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Carolanne Pegg - Carolanne (1973) [FLAC]

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Carolanne Pegg - Carolanne (1973) [FLAC]

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Category: Music
Total size: 295.11 MB
Added: 1 month ago (2025-05-13 22:04:01)

Share ratio: 8 seeders, 0 leechers
Info Hash: 16082FAFADF64045549C3B245C52826CE4E3BCA3
Last updated: 10 hours ago (2025-06-15 12:45:00)

Description:

Artist: Carolanne Pegg Title: Carolanne Year Of Release: 1973/1999 Label: Pier Records Genre: Folk Rock Quality: Flac (tracks + scans) Total Time: 48:21 Total Size: 327 Mb Tracklist: 01. Open the Door (4:25) 02. A Witch's Guide to the Underground (3:48) 03. Mouse and the Crow (2:53) 04. The Sapphire (4:00) 05. Fair Fortune's Star (10:05) 06. Clancy's Song (4:00) 07. The Lady and the Well (4:36) 08. Wycoller (2:54) 09. The Lizard (3:20) 10. Man of War (3:21) 11. Winter People (5:01) Banjo – Keith Nelson Bass – Dave Peacock Cello – Michael Lavelle* Fiddle, Guitar, Harmonium, Vocals – Carolanne Pegg* Guitar – Albert Lee Jew's Harp [Mouth Harp] – Paul Rowan Percussion – Alan Eden As a fiddler and vocalist, Carolanne Pegg (then billed as Carole Pegg) was an important part of Mr. Fox, a notable if cultish early-'70s British folk-rock group. On her 1973 self-titled album, however, she simply sounds both out of her element and ill-equipped to carry a record as a solo artist. Her voice is thin and wavering, and the material is often far less folk-oriented than Mr. Fox's, veering toward mainstream early- to mid-'70s singer/songwriting with some country-rock touches and a mystical air. While a song title such as "A Witch's Guide to the Underground" might whet the appetite for something truly hellacious, in the event it turns out to be a prissy tune, sung with all the confidence of a woman stepping onto a frozen pond whose ice may or may not hold. More of her folk roots surface in the dark British melodies of "The Sapphire" and "Fair Fortune's Star"; "Man of War," which sounds like a Sandy Denny song with lousy (and very un-Denny-like) vocals; and the fiddle-driven "Mouse and the Crow." Those are more satisfying than the straight and unmemorably ordinary rock tunes here, but are still way short of outstanding