No theatrics on stage! Just the magic of beautiful music, beautifully performed and sung. And no other group fused traditional folk with Jazz with such aplomb!
"Just the magic of beautiful music" And that's ALL we should need! Real music, performed by real musicians, requires NO artificial enhancements. Here, for example, Jacqui's voice _alone_ is worth more than any lighting rig (plus dance troupe, cavorting on stage, irrelevantly)!
I had the privilege of being brought up by my Dad, a jazz/blues/folk fan who spent his whole life fighting to 'Keep Music Live'. So much so, I had the gift of God honour to see, and meet, Pentangle reformed twice. My father was a modest, introspective man until injustice, then he arose. My greatest, most cherished, memory of him was standing on stage introducing the newly reformed Pentangle and just shining, glowing, emanating in the success of sharing the greatest group of musicians ever to have played a (small) venue anywhere, ever. :] Thanks to him, and my mother (classical/opera/big band/folk), I have an encyclopaedic love of music...however, ONLY Pentangle lift me beyond everything, and everyone, else and remind me the beauty that can be created when a group of people work together. Joy to you.
When I was in boarding school (1968-1971) we would listen to Pentangle nearly every morning before classes! There’s nothing like this now! Our school was up in the mountains above Ventura, Ca in Ojai. Kind of fit the area and the times.. that and mostly Scottish by heritage
Pentangle are ALWAYS wonderful - but there is something in the melody of Willy O'Winsbury, and of course the timeless bardic delivery from Jacqui McShee that just pulls at my heart. The result is, simply, sublime.
It's great to see so many humbling and truly appreciative comments here today about this timeless and fantastic group, The Pentangle. That so many comment, they just discovered them recently. I was about 20 years old in 1974, when the second FM radio station in the nation that played long LP tracks by the Christmas season of 1968, KINK FM 102 in our hometown of Portland Oregon was soon playing the Pentangle's music. This just after KSAN FM in San Francisco started what became known soon as the first FM underground station in the Summer of 1968. I soon lost all interest in the more usual pop music, especially when I personally heard that first track by the Pentangle one day in 1974 on Portland's KINK FM. It was the opening title track to the Sweet Child Album. I was soon out into my first car, my Datsun 1600 Roadster in our parents driveway, and driving to the local most eclectic record store here, Music Millennium. I believe I called them on the phone to make sure they had this album. It's a double vinyl disc on the import from England Transatlantic label. I still have it today in nearly pristine condition. If others are familiar with it, it's album cover laminated with a glossy protective covering, and that huge colorful pentangle symbol, it's a beautiful fold out like a book cover. The inside shows all the group members standing full body, across in vertical black & white photos, with a short quote by each group member. There is a brief write-up by music critic, above on the inside cover. I believe his last name is Keepnews. He describes the groups music as a unique combination of folk, classical, jazz, and blues. Jump ahead many years later, I think it was around 2012 here in Portland Oregon that Bert Jansch came to play solo at the Mississippi Studios in North Portland. I had already seen John Renbourn play solo at a local community college chapel some years before. That was a special moment. And I wish I had taken my Sweet Child album cover to have him sign it. So I did it this time when I saw Bert Jansch play. It was a small hall of maybe several hundred people packed standing in front of the stage while he played acoustic guitar and sang a little for an hour or so. I took a short crude video lasting maybe only a minute or two with my small pocket digital camera then. More recently I used a better digital camera to record a couple numbers from the Sweet child album showing the needle tracking in the record groove up close. This can be seen in my Mark Seibold RUclips Channel . It might only be one number with Jacqui singing solo on the Sweet Child album. At the concert by Bert, I'd taken a lady friend of my age and several younger friends that were musicians. At the end, everybody was leaving the hall, but I