I first saw Bert appear at a leisure centre bar ...about 20 people turned up to see him...he came out of a side door to get a drink at the bar right behind me...i wanted to speak to him but couldn't think of anything to say.. completely lost for words..then the moment was gone....a great songwriter and player..thanks for the memories..
So sad to think of these two men no longer with us, never to return. So much knowledge, experience and expression in their playing. Moments like these on Y/Tube to cherish.
In my mind, these two guys are the most inspired and innovative acoustic guitar players of all time. I have played acoustic guitar for 45 years and have greatly appreciated their contribution to music. May they rest in peace knowing they have shared some incredible music with us. I have met John and Bert and they were both very humble people.
yes I worked with John a few times as sound engineer and also enjoyed being with him. I remember one night the back electric window of his big old black range rover got jammed and i stripped down the tailgate to repair it. Nice man. :)
Greg Joy. Well said, sir... Extraordinary talents... If I had 1/1000th of the talent either possessed, I would be a very contented player for life... However... I don"t, but love messing about and playing.
Booked Bert for a concert in Canterbury in 1968, and then commissioned him for the soundtrack of my wildlife garden film for the BBC 20 years later. No one can compare . Chris Baines
@@verite Guess it's named: Chris Baines - Blue Tits and Bumblebees :The Making of a Wildlife Garden ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-qG0aCIbw5Wk.html
@@nelliemangaroo7683 Guess it's named: Chris Baines - Blue Tits and Bumblebees :The Making of a Wildlife Garden ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-qG0aCIbw5Wk.html
I recall sitting listening to these two in my sister's house in Sussex, as they practiced over and over, trying to get it right, I particularly loved the sound of Bert's long neck banjo , so much so, I bought one like it. Heather and I would leave them to it , and rush off down the country lanes in her old Alvis hunting for antique things in secondhand shops for their place. Bert on the other hand would have been happy down the pub, he didn't care much material things. Hearing Plant and Kraus do Berts " It dont bother me" which has just been released, brought it all back.
Malcolm I am curious have you read Colin Harper's Dazzling Stranger? Wonderfully researched and written, but your precious memories (being Heather's brother & all) certainly would have benefited the book!
Your words about your sisters place be it a house or place of work etc... For me a awesome description about the trust in people...friends and family that give the area needed in both space and time, needed for truly great humans Todo Awsome achievements ... So thank you two for the the time and space to make it happen your involvement is appreciated.
Re: Bert Jansch: I saw him at the Inn of the Beginning (Cotati CA) back in the 70s. He was completely unable to perform his wonderful tunes. Shortly before that I had read somewhere that he had contracted arthritis. Well, I can believe it, though he had been a hero of mine ever since I heard ‘Anji’ in the 60s. His best tunes exhibit a timeless beauty. One of the few 'folk' performers who could play counterpoint with each voice clear, as his Bach pieces show. You're one of the greats, Bert. Long may you wave.
Folk and traditional music from the British Isles, maybe not so well-known over the world as it would deserve, but so delicate, inspired, and dream-conveying... And those two guys, part of my youth...
Saw him at Denmark street but kept nodding off after a too long day's work on a construction site. Pentangle were amazing-Bert and Renbourn phenomenal. And Davy Graham. Long live celtic and so on music! I am SOuth African but half dutch and half afrikaans back to Germany centuries ago. A coloniser but Africa is incredibly beautiful and so are the people.
heard these lads live, it was amazing... just as i was finding myself in the world as an adolescent... who absolutely loved music thank y'all for helping me find my way back then 😎👍
These 2 artists have had a profound influence on my playing and how I listen to music! Particularly Bert and his unique style, an unmistakable sound, truly unique!
Absolutely stunning. Probably the best two acoustic guitarists the uk has ever had - discovered them in the late seventies and they have remained favourites of mine ever since.
This gave me chills on chills on chills. the way both of their playing just inundates together so well it might just as easily sound like one person is mind blowing. Both great musicians have passed on, but the well ordered and pronounced playing will never be forgotten.
Still enjoying this in December 2018, I never get bored of this performance. Nobody has surpassed this amazing blend of intricate guitar-play, from two absolute legends of acoustic folk.
I used to play back in the day. Fell in with some jazzers & made a fatal mistake; I let them influence me to where they'd poo poo John & Bert and great bluesmen like Otis Rush or Buddy Guy. Luckily I grew apart from them, and glad I did. Bert & John created such moving beauty, and humans are better off for them. RIP, and Long live Bert & John.
