Pop & Miscellaneous The best music site on the web there is where you can read about and listen to blues, jazz, classical music and much more. This is your ultimate music resource. Tons of albums can be found within. http://theblues-thatjazz.com/en/pop-miscellaneous/4154.html Wed, 24 Apr 2024 00:31:36 +0000 Joomla! 1.5 - Open Source Content Management en-gb Molly Drake – Molly Drake (1960 - 1993) http://theblues-thatjazz.com/en/pop-miscellaneous/4154-molly-drake/15754-molly-drake-molly-drake-1960-1993.html http://theblues-thatjazz.com/en/pop-miscellaneous/4154-molly-drake/15754-molly-drake-molly-drake-1960-1993.html Molly Drake – Molly Drake (1960 - 1993)

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01. Happiness
02. Little Weaver Bird
03. Cuckoo Time
04. Love Isn't a Right
05. Dream Your Dreams
06. How Wild the Wind Blows
07. What Can a Song Do to You?
08. I Remember
09. A Sound
10. Ballad
11. Woods in May
12. Night Is My Friend
13. Fine Summer Morning
14. Set Me Free
15. Breakfast at Bradenham Woods
16. Never Pine for the Old Love
17. Poor Mum
18. Do You Ever Remember?
19. The First Day

 

The mother of British singer/songwriter Nick Drake, Molly Drake was never a recording artist during her lifetime. She died at the age of 77 in 1993, nearly 20 years after her son's passing. At the time Nick Drake's cult was already substantial, but had yet to grow to such large proportions as it would within a decade. However, until the 2000 Nick Drake documentary A Skin Too Few, it wasn't known that his mother might have wielded a substantial influence upon his music, as that film included a couple of recordings of Molly Drake that bore some eerie resemblance to her son in style. A couple of recordings of her playing (on piano) and singing her own compositions, "Try to Remember" and "Poor Mum," appear on the 2007 Nick Drake compilation Family Tree. ---Richie Unterberger, Rovi

This is surely the most unexpected, strangely compelling release in years – a home recording of self-composed songs made in the 1950s and 60s by Molly Drake, the wife of a successful Warwickshire businessman and mother of Nick Drake, the struggling singer-songwriter who acquired legendary status after dying of an overdose of antidepressants in 1974, aged 26. Nick Drake found posthumous fame thanks to his fragile, haunting songs, and his mother was clearly an influence. As his producer Joe Boyd has written, she was "the missing link in the Nick Drake story – there, in the piano chords, are the roots of Nick's harmonies". Molly's piano-backed songs are brief, some just over a minute in length, and are influenced by the popular music of the day, from show tunes to sentimental ballads. But they are remarkable for their blend of confidence, sadness and quiet intimacy. ---Robin Denselow, theguardian.com

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluelover) Molly Drake Mon, 24 Mar 2014 16:37:06 +0000