walked up to the stage and what I thought was a roadie just rounding up the music equipment and cables, I asked her if Bert might come back out because I'd like him to sign my Sweet Child album cover and let him know that it changed my life when I first heard his and the groups music, on a local FM station here in Portland when I was only 20 years of age in 1974. She said she'd go back and ask him to come out, and she kept working on rounding up the equipment to pack it away. My lady friend came back in from out toward the street with our younger friends and said come on Mark, let's go, he's not going to come back out. I just asked the lady rounding up the cables again if she's sure he would come out, and she said yes I'm sure he will, because I'm going to go ask him right now, he's my husband. I was so humbled I had to tell Bert's wife, oh thank you, I'm so honored to meet you before I meet Bert. He finally came walking out a few seconds later and I remember him struggling to walk a little, as it must have been the last year or two of his life. I shook his hand I told him that this album changed my whole life as appreciating great music when I was only 20. He said something and then he also mentioned that his favorite banjo player in the world is here in Portland Oregon. Then he signed his autograph to the photo inside the album cover and drew a quick circle with a star in the middle. I was told by others at all for the group members sign their names this way with the Pentangle monogram. So I thanked him for coming to Portland, then we walked out. I don't think it was a year or two later I was driving in my car one night and listening to videos on RUclips of the Pentangle. I saw people's condolences and respects paid about Bert, then realized he had just passed away. I'll never forget talking to him so close, the sound of his humble voice, and his handshake.
Salut mon ami, tu as découvert Pentangle avec 7 ans de retard. Jacqui McShee a dit : "J'avais l'habitude de chanter avec ma sœur (Pam, décédée) mais nous avons rompu notre duo et je l'ai remplacée par quatre hommes". * * Hello my friend, you discovered Pentangle 7 years late. Jacqui McShee said : "I used tae sing wi' mah sister (Pam, deceased), but we broke up the act an' I replaced her wi' four men".
I'm from Portland, too. I missed Bert at Mississippi Studios but caught him at the Aladdin and Lola's Room at the Crystal. Caught John Renbourn in Portland every chance I could. Even saw John and Jacqui at the Troubadour London. Have about 15 Pentangle related CDs.
Pentangle's music should be taught in schools as a compulsory part of a music course. Every young musician should be made to understand what miracles can happen when the right people come together. And "Light Flight" is nothing short of a miracle. After 50+ years my feet still start tapping on their own when that song comes on - I have no control over them.
TAUGHT IN SCHOOL, I'M AFRAID THE MASSES ARE LIGHT YEARS FROM SUCH REFINEMENT. PEARLS BEFORE SWINE. IT WOULD INTERUPT THEIR HIP HOP. "OUR" WORLD IS OVER.
Hard to shake the suspicion that Jacqui is a time traveler from early 17th century England. Her face is like a portrait from that bygone era. Were the players not up to her standards then? Was the whole folk/jazz scene in London of Shakespeare's time not to her liking? ;) Whatever the case, we're so fortunate she decided to land in 1960's England and carry on from there. What a wonderful voice and a timeless talent!
Yes! I could see her with a crown. Or as a beautiful peasant of that era. This music gives me the chills. I was born in 1973 and I’m thinking maybe I heard this on the radio as a child.
I HAVE ALWAYS LOVED EVERY MEMBER OF THIS SO VERY VERY PRECIOUS BAND MY HUGGING THEM WOULD CRUSH THEIR LUNGS !!! WE ARE ALL SUCH A BLESSED SPECIAL REFINED FAMILY , IT ALMOST KILLS ME WE DON'T ALL KNOW EACH OTHER. I WOULD HAVE GRANTED THIS BAND ETERNAL YOUTH IF I COULD HAVE. BLESS THEM AND THEIR FANS. NUFF SAID
It is so pure it is so deep What a pleasure for my soul for all souls It is magic it is a massage for our hearts The Pentangle - sound is familiar to me from my teenage - times on It is a vademekum for my heart and soul Silence plays music
I just love Pentangle! Went to see them live many times when I was late teens early twenties. I had a crush on Jacqui Mc Shee at the time, and now just wish i had a voice like hers. (I started off male but I am now female, and have been that way for the the last 25 years!)