+Billy Lindros didn't know about john. we can't live forever or there would be no room for our children. agree with you about john's playing and of course they complemented each other. my first album "Bert and John" still listen to it.
Between John's intimidating technique and historical knowledge, and Bert's dark, Gothic soul, the two were made for each other. After Pentangle broke up, the two needed a break, but it's wonderful to know that they got together again before they died.
Having listened to this clip probably 1000 times, I have to say it really transcends 'music', it's magical, surreal, a combination of feelings, emotions, and spirituality. Individually they are brilliant, but together the sum of the two parts adds up to much more than that. It is heavenly.
I could listen to these guys all day but will now have to wait until I get to the other side! Saw them many times over the years, even at Les Cousins, London in the 1960s, and they were never better than when together. RIP JR & BJ.
There were tv tributes to Bert Jansch but nothing for John Renbourne, my favourite. Did anyone else see any tv or videos? I tried to get my local folk club to run something but the comment was “What. Ask other musicians to play another’s music? They wouldn’t buy into it.”. I’d love a tribute bringing out the amazing range and skill of John to the fore. Can anyone help?
Stunning amazing players! The interweaving of the guitar parts is like a beautiful piece of tapestry, a fantastic piece and Johns light finger work on the fretboard is unbelievable and we all know how great Bert was.
These guys are scary. I've never heard sounds like theirs. They played like no one else ever played. I've listened to music for a long time and I've never heard acoustic music like this.
I think, aside of course from sheer talent, they were both very open-minded about music, drawing from a much wider range of influences, all the way from American blues, traditional folk and jazz to Renaissance dance tunes and early classical. No prejudices at all.
Two master guitarist/composers: Bert, slightly bluesier, John, slightly more classically inclined, but each could cover all bases. And they were magic when playing duo. Billy Connolly (at the end of this tape) was in the mix as a Humblebum, and as a major fan of the greats. Wizz Jones, Ralph McTell, Pete Stanley, Archie Fisher, Davey Graham, there were a lot of good 1960s UK folk guitarists. A second generation John Martyn, Richard Thompson, Nick Drake did good work in the 1970s.
45 years ago (!) I went to a concert advertised as Bert Jansch and John Renbourn - but they didn't play together! Both played on their own. I was so disappointed. I finally got to see them playing together in 2008 in their farewell tour at St David's Hall in Cardiff. What a wonderful concert and amazing interplay between the 2.
God how i miss John such beautiful music hurts me to listen now glad i have all his music i fell in love with him in 60s met him only once(he would have never remembered) and have followed him ever since. fly high John flly high hope we meet again
two of my greatest musical inspirations. I had the pleasure of meeting sir John three times , he reminded me of santa with a guitar lol. A lovely missed guy for me. I saw Bert play in Saltburn in a hotel few years back. RIP to these legends.
Gorgeous stuff, especially John's superb use of harmonics. They taught us so much, both inside and outside Pentangle. Fairport and Steeleye, both superlative, grabbed the fame of the time maybe, but John & Bert & the great Danny Thompson were certainly their equal as a musical unit - and having Jacqui McShee singing was, of course, a considerable plus... Love this video, thanks so much!
You mentioned four of Pentangle, but Terry Cox on drums was every bit their equal. As a band, they were so far ahead of thir time. As a 15 year old, I was lucky enough to be taken by an older cousin to see them in 1970. It opened my eyes to the new sounds that were appearing then.
Back in the 70's or 80's I heard on the radio-Call for free tickets to hear Bert Jansch, John Renbourn and Jacqui McShee in Concert in Athens Ohio. About 10 of us loaded up in a van and drove from Dayton to Athens for the most incredible concert of our lives. I wish I could replay it over and over. It's up there with hearing Grace Slick and the Jefferson Airplane with Papa John Creech here in Dayton, Or maybe Eric Clapton jamming with Carlos Santana or ..............Wow Have I been blessed!
I met Bert just once .. Sadly due to a mix up & my friend & I being distracted by two beautiful girls in a bar then a rush across town ( Edinburgh ) & a mix up as to which Venue .. I arrived just as he finished his set .. I was able to speak to him & was hoping it was an intermission but no .. 45 mins .. & altho he was charming he explained that the two lovely girls waiting at the Bar had offered to buy him a drink & he was sure he said with a twinkle in his eye that I would understand that he would rather talk to them than me .. Lol .. But yes what a gr8 musician .. sadly missed .
I saw John at a folk club in Cheltenham in the 1980s.He was magnificent but the crowd was most disrespectful. This is great. My two heroes Bert and John