A Boxful of Treasures | ||||
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Compilation album by | ||||
Released | 11 October 2004 [1] | |||
Recorded | 1967–1977 | |||
Genre | folk rock | |||
Label | Fledg'ling NEST 5002 | |||
Producer | various | |||
Sandy Denny chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [2] |
A Boxful of Treasures is a 2004 compilation box set of recordings by folk singer Sandy Denny and comprises solo material and recordings made during her time as a member of Fotheringay, Fairport Convention, and other groups. The fifth CD contains previously unreleased tracks, most of which are demos recorded at Denny's home.
All songs are credited to Sandy Denny except where noted. [3]
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Context | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "3:10 to Yuma" | George Duning, Ned Washington | from Sandy and Johnny | 3:37 |
2. | "She Moves Through the Fair" | Traditional | Solo, home recording | 4:04 |
3. | "Boxful of Treasure" | [3] [4] | 1:43 | |
4. | "They Don't Seem to Know You" | 2:25 | ||
5. | "Go Your Way My Love" | Anne Briggs | 4:12 | |
6. | "Geordie" | Traditional | 3:45 | |
7. | "Been on the Road So Long" | Alex Campbell | with Alex Campbell from Alex Campbell and his Friends | 5:03 |
8. | "You Never Wanted Me" | Jackson C. Frank | 3:24 | |
9. | "This Train" | Traditional | 2:07 | |
10. | "Sail Away to the Sea" | Dave Cousins | from All Our Own Work by Strawbs | 3:25 |
11. | "Tell Me What You See In Me" | Cousins | 3:38 | |
12. | "Who Knows Where the Time Goes?" | 4:14 | ||
13. | "Autopsy" | Demo recording | 4:28 | |
14. | "Now & Then" | 3:51 | ||
15. | "I Don't Know Where I Stand" | Joni Mitchell | Radio session with Fairport Convention from Heyday | 3:40 |
16. | "Bird on a Wire" | Leonard Cohen | 3:30 | |
17. | "Fotheringay" | with Fairport Convention from What We Did on Our Holidays | 3:06 | |
18. | "Nottamun Town" | Traditional | 3:11 | |
19. | "Meet on the Ledge" | Richard Thompson | 2:53 | |
Total length: | 66:16 |
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Context | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Si Tu Dois Partir" | Bob Dylan | with Fairport Convention from Unhalfbricking | 2:22 |
2. | "Cajun Woman" | Richard Thompson | 2:45 | |
3. | "The Ballad of Easy Rider" | Dylan, Roger McGuinn | with Fairport Convention from the Liege & Lief sessions | 4:56 |
4. | "A Sailor's Life" | Traditional arranged by Denny, Thompson, Simon Nicol, Ashley Hutchings, Martin Lamble | with Fairport Convention from Unhalfbricking | 11:11 |
5. | "Reynardine" | Traditional arr. Fairport Convention | with Fairport Convention from Liege & Lief | 4:33 |
6. | "Farewell Farewell" | Thompson | 2:40 | |
7. | "Tam Lin" | Traditional arranged by Dave Swarbrick | 7:13 | |
8. | "Sir Patrick Spens" | Traditional arr. Fairport Convention | BBC radio session on September 23, 1969, from From Past Archives | 3:47 |
9. | "The Pond and the Stream" | with Fotheringay from their album Fotheringay | 3:19 | |
10. | "The Sea" | 5:32 | ||
11. | "The Banks of the Nile" | Traditional | 8:06 | |
12. | "Silver Threads and Golden Needles" | Dick Reynolds, Rhodes | with Fotheringay, previously unreleased | 4:32 |
13. | "The Lowlands of Holland" | Traditional | BBC radio session, August 24, 1971, from The BBC Sessions 1971–73 | 3:21 |
14. | "Nothing More" | Live Rotterdam, June 28, 1970, from Who Knows Where the Time Goes? | 4:54 | |
15. | "Gypsy Davey" | Traditional | with Fotheringay from their album Fotheringay | 3:54 |
16. | "Late November" | from Who Knows Where the Time Goes? | 4:34 |
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Context | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "The North Star Grassman and the Ravens" | from The North Star Grassman and the Ravens | 3:23 | |
2. | "Next Time Around" | [5] | 4:46 | |
3. | "Blackwaterside" | Traditional | 4:12 | |
4. | "The Sea Captain" | 3:10 | ||
5. | "Thro' My Eyes" | Iain Matthews | with Iain Matthews | 2:37 |
6. | "Learning the Game" | Buddy Holly | from Rock On by The Bunch | 2:09 |
7. | "Here in Silence" | Elford, Fraser | from the soundtrack of the film "Pass of Arms" [6] | 3:53 |
8. | "Bruton Town" | Traditional | from Who Knows Where the Time Goes? [7] | 4:50 |
9. | "Sweet Rosemary" | [8] | 2:58 | |
10. | "After Halloween" | [8] | 2:58 | |
11. | "The Lady" | [8] | 3:40 | |
12. | "The Music Weaver" | from Sandy | 3:21 | |
13. | "Ecoute Ecoute" | from The Attic Tracks Vol. 4 | 3:59 | |
