Saturday, January 26, 2019

Listening To Vashti Bunyan.

I didn't do much today, it was dark and rainy so I stayed in reading most of the day. Vashti Bunyan is mentioned in Joe Boyd's book, so I thought I would dust off a piece I wrote about her a few years ago...  The story of Vashti Bunyan must be one of the most interesting in the history of music. I had never heard of her until a few weeks ago when I stumbled across her on Youtube. It was her name that first intrigued me. It was so unusual, like a mixture of Russian and English and I immediately thought of John Bunyan who wrote Pilgrim's Progress. The song she was singing in the youtube clip was called I Want To Be Alone.
She  reminded me of Marianne Faithfull. I looked up Vashti Bunyan on Wikipedia. It told me that Vashti was born in London in 1945. In the early 1960's, she studied Fine Art and Drawing at Ruskin College Oxford but was expelled because she couldn't decide between art and music. At 18 she travelled to New York and discovered the music of Bob Dylan and decided to become a full-time musician. Returning to London she was discovered by the Stones manager Andrew Loog Oldham, and, in June 1965  released her first single, written by Jagger & Richards called Somethings Just Stick In Your Mind, it was backed with her own song I Want to Be Alone.
Her early records all flopped and then Vashti turned her back on the city and decided to travel with her boyfriend Robert in a gypsy caravan pulled by a horse called Bess and a dog called Blue to the Isle Of Skye to join a commune planned by a friend, fellow folk singer Donovan. The epic journey was to take 2 years, stopping along the way to doing casual work and odd jobs to get some money and the occasional gig. During the trip she began writing the songs that eventually became her first album Just Another Diamond Day. I got interested because her story reminded me of another singer who I had written about previously called Anne Briggs. I have always been interested in people who have a brief flirtation with fame and then disappear such as Karen Dalton, Jonathan Kelly and The Trees. I discovered that in 1968 Vashti met the producer Joe Boyd who I have always admired through his work with Fairport Convention and others. In 1969 Vashti made her first album which featured Simon Nicol and Dave Swarbrick from Fairport and also Robin Williamson of the Incredible String Band who I also like. The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter', by the ISB is a favourite of mine. The album came out in December 1970 and despite warm reviews it disappeared without trace and so did Vashti. She moved to the Outer Hebrides and then Ireland and spent the next 3 decades in total obscurity, raising her family and looking after animals.
30 long years went by, and as the years turned into decades word about her album slowly acquired mythic proportions among serious music collectors and gradually the few copies in existence became some of the most sought after items in music. Vashti was totally oblivious to the fact that her work was acquiring a cult following. One copy apparently sold on Ebay for $2,000. Her music reached the ears of a new wave of folk singers such as Devendra Banhart and Joanne Newsom and in 2000 her album was re-released and this time it was noticed by the public and it was acclaimed as a work of genius. Suddenly Vashti had become the god mother of a new genre known as Freak Folk

I knew I wouldn't be satisfied until I owned this album. A quick look on eBay and 3 days later the cd popped onto the carpet through my letterbox. As soon as the opening  song began I knew that it was something good. There is no percussion on this record just tasteful guitar accompanies some tracks and there is some flute, whistle, piano, harp, banjo, mandolin and strings, but any more instruments would be intrusive as this album is so intimate you can almost hear Vashti breathing in between the lines of the songs. The lyrics have a childlike simplicity and are like nature poems. I think John Clare or William Blake would enjoy this album. I can understand some people wouldn't like the album. If you like rap or heavy metal I dare say you would hate it, but if like me you like folk records like Fairport, Nick Drake, String Band, or Donovan  then  you will love it. The song I am listening to at this very moment Come Wind Come Rain clops along just like the gypsy caravan, and you almost feel like you are on it.
Unlike Annie Briggs who I mentioned earlier who has shown no interest in recording or performing again, Vashti seems to welcome her new fame and finally got to record the album that was planned as the follow-up to Diamond Day. It is called Lookaftering and after a 35 year gap since her first album this one was also hailed as a classic. I haven't heard it yet though, but will. Also in 2008 a documentary film was made which retraced Vashti's journey from London to the North of Scotland. It was called From Here To Before.


 

2 comments:

No'am Newman said...

Vashti is a Persian name familiar to Jewish people, as she is one of the major characters in the Book of Esther (she was the queen of Persia until her husband divorced her).

I don't know how Vashti Bunyan got her name, as it is an intriguing combination of Old Testament Persian and 18th century writer John Bunyan (A pilgrim's progress).

Pat said...

Hi No'am Newman,

Thanks for your comment.
Her first name was actually Jennifer. Vashti was her middle name. I don't know why her parents chose that name. She was born in Newcastle upon Tyne in 1945 to John Bunyan and Helen Webber, and moved to London at six months old. Although she has been said to be descended from The Pilgrim's Progress author John Bunyan, this is a claim she has herself denied.
Thanks for reading my stuff. It is always nice to get feedback.

All the best, Pat.

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