A Shattering Live Experience, BBC Radio session, 1969
Nottamun Town, alternative version, 1968
Si Tu Dois Partir, radio recording, 1968
Come all ye, Liege & Lief out-takes, 1969
Tam Lin, Liege & Lief out-takes , 1969
Dirty Linen, Cropredy, 1988
Staines Morris, Philadelphia Folk Fest, 1970
Journeyman's Grace, 1970
Angel delight, Cropredy, 1997
Time is near, Roger Hill/Tom Farnell lineup, 1972
Polly on the shore, live, 1973
Rising for the moon, BBC session, 1974
Reynard the Fox, TV performance, 1987
Rubber band, Simons Records, 1980
Naked Highwayman, Bottom Line, 1998
The wood and the wire, Cropredy 1999
The Crowd, Woodworm, 2002
One sure thing, (excerpt) Sound Techniques, 1967 - Fairport's first demo recording
Track Listings (19) - Disc #2
Sir B McKenzie, 1976
Suzanne, 1968
Time will show the wiser, 1968
Mr Lacey, Dutch TV, 1969
Reno Nevada, French TV, 1968
Percy's song, 1968
Dear Landlord, 1968
I don't believe you, 'Nine' out-take, 1973
The deserter, BBC, 1970
Farewell to a poor man's son, BBC-TV Babbacombe Lee, 1973
Sad song, The Manor Sessions, 1972
Autopsy, 1968
Maverick Child, David Rea / Tom Farnell line-up, 1972
Fiddlestix, Australian single, 1973
It's now or never, with Steve Tilston, 2000
The lady is a tramp, BBC Top Gear, 1968
General Taylor, Live in Chicago, 1972
Accountancy Shanty, Live in Hull, 1989
A sailor's life, Southampton, 1969
Track Listings (16) - Disc #3
Sir Patrick Spens, 1969
Wat Tyler, York, 1992
Flowers of the forest, London 1977
Fotheringay, Symonds on Sunday, 1969
To Althea, Cropredy 1984
Red and gold, Cropredy 1996
Lord Marlborough, El Pea, 1971
Adieu Adieu, TV performance, 1976
Here's to Tom Paine, Weston-super-mare, 1997
Bonny Bunch of Roses, Live in Australia, 1977
Breakfast in Mayfair, Sandy Denny/Simon Nicol vcls, 1973
Battle of the Somme, Troubadour, 1970
Summer before the war, BBC In Concert, 1990
Get Together, 1967
Genesis Hall, Cropredy, 1993
Jewel in the crown, Apollo 1995
Track Listings (15) - Disc #4
Walk awhile, Bumpers, 1970
John Gaudie, Bottom Line, 1998
Hexhamshire lass, Capital Radio, 1976 with Dan ar Bras
Slip jigs and reels, Oxford Apollo, 1995
Poor Will and the Jolly Hangman, Broughton Castle, 1982
Crazy Man Michael, Rehearsal Tape, 1969
Rosie, Melbourne Assembly Hall, 1996
Farewell Farewell, Fairport rehearsal tape, 1969
Now be thankful, BBC Sounds of the 70s, 1970
Hiring Fair, Cropredy, 1989
Stranger to himself, Live, 1974
Sloth, Live, 1974
Who knows where the time goes, BBC Radio, 1968
Matty Groves, specially-compiled multi-version
Meet on the Ledge, BBC Radio, 1968
A fascinating albeit slightly frustrating four-disc box set, Fairport Unconventional is, as the title suggests, a pretty exceptional collection of curiosities. Though it?s no place for the Fairport beginner to start, fans ... more »will find such an attractive assembly of rare and previously unreleased recordings hard to resist. Gamely organised into four thematically distinct discs, this 35th anniversary set spans the entire Fairport history and all the band?s myriad incarnations. Part 1 is a chronological trawl through the vast Fairport catalogue, using rare and alternative takes; Part 2 features even rarer and more obscure tracks (including Richard Thompson singing "The Lady Is A Tramp"); Part 3 collects the Fairport "British history" songs in chronological order of the events described in each song; Part 4 gives us the Top 15 favourite Fairport songs, but again in unfamiliar versions. Inevitably, given the disparate source material, recording quality varies hugely from track to track: some of it is good, some of it is frankly dire. And because it skips between live performances, radio sessions and studio outtakes, as well as placing new tracks side-by-side with 35-year-old recordings, the set can be a disorientating experience. But there are gems aplenty to be found, nonetheless, and it?s a pleasure to discover, for example, "Poor Will And The Jolly Hangman" live from Broughton Castle in 1982 or a barnstorming "Fiddlestix" from 1973 complete with banjo. The chunky box set comes with a vast 172-page illustrated book, which provides a full biography and the sources of all 72 tracks in exhaustive detail. Just to make the package irresistible there?s more besides, including posters, souvenir booklets and special limited-edition CD offers. Cropredy-goers should need no further persuasion. --Mark Walker« less
