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John Renbourn's Ship of Fools

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Download links and information about John Renbourn's Ship of Fools by John Renbourn. This album was released in 1988 and it belongs to Rock, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 42:37 minutes.

Artist: John Renbourn
Release date: 1988
Genre: Rock, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist
Tracks: 10
Duration: 42:37
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Searching for Lambs (featuring Steve Tilston, Tony Roberts, Maggie Boyle) 3:41
2. Sandwood Down to Kyle (featuring Steve Tilston, Tony Roberts, Maggie Boyle) 3:55
3. Bogey's Bonnie Belle (featuring Steve Tilston, Tony Roberts, Maggie Boyle) 3:55
4. Lark in the Clear Air (featuring Steve Tilston, Tony Roberts, Maggie Boyle) 2:59
5. The Martinmass Wind (featuring Steve Tilston, Tony Roberts, Maggie Boyle) 6:12
6. Cobbler's Jig/Maltese Brawls (featuring Steve Tilston, Tony Roberts, Maggie Boyle) 3:27
7. I Live Not Where I Love (featuring Steve Tilston, Tony Roberts, Maggie Boyle) 4:06
8. The Verdant Braes of Screen (featuring Steve Tilston, Tony Roberts, Maggie Boyle) 5:00
9. Ship of Fools (featuring Steve Tilston, Tony Roberts, Maggie Boyle) 6:44
10. Travellers' Prayer (featuring Steve Tilston, Tony Roberts, Maggie Boyle) 2:38

Details

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In addition to being called Ship of Fools, this album is credited to John Renbourn's Ship of Fools, signaling that it is not a Renbourn solo album, but rather a group effort. Previously, Renbourn has used the credit "the John Renbourn Group," but since the personnel is different, he seems to have opted for a new moniker. The chief difference is that, in this case, the female singer is not his old Pentangle partner Jacqui McShee but rather Maggie Boyle, who takes lead vocals on four of the ten tracks, in addition to playing flute. Tony Roberts plays wind instruments, as he did in the John Renbourn Group, with Scott Breadman, producer Mitch Greenhill, and Michael Tempo adding various percussion instruments. Renbourn is joined on the guitar by Steve Tilston, who also adds mandolin. The music is stately traditional British folk in Renbourn's familiar manner, and the mixture is also familiar, with "Cobbler's Jig/Maltese Brawls" the instrumental and the album concluding with an a cappella hymn, "Travellers' Prayer." The album is thus a worthy successor to the John Renbourn Group albums A Maid in Bedlam and The Enchanted Garden.