John Renbourn
Renbourn's name is associated with Bert Jansch's, not only because they worked together in Pentangle but because they were basically doing very similar things. Their voices even sound somewhat similar. Also, as with Jansch, I had a little trouble finding YouTube videos that emphasized his guitar work. This is in part because he seems to have made a lot of music under his own name which emphasised strings or keyboards as the main voices. Or at least I seem to have come across a lot of it. But here's a solo (plus tabla) piece, from 1968, which sort of explains the tabla (Indian drums, often heard with sitar).
And here's a maybe better one, although it's not solo–an electric guitar comes in part way through, which according to AllMusic is Renbourn overdubbed.
I always wanted to like Pentangle more than I did. They were great musicians, and I did like them, but their singer, Jacqui McShee, through no fault of her own just didn't appeal very much to me. So one of my very favorite Pentangle tracks was one on which she only sang a bit of background, with Renbourn taking the lead: "Lord Franklin," a ballad about a lost Arctic expedition. I had always thought Jansch was the singer, and only in recent years learned otherwise. Here is a video which not only contains a great performance of the song, but also tells you how to play it. (I'm very excited about that because it turns out not to be as difficult as I thought, and I might even be able to play it. It's even in standard tuning, which I thought surely it was not.)
I learned from this performance that for lo these many years I've had part of the words wrong. I thought it was "Through cruel hardship they made a stroke / Their ship on mountains of ice was broke." But it's "Through cruel hardship they vainly strove / Their ships on mountains of ice was drove."
Here's Pentangle's version. It's really quite lovely, with the accordion or concertina or whatever that is, and the bit of electric guitar. I've always loved that combination of distorted/compressed electric single-note lead over an acoustic background.
You can read the sad story of the Franklin expedition here.
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