A fascinating albeit slightly frustrating four-disc box set, Fairport Unconventional is, as the title suggests, a pretty exceptional collection of curiosities. Though it?s no place for the Fairport beginner to start, fans will find such an attractive assembly of rare and previously unreleased recordings hard to resist. Gamely organised into four thematically distinct discs, this 35th anniversary set spans the entire Fairport history and all the band?s myriad incarnations. Part 1 is a chronological trawl through the vast Fairport catalogue, using rare and alternative takes; Part 2 features even rarer and more obscure tracks (including Richard Thompson singing "The Lady Is A Tramp"); Part 3 collects the Fairport "British history" songs in chronological order of the events described in each song; Part 4 gives us the Top 15 favourite Fairport songs, but again in unfamiliar versions. Inevitably, given the disparate source material, recording quality varies hugely from track to track: some of it is good, some of it is frankly dire. And because it skips between live performances, radio sessions and studio outtakes, as well as placing new tracks side-by-side with 35-year-old recordings, the set can be a disorientating experience. But there are gems aplenty to be found, nonetheless, and it?s a pleasure to discover, for example, "Poor Will And The Jolly Hangman" live from Broughton Castle in 1982 or a barnstorming "Fiddlestix" from 1973 complete with banjo. The chunky box set comes with a vast 172-page illustrated book, which provides a full biography and the sources of all 72 tracks in exhaustive detail. Just to make the package irresistible there?s more besides, including posters, souvenir booklets and special limited-edition CD offers. Cropredy-goers should need no further persuasion. --Mark Walker
CD Reviews
Too Many Bootleg-Quality Recordings
D. A Campbell | Annandale, VA United States | 08/27/2006
(3 out of 5 stars)
"I am a huge Fairport fan, but am not a collector of low-quality, archival recordings. As such, this box was a major disappointment. Luckily, I got it used for about half price, but wouldn't buy it again. I keep it mainly for the very nice booklet (which I think you can buy separately from Free Reed). Way too many bootleg-quality archival recordings here for my taste. And because it is not chronologically compiled, the music keeps jerking back and forth from stuff that sounds like it was recorded off you big sister's transistor radio in 1968 to some fairly good stuff. They shoud congregated the low-quality stuff so you at least could have gotten used to it. These bootleg-type recordings should be compiled on a special CD and sold to the really hard-core collectors. Then create a nice box set for the rest of us that we will actually want to listen to more than once or twice. The sad thing is that such a fine job was done on Fairport's Heyday and House Full CDs of old radio & live recordings. Indeed, those are right at top of my favorite Fairport albums list. So did Free Reed just not want to put time and money into improving the archival recordings on this box, or were they beyond repair? If the later, very little of it should have been used. Compare this to the Fleetwood Mac Live in Boston 3-CD set, which knocks my socks off at how much better the CDs are than the old vinyl albums. Somebody actually invested a lot of love and care in that restoration project, taking the tapes into the studio and greatly improving them. Free Reed should take note.