Pentangle were huge. John and Bert talked about how the constant touring across the world between 67 and 73 was just too much for a bunch of folkies, and it was that that eventually decided the band's demise. They were the first folk music I heard when a mate played me Sweet Child back in 86. And John Renbourn still remains a massive influence on me. I had the privilege of meeting him several times. He was always very generous with his time, advice and support. Incredible band. What a wonderful way to start the day, not seen this footage before. Thanks for uploading, I'm going to have to re-read your book again. For those that don't know, Colin Harper wrote a wonderful book many years ago, 'Dazzling Stranger', ostensibly about Bert Jansch, but covered the history of the band as well.
What absolutely beautiful and spellbinding music! I've only just discovered Pentangle a few weeks ago when RUclips played a version of them doing Willy O'Winsbury after I had searched for and listened to Sandy Denny singing her classic "Who Knows Where The Time Goes." I've been a fan of Fairport Convention since the early 70s. The first song on this video reminds me strongly of the music of Renaissance and Annie Haslam. They were my favorite group back them and I saw them in concert 7 times.
Fantastic footage of a fantastic band. They were all brilliant. Jaqui's voice - as well as being astonishingly beautiful and otherworldly, is intonationally perfect. I really wish they'd covered more jazz-tinged material, much as I liked the traditional stuff, I thought they excelled [and led the way] in jazz-folk.
The version of Reflection here is priceless. They are as prog as any King Crimson. This is one of your best archive selections CH. Thanks again. And yes, Dazzling Stranger is a must read for you all.
@@Melvorgazh At a folk festival here in England (city of Lincoln). Jacqui McShee's Pentangle headlined, and were brilliant, Jacqui still sounded great.
@@snowfiresunwind Indeed it was. They never repeated it but in the mid-80s the BBC did briefly reprise as Take Three Women, looking at the lives of the Ladies 15 years on down the the road. Unfortunately didn’t see it so can’t comment.
OK, to the point. There is some cosmic harmonic confluence in the ballad Wille O Winsbury. Such a Druid like tale here sung by this beguiling lady with a face and voice to huant and heal with masterful accompaniment. I have known some other Gaelic melodies that enter your ears and go to some heartfelt emotional place. The British Isles, must be something in the Water.
They two or three tours to Australia maybe more also a tour with John Martyn saw a few shows also when Bert Jansch graced these shores...they were fantastic times...nothing like that will ever come round again so glad l was there....
Forgot to add a chatted with Bert in Katoomba Blue Mts Australia and he pointed me toward Dick Gaughan which was a superb tip off DGs Willie o Winsbury is truly a masterpiece
Adverts that kick in the middle of songs? Totally unacceptable! It's not difficult to tell RUclips that it's a song thing, and they wait for the pause...
Meravigliosi Pentangle 🎶🎤🎸 Ho ascoltato John Renbourn in solo in due occasioni, poi Bert Jansch e Jacqui McShee e successivamente Danny Thompson con altri; speriamo che Terry Cox possa venire in Italia 🥁😉
Thank you for this wonderful clip. I love it how they spell John Renbourn’s name with an E at the end, like it was Melbourne, probably the city they recorded it in!
Once again (like in the Belgium TV appearance), almost no trace of John Renbourn on the screen. Seems an habit and maybe to his onw request. Does someone know?
Uncontaminated Britishness. Sad one must dig this out the accumulated sands of a fifty-two years period during which both the finest possible artistic expression and that particular thrust to freedom, fuelled by that unique sense of magic that used to gravitate about some undefined center somewhere in the British Islands, were gradually reduced to silence. Digging is how one finds gems, anyway.
i was never keen on folk. they [pentangle] convinced me a bit. bert and john moved me in the same direction. then many years later i discovered irish music. .sharon shannon. of course, i am getting older and my taste natuarally [spelling]? changes. Danny Thompson with John Martyn sealed my fate.
