His second LP, from 1965. Mostly his own songs — including Anti Apartheid — with Roy Harper singing on A Man I’d Rather Be, and John Renbourn duetting on Lucky Thirteen. Bert swaps his steel-string for a banjo, to close with 900 Miles (the same year Terry Callier made it his own, for Prestige).
Originally released on Stefan Grossman’s Kicking Mule label in 1979, after the break-up of Pentangle. With Martin Jenkins, Nigel Portman-Smith, Luce Langridge — and Jacquie McShee on one track.
Still breathtaking.
Rasta Cowboy excursion.
Tough, dismissive, soundboy digi. A King Tubby dubplate from 1986.
A title track which never ages, unfortunately.
Celebrated late-eighties soundboy business — another of his very best, revived at last.
Highly recommended — previously unreleased digi fire from the same sessions and mould as He Was A Friend.