- Sorry, this product cannot be purchased.
Just Another Diamond Day (Vinyl)
Availability: In stock
White vinyl reissue. Gatefold sleeve with lyric inner sleeve and restored artwork.
“Produced in 1970 by the legendary Joe Boyd, Just Another Diamond Day has long been considered a holy grail for Brit-folk record collectors, with original copies of the album fetching over $1,000 at auction. It shouldn’t take many listens to realize why it’s so highly regarded; Just Another Diamond Day is, in its own humble way, nearly a thing of perfection.” PITCHFORK 9.0
Vashti Bunyan’s legendary debut album from 1970 finally gets a UK vinyl repressing. Produced by Joe Boyd for Witchseason Productions and originally released on Philips in 1970, the album features contributions from Fairport Convention’s Simon Nicol and Dave Swarbrick and The Incredible String Band’s Robin Williamson.
The songs mostly concern the events that took place when Vashti and her lover travelled to the Hebrides in a horse and cart to join up with Donovan’s artistic community but by the tiime they got there that community had all left.
This story has been brilliantly told in Kieran Evans’ rarely seen 2008 film Vashti Bunyan: From Here To Before.
You may also like...
The Time Has Come (Vinyl)
Anne Briggs
A timeless document of sweet and haunting melodies. Black vinyl repress. Originally released in 1971.
Variants (CD)
Cobalt Chapel
Psych-infused chamber pop with echoes of Broadcast and Delia Derbyshire. The follow-up to their much lauded self-titled debut album.
Ways Of Seeing (Vinyl)
The Advisory Circle
A beautiful and uplifting selection of electronic pieces. Gold vinyl edition.
- Quick ViewRead more
Shleep (Vinyl)
Robert Wyatt
Originally released in 1997. 2 x LP on heavyweight vinyl with download.
Ways Of Seeing (CD)
The Advisory Circle
A beautiful and uplifting selection of electronic pieces. Gold vinyl edition.
- Quick ViewRead more
Mind How You Go EP (Vinyl)
The Advisory Circle
“…an uncanny blend of library music, institutional electronica, BBC Open University audiologophonics and daft, po-faced clips sampled and distorted from daytime science programmes…”