And barely seen on camera here, like he didn't exist. I'm sure he was simple and humble, and didn't mind that, but it is shame that such an important figure is left out :-( Nevertheless, lovely to see one of the best bands ever on footage like this!
No theatrics on stage! Just the magic of beautiful music, beautifully performed and sung. And no other group fused traditional folk with Jazz with such aplomb!
"Just the magic of beautiful music"
And that's ALL we should need! Real music, performed by real musicians, requires NO artificial enhancements. Here, for example, Jacqui's voice _alone_ is worth more than any lighting rig (plus dance troupe, cavorting on stage, irrelevantly)!
Moments like these convince me Pentangle was the most innovative musical gift ever to come from the shores of Britain.
I agree 100%
aqree
"agree". @@potdog1000
Félicitations ! Tu en parles parfaitement bien et de manière poétique.
Congratulations ! Thou talk'st 'bout 'hem perfectly well and poetically.
@d.
😊anielgiraud1118
Danny Thompson is magnificent
as john martyn realised
Oh yes… genius !!!
They're all magnificent.
I had the privilege of being brought up by my Dad, a jazz/blues/folk fan who spent his whole life fighting to 'Keep Music Live'. So much so, I had the gift of God honour to see, and meet, Pentangle reformed twice. My father was a modest, introspective man until injustice, then he arose. My greatest, most cherished, memory of him was standing on stage introducing the newly reformed Pentangle and just shining, glowing, emanating in the success of sharing the greatest group of musicians ever to have played a (small) venue anywhere, ever. :]
Thanks to him, and my mother (classical/opera/big band/folk), I have an encyclopaedic love of music...however, ONLY Pentangle lift me beyond everything, and everyone, else and remind me the beauty that can be created when a group of people work together.
Joy to you.
Jacqui didn't need auto-tone, unlike most singers today. Angelic voice.
"Angelic voice"
Which, strangely, always made her seem _beautiful_ to me! (Ditto, Sandy Denny)
Tam Lin.......no more need be said@@marvinc9994
Taylor Swift is the greatest singer of all time.
Shit I'm pissed again, ain't I, damn.
@@bartonseagrave9605 clearly 🤣
"Willy ..." is Jacqui's best vocals EVER and. She had a peak in 1972 and that says something of pure quality. ❤
Best performance of Wilie of Winsbury I've ever heard by them. Jacqui McShee's voice is angelic.
It's good, George - but this performance is the killer. ruclips.net/video/nwqP_yoszCE/видео.html
One of the greatest, most musical bands ever IMO
Fairport Convention, Incredible String Band, Pentangle, three great treasures.
Such magical music. she has a face right out of a Renaissance era painting
And a musical talent to match.
When I was in boarding school (1968-1971) we would listen to Pentangle nearly every morning before classes! There’s nothing like this now! Our school was up in the mountains above Ventura, Ca in Ojai. Kind of fit the area and the times.. that and mostly Scottish by heritage
BLESSED BE.
Pentangle are ALWAYS wonderful - but there is something in the melody of Willy O'Winsbury, and of course the timeless bardic delivery from Jacqui McShee that just pulls at my heart. The result is, simply, sublime.
Music doesn't get much better than this
It's great to see so many humbling and truly appreciative comments here today about this timeless and fantastic group, The Pentangle.
That so many comment, they just discovered them recently. I was about 20 years old in 1974, when the second FM radio station in the nation that played long LP tracks by the Christmas season of 1968, KINK FM 102 in our hometown of Portland Oregon was soon playing the Pentangle's music. This just after KSAN FM in San Francisco started what became known soon as the first FM underground station in the Summer of 1968.
