Wednesday, September 11, 2024

State of Grace & Danger



John Martyn - Some People Are Crazy


We'll blast off into September like a grip of nanothermite insta-toppling a skyscraper -- all so the Mossad could inaugurate their desired era of Zionist World Domination we now so serftastically enjoy -- with what woulda been the 76th b'day of one of my go-to guys.

I done him a few times years ago, but I've been on a Grace and Danger kick lately -- that's his 1980 record where he got a permanent band after a decade more or less solo -- and in the course of making a live compilation of that tour for myself I found the music too awesome not to share.

What is there to say about John Martyn? Why does his music move me and others so much?

He's thought of now as a pioneer and a heavyweight songwriter and guitar wizard, as the passage of time always smooths the rougher edges.

When he was alive, he was never quite able to break through to a wide audience, try as he might have, largely due to his badass attitude and the raging alcoholism that eventually took him away at the too-soon age of 60.

Our CIA Music Overlords don't allow performers such as he to break through anymore anyway; too personal, too emotionally relevant, and too unity-promoting for the Gumball Gulag they have in mind.

No matter though. People right now are playing the music of John Martyn without even knowing it's his birthday, while no one remembers William Colby except the fishes with whom he sleeps.

It's to them -- the listeners, not the fishes -- that this collection is dedicated.


John Martyn
1981 UK Tour Sampler

01 Lookin' On
02 One World
03 Johnny Too Bad
04 May You Never
05 Outside In
06 Hurt In Your Heart
07 Sweet Little Mystery
08 Spencer the Rover
09 Didn't Do That
10 Solid Air
11 Anna/Small Hours
12 Singin' In the Rain
13 Some People Are Crazy
14 Grace and Danger
15 Save Some (For Me)
16 Eibhli Ghail Chiuin Ni Chearbhail
17 Couldn’t Love You More
18 Amsterdam
19 Johnny Too Bad
20 Big Muff

Total Time: 1:53:50
disc break goes after Track 12

John Martyn - guitar & vocals
Alan Thomson - bass
Danny Cummings - percussion
Max Middleton - keyboards (Tracks 02-12)
Jeff Allen - drums (Tracks 02-20)
Tommy Eyre - keyboards (Tracks 01, 13-20)
Phil Collins - drums & vocals (Track 01)

Track 01: "The Old Grey Whistle Test" BBC Television Centre, London UK 1.10.1981 
sourced from the 2007 deluxe edition of "Grace and Danger" on the Island label
Tracks 02-06: "A Little Night Music" BBC Television Centre, London UK 8.12.1981 
sourced from the 2013 box set "The Island Years" DVD on the Island label
Tracks 07-12: Dominion Theatre, London UK 5.24.1981 
sourced from the 2001 CD "Sweet Certain Surprise" on the One World label (Tracks 07+08) and a 2nd gen off-air FM cassette (Tracks 09-12)
Tracks 13-19: "Rock Goes to College" Pathfoot Auditorium  Stirling University, Stirling UK 2.25.1981 
sourced from the 2006 DVD "At the BBC" on the Island label
Track 20: "Rock Goes to College" Pathfoot Auditorium  Stirling University, Stirling UK 2.25.1981 
sourced from a master off-air FM cassette from a 1980s Swedish radio rebroadcast of part of the concert 
this is the full song, and not the fragment in the TV broadcast and on the DVD

extracted, unified to 16/44 CD Audio, assembled, repaired & remastered by EN, September 2024
Tracks 07, 08, 10, 12 & 20 pitch corrected by PervFesser Goody, September 2024
666 MB FLAC/direct link


This is one of those rare deals where ostensibly official stuff and unissued things get mashed up, something I usually avoid doing but in this case, I didn't originally intend to put this up so it is what it is. The only track that's ever been on CD is the 1st one anyhow, and a couple of the others that were bonus cuts bundled in with album reissues.

I remastered everything to be its level best, and even paid a call on a certain PervFesser Goody to pitch-tune the more recalcitrant tapes. And yes, two of the officially-released tunes were at the wrong speed. Come on Overlords, step it up!

OK? Enough of my hatespeech, deserving as it may be. Enjoy this and even if you don't, I'll be back tomorrow with something completely different, yet just as full of a Love so sorely lacking. And of course a happy 76th to the immortally tremendous Johnny Too Bad, who just gets badder and badder!--J.


9.11.1948 - 1.29.2009