Skip to main content alibris logo

Return of the Repressed: The John Fahey Anthology ()

by

Write The First Customer Review
Return of the Repressed: The John Fahey Anthology - John Fahey
Filter Results
Shipping
Item Condition
Seller Rating
Other Options
Change Currency
Track Listing
  1. Desperate Man Blues
  2. Dance of the Inhabitants of the Palace of King Phillip XIV of Spain
  3. Sligo River Blues
  4. Sun Gonna Shine in My Back Door Someday Blues
  5. On Doing an Evil Deed Blues
Show All Tracks
  1. Desperate Man Blues
  2. Dance of the Inhabitants of the Palace of King Phillip XIV of Spain
  3. Sligo River Blues
  4. Sun Gonna Shine in My Back Door Someday Blues
  5. On Doing an Evil Deed Blues
  6. I'm Gonna Do All I Can for My Lord
  7. Some Summer Day
  8. Worried Blues
  9. Tell Her to Come Back Home
  10. Poor Boy
  11. Orinda-Moraga
  12. The Death of Clayton Peacock
  13. Brenda's Blues
  14. On the Sunny Side of the Ocean
  15. Revelation on the Banks of the Pawtuxent
  16. Night Train to Valhalla
  17. Knott's Berry Farm Molly
  18. Bill Cheatham]
  19. Knoxville Blues
  20. Sunflower River Blues
  21. A Raga Called Pat (Pt. 1)
  22. In Christ There Is No East or West
  23. The Yellow Princess
  24. Lion
  25. The Revolt of the Dyke Brigade
  26. The Portland Cement Factory at Monolith, California
  27. Steamboat Gwine 'Round de Bend
  28. Lord Have Mercy]
  29. Beverly
  30. Hawaiian Two-Step
  31. Candy Man
  32. Jaya Shiva Shankara
  33. Medley: Silver Bell/Cheyenne
  34. The Approaching of the Disco Void
  35. Summer Cat by My Door
  36. Theme and Variations
  37. Lava on Waikiki
  38. Samba de Orfeu
  39. Rain Forest
  40. Twilight Time
  41. The Sea of Love
  42. Yes, Jesus Loves Me
Show Fewer Tracks

Back in the 1960s, when fingerpicking folk guitarists were a dime a dozen, John Fahey stood out for several reasons. For one thing, his sense of humor was sophisticated and unfashionably cynical for the period (this is the guy, remember, who simultaneously celebrated the blues tradition and ridiculed his own blues pretensions by adopting the nom de plume of "Blind Joe Death"). But most of all, he possessed absolutely astounding chops, and made no attempt to hide his superior guitar skills despite a pop music climate which ...

loading