I soon lost all interest in the more usual pop music, especially when I personally heard that first track by the Pentangle one day in 1974 on Portland's KINK FM.
It was the opening title track to the Sweet Child Album. I was soon out into my first car, my Datsun 1600 Roadster in our parents driveway, and driving to the local most eclectic record store here, Music Millennium. I believe I called them on the phone to make sure they had this album.
It's a double vinyl disc on the import from England Transatlantic label. I still have it today in nearly pristine condition.
If others are familiar with it, it's album cover laminated with a glossy protective covering, and that huge colorful pentangle symbol, it's a beautiful fold out like a book cover. The inside shows all the group members standing full body, across in vertical black & white photos, with a short quote by each group member. There is a brief write-up by music critic, above on the inside cover. I believe his last name is Keepnews. He describes the groups music as a unique combination of folk, classical, jazz, and blues.
Jump ahead many years later, I think it was around 2012 here in Portland Oregon that Bert Jansch came to play solo at the Mississippi Studios in North Portland.
I had already seen John Renbourn play solo at a local community college chapel some years before. That was a special moment.
And I wish I had taken my Sweet Child album cover to have him sign it.
So I did it this time when I saw Bert Jansch play. It was a small hall of maybe several hundred people packed standing in front of the stage while he played acoustic guitar and sang a little for an hour or so. I took a short crude video lasting maybe only a minute or two with my small pocket digital camera then. More recently I used a better digital camera to record a couple numbers from the Sweet child album showing the needle tracking in the record groove up close. This can be seen in my Mark Seibold RUclips Channel . It might only be one number with Jacqui singing solo on the Sweet Child album.
At the concert by Bert, I'd taken a lady friend of my age and several younger friends that were musicians.
At the end, everybody was leaving the hall, but I walked up to the stage and what I thought was a roadie just rounding up the music equipment and cables, I asked her if Bert might come back out because I'd like him to sign my Sweet Child album cover and let him know that it changed my life when I first heard his and the groups music, on a local FM station here in Portland when I was only 20 years of age in 1974.
She said she'd go back and ask him to come out, and she kept working on rounding up the equipment to pack it away. My lady friend came back in from out toward the street with our younger friends and said come on Mark, let's go, he's not going to come back out. I just asked the lady rounding up the cables again if she's sure he would come out, and she said yes I'm sure he will, because I'm going to go ask him right now, he's my husband.
I was so humbled I had to tell Bert's wife, oh thank you, I'm so honored to meet you before I meet Bert.
He finally came walking out a few seconds later and I remember him struggling to walk a little, as it must have been the last year or two of his life. I shook his hand I told him that this album changed my whole life as appreciating great music when I was only 20. He said something and then he also mentioned that his favorite banjo player in the world is here in Portland Oregon. Then he signed his autograph to the photo inside the album cover and drew a quick circle with a star in the middle. I was told by others at all for the group members sign their names this way with the Pentangle monogram.
So I thanked him for coming to Portland, then we walked out.
I don't think it was a year or two later I was driving in my car one night and listening to videos on RUclips of the Pentangle. I saw people's condolences and respects paid about Bert, then realized he had just passed away.
I'll never forget talking to him so close, the sound of his humble voice, and his handshake.
Good write up, unfortunately a vinyl copy of Sweet Child costs $100 - $200+, even the CD costs $100.
Salut mon ami, tu as découvert Pentangle avec 7 ans de retard.
Jacqui McShee a dit : "J'avais l'habitude de chanter avec ma sœur (Pam, décédée) mais nous avons rompu notre duo et je l'ai remplacée par quatre hommes".
* * Hello my friend, you discovered Pentangle 7 years late.
Jacqui McShee said : "I used tae sing wi' mah sister (Pam, deceased), but we broke up the act an' I replaced her wi' four men".
I'm from Portland, too. I missed Bert at Mississippi Studios but caught him at the Aladdin and Lola's Room at the Crystal. Caught John Renbourn in Portland every chance I could. Even saw John and Jacqui at the Troubadour London. Have about 15 Pentangle related CDs.
