Five Leaves Left – Nick Drake
Although my
favourite period of music is the mid-80s to the mid-90s, I’ve always suspected that the 1960s was the
best period of music. The time that we’ve spent on the Rock Evolution thread picking through the best of the 1960s seals the deal in my opinion, so I’m very much in agreement with the sentiments set out by
@GoatersLeftShin in his introduction to this album.
I love the sound of acoustic guitar strings in general, and what I particularly love about this album is that the songs are not somebody idly strumming as an accompaniment – there’s complex fingerpicking in places and it really adds to the momentum of the songs.
Checking back in my notes, I selected “River Man” from this album as one of my “Big Winners” on the Water playlist. This, followed quickly by “Three Hours” make for a superb double, and the great songs keep coming. “Day Is Done” and “’Cello Song” are both fantastic. In fact, “Day Is Done” has echoes of the acoustic parts in “Stairway to Heaven”, which of course would follow two years later.
“Fruit Tree”, with it’s rumination on failing to achieve fame whilst you walk to earth, is sadly prophetic:-
Safe in your place deep in the earth
That's when they'll know what you were really worth
Forgotten while you're here
Remembered for a while
Tasteful backing of other instruments such as the strings on “River Man”, the cello on “’Cello Song” and the vibraphone on “Saturday Sun” complement the acoustic guitar and give the album a wonderful sound. It’s one of those albums with unfussy production where every instrument has its place and they all complement each other nicely, so it’s a big thumbs up in this regard.
Having listened to this album a few times through, I can’t help but compare it to Beck’s masterpiece,
Sea Change. Both are full of acoustic-based, melancholy songs backed in places by orchestration. Add to that Beck has a song called “Sunday Sun” vs Nick Drake’s “Saturday Sun” and “End of the Day” vs “Day Is Done”. Listen to “Round The Bend” from Beck’s album, and although it’s slower, it’s hard to miss the echoes of “River Man”.
One small negative: I am disappointed to find out that the album title refers to something as grubby as a Rizla packet. I thought it was a poetic way of saying we are moving from Autumn to Winter and there are only five leaves left on the tree.
Scoring wise, whilst some may be hoping for something more upbeat or an album that takes a few chances, if you’re in the market for a low-key, singer-songwriter album, it’s hard to imagine an album that would beat
Five Leaves Left. It’s also hard to imagine many albums that would be nominated on this thread that would tick so many boxes for me, and for these reasons, it joins Lucinda Williams and The Waterboys on
10/10.