Why Nick Drake’s is music of comfort, not of despair | BBC News


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On the 40th anniversary of Nick Drake‘s death, a short piece for the BBC News Magazine:


His first album, the pastoral Five Leaves Left, correspondingly begins with the lines: ‘Time has told me you’re a rare, rare find / A troubled cure for a troubled mind’.


The second, Bryter Layter, is purposefully upbeat and the last, Pink Moon, ends: ‘So look, see the sights, the endless summer nights / And go play the game that you learned from the morning’. This is music of comfort, not of despair; rebirth, not death.


Here’s the documentary mentioned, A Skin Too Few:



And there’s a John Peel version of my favourite track, Cello Song, at the Guardian.



See also: Why does Everybody Hurt?
A more fanciful piece on Drake, from 10 years ago
Tree photo taken on the Thames, 3 Feb 2007
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Published on November 25, 2014 03:05
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