Please to See the King cover

Please to See the King

Released

Writer and critic David Keenan once accurately described Please to See the King, the second album by English folk rock institution Steeleye Span, as sounding like a medieval Velvet Underground. It’s most obviously there in the droning, clanging electric guitar and dulcimer, which can get crushingly intense at time – the way Martin Carthy’s downward-strummed guitar crashes through “Prince Charlie Stuart” is startling. It’s there in the wheezing violin drones as well, though Steeleye Span are careful to corral that sound and shift it in different directions – see the slow-motion maypole melancholy of “The Lark in the Morning”. For a second album by a group with an ever-shifting line-up, Please to See the King is a major achievement; it’s also one of the greatest folk rock albums recorded, up there with Shirley Collins’ No Roses and Fairport Convention’s Liege & Lief; it’s every bit as pioneering and as intense.

Jon Dale

Suggestions
Kosogor cover

Kosogor

Kedr Livanskiy, Kosaya Gora, Flaty
Ashore cover

Ashore

June Tabor
Mo-Di cover

Mo-Di

Mouth Music, Jackie Joyce, Michaela Rowan
Deserters cover

Deserters

Oysterband
Designer cover

Designer

Aldous Harding
Monongah cover

Monongah

Kyle Carey