14. | "The Quiet Joys of Brotherhood" | Richard Fariña | from Sandy | 4:28 |
15. | "It'll Take a Long Time" | 5:15 | ||
16. | "No End" | live solo version recorded December 3, 1972, from The Attic Tracks Vol. 1 | 7:36 | |
17. | "Bushes and Briars" | BBC radio session, October 25, 1972; from The BBC Sessions 1971-1973 | 2:38 | |
18. | "Walking the Floor Over You" | Ernest Tubb | from Who Knows Where the Time Goes? | 4:21 |
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Context | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Whispering Grass" | Doris Fisher, Fred Fisher | BBC radio session, November 14, 1973; from The BBC Sessions 1971–73 | 3:45 |
2. | "Solo" | from Like an Old Fashioned Waltz | 4:24 | |
3. | "At the End of the Day" | [5] | 6:31 | |
4. | "Like an Old Fashioned Waltz" | 4:13 | ||
5. | "Until the Real Thing Comes Along" | Sammy Cahn, Saul Chaplin, L.E. Freeman | BBC radio session, on November 14, 1973; from The BBC Sessions 1971–73 | 4:10 |
6. | "John the Gun" | Live at the L.A. Troubadour on February 1, 1974, with Fairport Convention | 5:39 | |
7. | "She Moves Through the Fair" | Traditional | 3:30 | |
8. | "One More Chance" | Home demo from The Attic Tracks Vol. 4 | 3:56 | |
9. | "King and Queen of England" | Home demo from Island Life: 25 Years of Island Records | 3:55 | |
10. | "Rising For the Moon" | With Fairport Convention, from Rising for the Moon | 4:09 | |
11. | "White Dress" | Ralph McTell, Dave Swarbrick | 4:45 | |
12. | "I'm a Dreamer" | from Rendezvous | 4:48 | |
13. | "By the Time It Gets Dark" | from the Rendezvous sessions | 4:12 | |
14. | "No More Sad Refrains" | from Rendezvous | 2:51 | |
15. | "Losing Game" | Eric Clapton | from the Rendezvous sessions | 3:17 |
16. | "Easy to Slip" | Lowell George, Fred Martin | from The Attic Tracks Vol. 1 | 3:28 |
17. | "Full Moon" | From Who Knows Where the Time Goes? | 4:31 | |
18. | "Moments" | Bryn Haworth | from The Attic Tracks Vol. 1 | 4:31 |
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Context | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "One Way Donkey Ride" | Demo | 4:14 | |
2. | "I'm a Dreamer" | 4:17 | ||
3. | "Take Me Away" | 4:00 | ||
4. | "Rising for the Moon" | 3:08 | ||
5. | "Still Waters Run Deep" | 3:10 | ||
6. | "All Our Days" | 3:40 | ||
7. | "No More Sad Refrains" | 3:07 | ||
8. | "By the Time It Gets Dark" | 3:32 | ||
9. | "The Music Weaver" | 3:17 | ||
10. | "What Is True?" | 3:46 | ||
11. | "Stranger to Himself" | 2:20 | ||
12. | "Take Away the Load" | 1:43 | ||
13. | "By the Time It Gets Dark" | Alternate take | 3:41 | |
14. | "Full moon" | 5:01 | ||
15. | "Knockin' on Heaven's Door" | Bob Dylan | Live | 5:25 |
16. | "It'll Take a Long Time" | 5:43 | ||
17. | "Who Knows Where the Time Goes?" | 6:35 |
Alexandra Elene MacLean Denny was an English singer-songwriter who was lead singer of the British folk rock band Fairport Convention. She has been described as "the pre-eminent British folk rock singer".
Fotheringay was a short-lived British folk rock group, formed in 1970 by singer-songwriter and musician Sandy Denny on her departure from Fairport Convention. The band drew its name from her 1968 composition "Fotheringay" about Fotheringhay Castle, in which Mary, Queen of Scots had been imprisoned. The song originally appeared on the 1969 Fairport Convention album, What We Did on Our Holidays, Denny's first album with that group. The original Fotheringay released one, self-titled album but disbanded at the start of 1971 as Denny embarked on a solo career. Forty-five years later, a new version of the band re-formed featuring the three original surviving members together with other musicians, and toured in 2015 and 2016.
Trevor George Lucas was an Australian folk singer, a member of Fairport Convention and one of the founders of Fotheringay. He mainly worked as a singer-songwriter and guitarist but also produced many albums and composed for the film industry toward the end of his career. He married three times, his first wife was Cheryl, his second wife was fellow folk musician Sandy Denny (1973–1978), and his third wife was Elizabeth Hurtt (1979–1989). Lucas died on 4 February 1989 of a heart attack in his sleep, in Sydney, aged 45. He was survived by Elizabeth Hurtt, his daughter, Georgia Rose Lucas, and his son, Daniel 'Clancy' Lucas. According to Australian rock music historian, Ian McFarlane, Lucas "was one of the most acclaimed singer-songwriters Australia ever produced and although he was held in high regard in UK folk rock circles, he remained virtually unknown in his homeland".
