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Fully Qualified Survivor (2011 Remaste...

3.4M streams

3,397,568

Rainmaker (2011 Remaster)

2.4M streams

2,432,346

The Decca Years 1974 to 1977

1.7M streams

1,651,821

Originals

1.6M streams

1,626,854

Mozart: Concertos for Clarinet, Oboe &...

1M streams

1,040,832

50

778.3K streams

778,306

True North

713.8K streams

713,764

EB=MC²

653.3K streams

653,275

Window (2014 Remaster)

463.3K streams

463,266

Trainsong : Guitar Compositions 1967-2...

432.5K streams

432,540

Biography

Veteran British songwriter Michael Chapman ranks among the innovative midcentury English guitarists—Davey Graham, Richard Thompson, and Michael’s old friend Mike Cooper are others—who transposed the atmosphere and syntax of the blues to a British context through reinvention and deconstruction rather than imitation. But Chapman uniquely deploys his liquid virtuosity and his resonant, slurred Yorkshire burr as vehicles for his mournful (and often barbed) musings on the pleasures and perils of hard living. His music feels suffused with the crooked logic, unfulfilled longing, and existential danger of dreams, shaded with his own wry sensibility of Northern darkness. Like a peaty whiskey (or Bob Dylan), the smoky gravitas of his playing and singing has grown more trenchant and entrenched with age; no one else sounds like him. It’s difficult not to describe Michael’s long career and his vast, masterful body of work obliquely, by reeling off his musical genealogy, the astounding roll call of collaborators, comrades, and disciples with whom he’s shared stages, studios, and his sturdy songs. His emergence in 1967, alongside Wizz Jones, as a self-taught jazz freak, recovering art-school student, and part-time photography teacher on the Cornish folk circuit preceded a series of classic late 1960s and ’70s albums for Harvest, Deram, and Decca. (But whatever you do, don’t call him a folkie; he feels more kinship with the improvisatory outer orbits of jazz, blues, and the avant-garde.)