Fans of singer, songwriter, and Brit-folk chanteuse
Bridget St. John will no doubt be delighted by this double-disc, 41-cut selection of her BBC recordings with
John Peel and other DJs from the late '60s through the mid-'70s.
Peel was hosting
Top Gear at this time, and took over the network’s
Night Ride program from producer
John Muir in 1968.
St. John appeared on
Night Ride first and that initial off-air rehearsal performance is here, near the end of disc two at her insistence, though its audio quality is not as high as most on this handsome package. The songs she chose for this performance are quite telling: “To Be Without a Hitch,” “Ask Me No Questions,” "Rochefort,” and “Lizard Long Tongue Boy,” to mention a few. This set is not arranged chronologically, which may piss off a few hardcore collectors and bibliophiles, but that’s what remote controls and multi-disc changers are for. It is arranged aesthetically -- the material on disc one is nearly flawlessly reproduced, while disc two has some rougher live spots (that do
not take away from the performances). The package, with copious liner notes and an interview with
St. John, has been wonderfully compiled and sequenced by Hux with the full cooperation of the artist and was beautifully remastered by
Ron Geesin, who appears as a sideman on many of these sessions, as do
Mike Oldfield,
Bernie Marsden, and
David Bedford.
St. John was one of the first artists signed to
Peel's Dandelion Records imprint, and some of the tunes she recorded on her five albums were previewed either in these BBC sessions for
Night Ride,
Top Gear, or the terrific
Radio 1 in Concert series.
St. John’s performances of her own songs are complemented richly by covers of
Buffy Sainte-Marie's “Lazarus,”
Joni Mitchell's “Night in the City,” and
John Martyn's “The River.”
Kevin Ayers duets with
St. John on three tunes from a
Radio 1 in Concert performance in 1971: “Jolie Madame,” “The Spider and the Fly,” and the co-written “Oyster and the Flying Fish.” A collection like this is pretty much for fans only; part of that is the appeal of her voice, which is limited in range in the same way
Nick Drake's was. But there was a reason she was a favorite of
Peel’s: she was a talented -- if shy songwriter -- who delivered her material with an unintended aura of mystery, ambiguity, and authority that is uncharacteristic for the era, though it has been oft-imitated since. There are other good compilations available for novices culled from her five albums, but for those dedicated fans, this is the holy grail.
–
Thom Jurek, Rovi