"Who Knows Where the Time Goes?" is a song written by the English folk-rock singer and songwriter Sandy Denny. Denny originally recorded the song as a demo in 1967, singing and playing guitar on the track. Later that year, she briefly joined the folk band The Strawbs, and re-recorded the song, again with only her voice and guitar, for what became the album All Our Own Work, which would not be released until 1973.
Jess Roden is an English rock singer, songwriter and guitarist.
Sandy is the second solo album by British folk rock musician Sandy Denny. The album was released in 1972 and begun just a fortnight after her UK tour promoting her debut solo album, The North Star Grassman and the Ravens, ended in early November 1971.
Fotheringay is the self-titled album by the group formed by Sandy Denny after she left Fairport Convention in 1969, and was the group's only contemporaneous release. It was recorded in 1970 with former Eclection member and Denny's future husband Trevor Lucas, with Gerry Conway, Jerry Donahue, and Pat Donaldson. The album includes five Sandy Denny compositions, one song by Lucas, as well as two traditional songs and two cover versions: Bob Dylan's "Too Much of Nothing" and Gordon Lightfoot's "The Way I Feel".
The Bunch were a British folk rock band, which came together in 1971 to record their one off album, Rock On.
Rising for the Moon is the tenth studio album by the British folk rock band Fairport Convention, released in 1975. It reached number 52 in the UK albums charts. This was the last Fairport album to feature vocalist Sandy Denny.
The Guv'nor vol 4 is a compilation of recordings by Ashley Hutchings.
The Guv'nor vol 1 is a compilation of recordings by Ashley Hutchings.
The North Star Grassman and the Ravens is a 1971 album by English folk rock singer-songwriter Sandy Denny. Built mostly around her own compositions, The North Star Grassman and the Ravens is distinguished by its elusive lyrics and unexpected harmonies.
Heyday: the BBC Radio Sessions 1968–69 is an album by English folk rock band Fairport Convention first released in 1987. As its title suggests, it consists of live versions of songs recorded for John Peel's Top Gear radio programmes.
Who Knows Where the Time Goes? is a retrospective compilation of the work of English folk rock singer Sandy Denny issued in 1985. It is a four LP boxed set released on the Island Records label in the UK and Germany and on Hannibal/Carthage Records in the US, later reissued as a three CD set. It includes released and previously unreleased recordings from 1967 to 1977, live performances, outtakes and demos from Denny's solo career, and with Fairport Convention, Fotheringay and Strawbs.
Rendezvous is the fourth and final studio album by English folk rock singer-songwriter Sandy Denny, released in May 1977, and the final album released during her lifetime.
Gold Dust is a live album by the late English folk rock singer Sandy Denny. It documents one of Denny's last public performances and was recorded at London's "Sound Circus" venue at the Royalty Theatre, Portugal Street, near Aldwych, London on 27 November 1977. The album features many of her classic songs both as a solo artist and as a member of Fairport Convention and Fotheringay and remains the most extensive documentation of Sandy's live work with a backing band. The album was not released on the label originally planned owing to stated technical problems with the master tape, and was only released on a different label twenty years after her death after various guitar and backing vocal tracks parts were re-recorded by Jerry Donahue and others.
Fairport Chronicles is a 1976 compilation album of the British folk-rock band Fairport Convention, including songs from 1968 to the departure of the last original member in 1972. The double album is unique in that it was only released in the USA, features original material and American covers over the traditional material usually associated with Fairport, and includes songs from side projects. All of the material was originally issued in the USA on A&M Records, which explains the exclusion of songs taken from their first, pre-Sandy Denny album, which was only later released in the United States.
Fotheringay 2 is the second album by the group formed by Sandy Denny after she left Fairport Convention in 1969. The band was short-lived, and broke up in 1971 after only a small number of tracks for this album had been completed, some of which then subsequently appeared on other compilations. The remainder were assembled, with additional studio recording as needed, from masters in various states of completeness by Jerry Donahue and finally released in 2008. Two songs originally worked on for this album were re-recorded and appeared on the first solo Denny Album The North Star Grassman and the Ravens in 1971, while live versions of others had previously been known to collectors from recordings of BBC radio broadcasts and live concerts, as subsequently compiled on the 2015 release Nothing More: The Collected Fotheringay.
Live at the BBC is a four disc compilation of British folk singer songwriter Sandy Denny's BBC sessions from 1966 to 1973 and contains almost all her solo work for the corporation. Disc 4 of the set is a DVD of Denny performing three songs on the music programme One in ten in 1971: the only surviving solo footage of her. This compilation superseded the earlier one-disc set issued on the Strange Fruit label in 1997 that due to rights issues was withdrawn on the day of release thereby creating a highly collectable disc up until the release of this comprehensive set.
Sandy Denny is a 2010 compilation box set of recordings by folk singer Sandy Denny and comprises all studio material and recordings made during her time both as a solo artist and as a member of Fotheringay, Fairport Convention, and other groups, together with home demos and live recordings.