, prog, psychedelia, folk music, folk rock, world music, experimental, doom metal, strange and creative music videos, deep cuts and more!
Friday, March 27, 2026
The Albion Country Band - New St. George / La Rotta
The New St. George is a song by Richard Thompson from the period of Albion IV which was sung by Martin Carthy in 1973. Because the band broke up shortly after, the album was shelved and only issued in 1976 as Battle of the Field. The track was closed by the tune La Rotta. It was included in the folk anthologies The Electric Muse and The New Electric Muse. A BBC recording of The New St. George from the Bob Harris Show on 9 May 1973 was included in 1998 on the Albion Band’s album The BBC Sessions and in 2001 on the anthology The Carthy Chronicles.
Karl Dallas wrote in the Electric Muse notes: If Britain ever shakes off its malaise, it could well be with this song by Richard Thompson as its anthem. This again is by Albion IV, vocal by Martin Carthy, and has never been issued before. It makes an interesting comparison with Richard’s own version. The play-out instrumental is La Rotta, an Italian dance tune which Pentangle recorded on Sweet Child, and takes its name from the instrument on which it was meant to be played, the harp-like rotta, chrotta, crot, cruit or crwth, sometimes bowed, sometimes plucked, the ancient ancestor of the fiddle (which a violin becomes immediately it gets into the hands of a folk musician), the instrument of the angels and the Celts, supplying an appropriate note on which to end. Richard Thompson’s own version is on his 1972 record Henry the Human Fly! From: https://mainlynorfolk.info/richard.thompson/songs/thenewstgeorge.html
-
Cult followers of the “witch house” movement will be familiar with industrial outfit White Ring, who are set to release their new album Gate...
-
Blake Babies - Temptation Eyes (The Grass Roots) Buddy Miles - You Really Got Me (The Kinks) Cold Blood with Lydia Pense - You Got Me...
-
Pterodactyl’s Spills Out belongs to that rare species of music that could be called indie-shred, if that wasn’t such a dumb thing to write o...
-
Joe Cocker - Mad Dogs & Englishmen - Part 1 Joe Cocker - Mad Dogs & Englishmen - Part 2 Joe Cocker - Mad Dogs & Englishme...
-
Weaving intricate rhythms and harmonies together to create a unique sound, Denver, Colorado based quartet Orna surely knew how to pique my i...
