Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Binding: Audio CD
EAN: 5099950386727
Label: Real World
Manufacturer: Real World
Number Of Discs: 1
Publisher: Real World
Release Date: October 15, 2007
Studio: Real World
Sales Rank: 371
Disc 1:- 'Ouses 'Ouses 'Ouses - Cooper, Johnny & Sheila Chandra
- John Barleycorn - Carthy, Martin & Eliza/Paul Weller
- Tam Lyn Retold - Zephaniah, Benjamin & Eliza Carthy/Transglobal Underground/S
imon Emmerson
- Death And The Maiden Retold - Tunng
- Cold Hailey Rainy Night - Carthy, Eliza & Chris Wood/Transglobal Underground/The Young
Copper Family
- Welcome Sailor - Chandra, Sheila & Chris Wood
- Acres Of Ground - Carthy, Eliza
- Pilsden Pen - Village Band
- Hard Times Of Old England Retold - Bragg, Billy & Simon Emmerson/The Young Copper Family/Eliza
Carthy
- Kit Whites I And II - Gloworms
- Slow On The Uptake - Tiger Moth
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Average Rating: 
Rating: -
I think this is probably a great album and certainly a sterling effort to bring together a range of influences both old and new to fuse a new UK folk perspective. The first talking bit sounds like Stanley Unwin on that Small faces album though and it can get just a little bit self indulgent - Hopefully like me though it will inspire you to re look at the rich heritage of traditional music this country has to offer
Rating: -
Definitely a Curate's egg of a recording - good in parts. The first track (spoken) is excellent as are some of the more traditionally done tracks e.g John Barleycorn, and Hard Times of Old England with current day hard times is brilliant. I was looking forward to hearing a different version of Tam Lyn (one of my favourite songs) but RAP!!!! come on! an abomination.
Rating: -
Dear Georgina,
What a wonderful idea of Nomasters and yourself to issue 'our' Imagined Village cd. I say 'our' right away, because the homeliness, the recognition and the heart-warming tunes are sufficient to make the most hardened of man/woman melt away on (soft) impact.
As you most surely know (and as much as Barry, Jim and Lester do) there is that poem of Rupert Brooke's that says that, wherever a British soldier might find his final resting-place, there is that secure spot 'that is forever England'.
At the computer keyboard in the attic of our cosy home but all around in Flanders as much as anywhere and everywhere, one can feel that same - the French would say - certain je ne sais quoi, meaning the warmth of a world past ... Read More:
Rating: -
I can't quite work out why i was almost moved to tears by this album, then I listened to 'Hard times in Old England' and thought "John Peel would have loved this..." and it pushed me over the edge...
This album has profoundly affected the way i think about not just English Folk music but Englishness in general: I like folk, but in small doses (and definitely without my finger in my ear!) and I also like house, rock, drum and bass, reggae, and this album made me think these days bands like Fairport Convention and Steeleye Span make up a backbone of "what people think folk used to be". We should remember these bands were ground breaking in their day, and so it is with this album.
Enjoy, and if you can't afford to buy it, dowload ... Read More:
Rating: -
....warbling, affected, ill-considered, jarringly incompatible ingredients.... total rubbish.
Except for Bob (?) Coppers' little spoken word section; for which the only star.
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