Sandy Denny
Early Home Recordings
First Vinyl, 2024
Every now and then something special comes my way. Readers may know that my favorite female vocalist of all time is Sandy Denny. I recently got my hands on a double CD of Sandy’s Home Recordings that I did not know existed. It comes with a hardcover storybook-sized booklet with essays by Patrick Humphries and Pat Thomas. The latter produced a project of 27 tracks. Many of them are versions of songs she later made famous. If you wonder how a superfan such as I did not know about these, it’s because Denny was never as famous in the States as she was in Britain, an injustice I explain as brain rot for listening to Top 40 radio.
I won’t say that Denny’s earliest works were masterpieces. You get it exactly what is promised, things that Sandy recorded at home before she made her mark in the folk world. She was born in 1947 and, like millions of teenagers, was enamored of Bob Dylan. Humphries quotes Denny as saying “…he was the closest I’ve ever come to worshiping anyone.” It’s hardly surprising that we find a cover of “It Ain’t Me Babe” among Denny’s home recordings. Nonetheless, what drew her in to a musical career (rather than one in nursing) was the British folk revival. In the mid-60s Dylan vied with folk songs, many of uncertain origin. Sandy tried her hand on such time-tested gems as “Geordie,” “Let No Man Steal Your Thyme,” and “East Virginia.” At the very end of the disc however, Denny set up her tape recorder and recorded what would become her signature song, “Who Knows Where the Time Goes?”
It was her entrée into a career that began in folk clubs and gigs with various bands. She would soon be poached by The Strawbs, and it didn’t take long for the word to get out. She began to write more of her own material as well as covering traditional songs. The Strawbs repertoire became too inconsistent for Denny. She felt increasingly confident about her compositions but not yet about herself. In her words,” I always write [a] song… and make it into something which everyone can actually identify with… I did try to be a bit more down-to-earth about things, but I do find it … difficult because I’m a bit shy of people knowing me.” That would change in a big way. Several of the songs on Disc Two became beloved concert selections. This includes “She Moves Through the Fair,” “Carnival,” “Fotheringay,” “They Don’t Seem to Know You,” and of course, “Who Knows Where the Time Goes?”
It's remarkable to hear how much different her 1968 version of “Who Knows” is from the one from the year before. Her first recording effort seems rushed, as if she’s trying to get the words out before she withered. As she gained confidence, she slowed her treatment and it began to approach what the song finally became. In 1968, Sandy went to a tryout for a band that became a legend: Fairport Convention. She was only with Fairport for about 18 months, but she made three amazing records with them, including 1969’s Liege and Leaf. Alongside teen guitar phenomenon Richard Thompson (!), Fairport was among the bands credited with pushing folk-rock to new levels.
The Thomas essay takes us beyond the timeframe of the two discs. In summary, Sandy formed her own short-lived band, Fotheringay with her musician husband Trevor Lucas, birthed a daughter, briefly rejoined Fairport Convention, and tried a solo career that included an attempt to break into the North American market. Neither of the latter two worked out as well as she had hoped. By 1976, Denny was spiraling out of control. Her marriage fell apart, her behavior was erratic, and she abused alcohol and drugs. When visiting her parents Denny fell and hit her head on concrete. Denny complained of headaches, but passed away on April 21, 1978. She was just 31.
Most Americans don’t know of Sandy Denny, though almost every music fan has heard her voice. She is the only guest vocalist Led Zeppelin ever used. She sang a duet with Robert Plant on Zep’s IV album. Listen to “The Battle of Evermore,” then by all means purchase Fairport’s Liege and Leaf. You’ll thank me.
Rob Weir
Note: Rather than provide links to various songs as I usually do, I thought it would be fitting to offer three versions of “Who Knows Where The Time Goes?” They are in order, the 1967 Who Knows....., 1968 Who Knows, and definitive 1969 version from Fairport Convention.