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  1. Solid Air is a massive improvement over some of Martyn's previous work, and many of the songs still remain today as Martyn's signature tunes. The album lets itself down in one or two areas, and I'd rather be the Devil feels rather out of place in comparison with his softer and sexier melodies. It is because of these slip ups that Solid Air ...

  2. Solid Air. John Martyn se n'è andato il 29 gennaio scorso: era un sessantenne scozzese a cui la vita con una mano aveva donato un talento vocale incommensurabile, mentre con l'altra gli aveva tolto progressivamente tranquillità e pace. Certo, anche lui ci aveva messo del suo, andandoci giù pesante con l'alcool, ingaggiando di volta in volta ...

  3. Solid Air is the album that unites the casual and the committed, the trendsetter and the naysayer. Martyn played the album in its entirety in 2006 around the UK, initially as part of the All Tomorrow's Parties curated Don't Look Back series. "John Martyn himself didn't have an awful lot to say about Solid Air" Andy Childs wrote in Zigzag in 1974.

  4. The Apprentice. 1 Feb 2023 | Album Reviews. The Apprentice (Esoteric 3CD + DVD released 25 November 2022). The album that finished his Island... Read More. Stormbringer! And The Road To Ruin. 4 Nov 2018 | Album Reviews. Reissue CDs Weekly: John & Beverley Martyn, Mott The Hoople Revisiting Island Records: The...

  5. Solid Air is the fourth studio album by Scottish singer-songwriter John Martyn, released in February 1973 by Island Records.

  6. 7 de sept. de 2006 · Solid Air (Remastered) There’s mystery in the air as John Martyn revives a classic. For an album that had no noticeable commercial impact here when it first appeared in February 1973, John Martyn’s Solid Air has enjoyed a remarkable afterlife. Unlike the chart toppers by Gilbert O’Sullivan and Alice Cooper that out gunned it in its day ...

  7. 22 de may. de 2009 · Solid Air (Deluxe Edition) Martyn’s 1973 opus remastered, plus an album of extras in the sleeve notes to this retooled version of John Martyn’s masterpiece, John Hillarby recalls an offstage moment when the singer, a man not in the habit of unpicking his lyrics, was asked to explain what he meant by ‘solid air’.