Known for her time as vocalist in Fairport Convention and respected
globally as Robert Plant’s frst Alison Krauss (duetting with him on Led
Zeppelin’s The Battle Of Evermore), Sandy Denny left a beguiling, everevolving body of work – Kate Bush was to namecheck her in song, and
Denny’s infuence can be heard in generations of singer-songwriters
From its David Bailey cover photo inwards, 1972’s Sandy is arguably the defnitive
Sandy Denny album. Recorded at John Wood’s Sound Techniques studio, and
produced by Trevor Lucas, it adds some special guests into its mix – ‘Sneaky’
Pete Kleinow from The Flying Burrito Brothers enhances It’ll Take A Long Time
with his unmistakable pedal steel playing, and New Orleans legend Allan
Toussaint adds a brass arrangement to For Nobody To Hear. But it is Denny’s
album. Often, it is impossible not be stopped in your tracks by that beautiful, long
gone yet so-full-of-life voice, especially on two of her career-bests – The Lady and
Listen, Listen.
Out of print on LP for a number of years, this re- issue faithfully replicates the
original 1972 Island Records UK release with gatefold sleeve and is pressed onto
high quality 180g vinyl.