Just breathtakingly beautiful. What a band, what a singer!
What a voice. So crystal clear, such perfect phrasing.
I've witnessed greatness she's no doubt in the high ranks of vocal giants transcends all notion of time
I was there, God help me, all those long years ago. Pentangle : unique, magnificent.
I am 6 years old at the time of this recording. Presently I am in love with Jacqui.
Pentangle's music should be taught in schools as a compulsory part of a music course. Every young musician should be made to understand what miracles can happen when the right people come together. And "Light Flight" is nothing short of a miracle. After 50+ years my feet still start tapping on their own when that song comes on - I have no control over them.
TAUGHT IN SCHOOL, I'M AFRAID THE MASSES ARE LIGHT YEARS FROM SUCH REFINEMENT. PEARLS BEFORE SWINE. IT WOULD INTERUPT THEIR HIP HOP. "OUR" WORLD IS OVER.
This one should be put in a time capsule.72 was a haunted year.Cameraman was as taken with her as the rest of us were...
Not to mention the absolute technical brilliance of this band , so incredibly perfect, never missing a beat or a note. Amazing
Hard to shake the suspicion that Jacqui is a time traveler from early 17th century England. Her face is like a portrait from that bygone era. Were the players not up to her standards then? Was the whole folk/jazz scene in London of Shakespeare's time not to her liking? ;)
Whatever the case, we're so fortunate she decided to land in 1960's England and carry on from there. What a wonderful voice and a timeless talent!
Yes! I could see her with a crown. Or as a beautiful peasant of that era. This music gives me the chills. I was born in 1973 and I’m thinking maybe I heard this on the radio as a child.
Well said.
Ha! Spot on!!
...brill 😂
Great. The accompaniment allows the voice to be heard, and what a voice!
The Philistines at RUclips interrupt Jacqui with adverts!
Magical !! Pentangle.
I had forgot how much I liked this band I just can’t get enough at the moment
I HAVE ALWAYS LOVED EVERY MEMBER OF THIS SO VERY VERY PRECIOUS BAND MY HUGGING THEM WOULD CRUSH THEIR LUNGS !!! WE ARE ALL SUCH A BLESSED SPECIAL REFINED FAMILY , IT ALMOST KILLS ME WE DON'T ALL KNOW EACH OTHER. I WOULD HAVE GRANTED THIS BAND ETERNAL YOUTH IF I COULD HAVE. BLESS THEM AND THEIR FANS. NUFF SAID
Fantastıc. It never gets stale.
Such a perfect beautiful soft gentle voice.
OMG Jacquie i have neve heard such an amalgam of voice & instruments , i say this as a retired singer
Willie O' Winsbury, what a track! ❤️❤️❤️
It is so pure
it is so deep
What a pleasure
for my soul
for all souls
It is magic
it is a massage
for our hearts
The Pentangle - sound
is familiar to me
from my teenage - times on
It is a vademekum
for my heart and soul
Silence plays music
💝 Bert dropping in a little mountain dulcimer. 💝
Magical! Never saw this one before! R.I.P. Bert & John.
The wonderful Pentangle.
Timeless sound. Could be made today and sound fresh.
This is the best version on the net.
There are few "meetings" that result in magic, bassist, guitarist, dulcimerist, percussionist and yes sublime is the word. And one perfect soprano!
Best version of 'Willie o Winsbury' I've heard so far!
I just love Pentangle! Went to see them live many times when I was late teens early twenties. I had a crush on Jacqui Mc Shee at the time, and now just wish i had a voice like hers. (I started off male but I am now female, and have been that way for the the last 25 years!)
Jacqui's mic' technique is brilliant.
They just don't make Bands like this anymore.... Five Musicians at the Very Top of Their Game individually and Collectively.
