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From the Beggar's Mantle...Fringed with Gold

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

From the Beggars Mantle...Fringed with Gold
Studio album by
Released1972
Recorded1971
StudioDecca, London
GenrePop, MOR
Length33:15
LabelDecca
ProducerRay Horricks
Barbara Dickson chronology
Do Right Woman
(1970)
From the Beggars Mantle...Fringed with Gold
(1972)
Answer Me
(1976)

From the Beggar's Mantle ... Fringed with Gold is an album by Barbara Dickson.

"The Morning Lies Heavy on Me" by Allan Taylor is a soldier's farewell to his family. Dickson had met the folk singer Daisy Chapman (1912 - 1979) in 1968, and had learned "The Orange and the Blue" directly from her.[citation needed] It is a longer version of the song "All Around My Hat". "Lord Thomas of Winesberry and the King's Daughter" is sustained for 6 minutes with simple fiddle and guitar accompaniment. The album was recorded in 1971 and released on vinyl in 1972. It was re-released in 2006 on CD with Do Right Woman.[1]

Track listing

Side One

  1. "Witch of the Westmorland" (Archie Fisher) (4:08)
  2. "If I Never, Ever Saw You Again" (Archie Fisher) (3:03)
  3. "Recruited Collier" (Traditional) (2:35)
  4. "The Morning Lies Heavy On Me" (Allan Taylor) (3:10)
  5. "Fine Flowers in the Valley" (Traditional) (3:01)

Side Two

  1. "Lord Thomas of Winesberry and the King's Daughter" (Traditional; arranged by Archie Fisher) (6:02)
  2. "The Climb" (Archie Fisher) (3:16)
  3. "The Orange and the Blue" (Traditional) (3:38)
  4. "Winter's Song" (Alan Hull) (4:32)

Personnel

Technical
  • Derek Varnals - engineer

References

  1. ^ "Barbara Dickson site - album information". Archived from the original on 17 May 2008. Retrieved 24 November 2008.
This page was last edited on 24 January 2023, at 20:33
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