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  1. 25 de abr. de 2020 · Bless The Weather - YouTube. John Martyn. 8.08K subscribers. 11. 346 views 3 years ago. Provided to YouTube by Ditto Music Bless The Weather · John Martyn & Danny Thompson · John...

  2. Danny Thompson provided bass accompaniment and Richard Thompson, Tony Reeves (Colosseum), Ian Whiteman and Roger Powell (Mighty Baby) all played on the album. Glistening Glyndebourne showcased John’s technique of playing acoustic guitar through the echoplex to stunning effect, although Rolling Stone magazine dismissed the track as “rambling

  3. Richard Thompson - guitar; Smiley De Jonnes - percussion; Beverley Martyn - guitar, vocals; Danny Thompson - double bass; Tony Reeves - double bass, bass guitar; Ian Whiteman - keyboards; Roger Powell - drums; Technical. Steve Mayberry - engineer; Visualeyes - design, photography; References

  4. Released in November 1971 Bless The Weather was an album of pure, simple but mature songs which John says was “very innocent, very beautiful and a pleasure to make”. Some of the songs were written in the studio on the day they were recorded, satisfying John’s desire to be spontaneous. Danny Thompson provided bass accompaniment and Richard ...

  5. Provided to YouTube by Universal Music GroupBless The Weather · John Martyn1971: The Year That Music Changed Everything℗ 1971 Island Records, a division of U...

  6. Many rate Bless The Weather even better than Solid Air. 'So nice to see our John again.'- Paul Wheeler. First CD release May 1993. Remastered and expanded CD 7 November 2005 (Island first pink label design). ... "The only concrete suggestion I made was to ask Danny Thompson to play bowed bass on Bless The Weather (the title track)."

  7. theshfl.com › album › Bless-the-WeatherBless the Weather

    might be the true start of Martyn leaving folk behind). Martyn starts working in earnest with upright bassist Danny Thompson and abandoning known forms (folk, pop, rock) and obvious sounds (kick and snare, for one). Beverley Martyn is almost entirely absent now, except for a few spooky backing vocals (see “Let The Good Things Come”).