Kann ich auch 1000 Daumen hoch bewerten? Meine Seele fühlt das!!!
Singing along to “Reflection”, the last song. For me, It has an Indian feel to it. Love it. Thank you. Jasmine 🦋🎵
Pentangle were huge. John and Bert talked about how the constant touring across the world between 67 and 73 was just too much for a bunch of folkies, and it was that that eventually decided the band's demise.
They were the first folk music I heard when a mate played me Sweet Child back in 86. And John Renbourn still remains a massive influence on me. I had the privilege of meeting him several times. He was always very generous with his time, advice and support.
Incredible band. What a wonderful way to start the day, not seen this footage before. Thanks for uploading, I'm going to have to re-read your book again. For those that don't know, Colin Harper wrote a wonderful book many years ago, 'Dazzling Stranger', ostensibly about Bert Jansch, but covered the history of the band as well.
Thank you, Mike 🙂
Hello my friend, you discovered Pentangle 9 years late.
Thank you for these songs! I knew Bert played dulcimer but had never seen/heard it. Bravo to all, so beautiful💞
I discovered this band in 2020. Will remember them forever
I discovered them in 2018. Bit ashamed of myself. I'm old enough to have seen them first time round. Got all their albums.
Me around 2019. Why wasn't I more clued up as a youngster!
What absolutely beautiful and spellbinding music! I've only just discovered Pentangle a few weeks ago when RUclips played a version of them doing Willy O'Winsbury after I had searched for and listened to Sandy Denny singing her classic "Who Knows Where The Time Goes." I've been a fan of Fairport Convention since the early 70s.
The first song on this video reminds me strongly of the music of Renaissance and Annie Haslam. They were my favorite group back them and I saw them in concert 7 times.
Fantastic footage of a fantastic band. They were all brilliant. Jaqui's voice - as well as being astonishingly beautiful and otherworldly, is intonationally perfect.
I really wish they'd covered more jazz-tinged material, much as I liked the traditional stuff, I thought they excelled [and led the way] in jazz-folk.
The version of Reflection here is priceless. They are as prog as any King Crimson. This is one of your best archive selections CH. Thanks again. And yes, Dazzling Stranger is a must read for you all.
Just amazing - I can't get enough of them
I love your voice so much
She was and elegant and pretty lady 😽💖
She still was two years ago when I met her after a gig she played, wonderful, warm, friendly, and amazing woman.
@@DjNikGnashers Ah, lucky chap :)
She seems very kind.
Where was it?
@@Melvorgazh At a folk festival here in England (city of Lincoln).
Jacqui McShee's Pentangle headlined, and were brilliant, Jacqui still sounded great.
One of the sweetest voices that I have had the pleasure of hearing !
Her eyes are so beautiful and soulful, to go with that voice.
This is amazing
Isn't that a beautiful tune? I'll give it foive!
Wow, such beautiful music.
Remember the BBC TV Series Light Flight was from. Take Three Girls.
A great and original programme for it's time.
@@snowfiresunwind Indeed it was. They never repeated it but in the mid-80s the BBC did briefly reprise as Take Three Women, looking at the lives of the Ladies 15 years on down the the road. Unfortunately didn’t see it so can’t comment.
OK, to the point. There is some cosmic harmonic confluence in the ballad Wille O Winsbury. Such a Druid like tale here sung by this beguiling lady with a face and voice to huant and heal with masterful accompaniment. I have known some other Gaelic melodies that enter your ears and go to some heartfelt emotional place. The British Isles, must be something in the Water.
Once we were young and beautiful. And now we are time ruined .
Wow…the cadence is brilliant 🤗🙏🍺cheers
Hauntingly beautiful!!! And I like the song too!
What a magical voice !
Wow, stunning voice
times shure have changed since this music was around , but the songs have stayed the same live long pentangle
They two or three tours to Australia maybe more also a tour with John Martyn saw a few shows also when Bert Jansch graced these shores...they were fantastic times...nothing like that will ever come round again so glad l was there....
Forgot to add a chatted with Bert in Katoomba Blue Mts Australia and he pointed me toward Dick Gaughan which was a superb tip off DGs Willie o Winsbury is truly a masterpiece
Just great! I've followed them for more than fifty years. This is a great performance. Thanks, Colin!
Brilliant !
Never seen this clip before, nice to hear slightly different versions.
The greatest band nobody has ever heard of....
@@davestonehill6177 . I've heard of them
Adverts that kick in the middle of songs? Totally unacceptable! It's not difficult to tell RUclips that it's a song thing, and they wait for the pause...
0:00 Light Flight
3:28 Willy O'Winsbury
9:13 Reflection
Never seen this before. Thank you, thank you very much!
Bring back this style of female vocals, so over this bombastic R&B/American Idol crap
FIND LP "LOVE HAS MADE ME STRONGER" BY CAROL KLEYN. YOU WILL FALL IN LOVE ALL OVER AGAIN. EXACT SAME UNIVERSE OR CLOSE TO.
Meravigliosi Pentangle 🎶🎤🎸 Ho ascoltato John Renbourn in solo in due occasioni, poi Bert Jansch e Jacqui McShee e successivamente Danny Thompson con altri; speriamo che Terry Cox possa venire in Italia 🥁😉
A vocal delivery so oure the best to dekivers tales of yore.
Awesome! Fantastic sounds
Great! Precious Pearl! Thanks for posting! 🤝
Great footage of an amazing band! Thanks for posting
I love this rendition of this folk Classic of this song , but I just wish that there was a live version of Anne Briggs version .
Great share, Colin. Thank you.
The best
Your archive seems endless Colin. Can't keep up !
Thank you for this wonderful clip. I love it how they spell John Renbourn’s name with an E at the end, like it was Melbourne, probably the city they recorded it in!
John was a huge influence on me.
Wow 😮 ❤❤❤❤❤❤
Thanks for uploading. Great footage.
this so great!! thank you so much colin for your magnificent channel!!💜
Great
Terry Cox!! x 🥁🎤🎵🎶🎼🔥👍
Wonderful
❤❤
I think she was 28 when this was recorded, she looks considerably younger. Correct me if I'm wrong.
Apparently, the cameraman had some problem with Bert Jansch, as he clearly didn't want him to appear on camera.
I think he was too smitten with Jacqui's beautiful eyes.
Once again (like in the Belgium TV appearance), almost no trace of John Renbourn on the screen. Seems an habit and maybe to his onw request. Does someone know?
Prog Folk Pioneers.
Uncontaminated Britishness. Sad one must dig this out the accumulated sands of a fifty-two years period during which both the finest possible artistic expression and that particular thrust to freedom, fuelled by that unique sense of magic that used to gravitate about some undefined center somewhere in the British Islands, were gradually reduced to silence. Digging is how one finds gems, anyway.
I found Pentangle via a Hip-Hop DJ who explained he was introduced to them by his Dad, he said they were his greatest musical influence.
wow
When did Australia get color TV?
They had the sense to keep it black and white, much better like early photography, more nuanced,
i was never keen on folk. they [pentangle] convinced me a bit. bert and john moved me in the same direction. then many years later i discovered irish music. .sharon shannon. of course, i am getting older and my taste natuarally [spelling]? changes. Danny Thompson with John Martyn sealed my fate.
Bass Drum Guitar Vocal. That's it.
Camerawork and sound is a bit strange but thank you.
1) light flight
2) willy of winsberry
Poor Bert got left out of the naming on Reflection. Still, pretty cool.
And barely seen on camera here, like he didn't exist. I'm sure he was simple and humble, and didn't mind that, but it is shame that such an important figure is left out :-(
Nevertheless, lovely to see one of the best bands ever on footage like this!