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Live at Last (Steeleye Span album)

Live at Last
Steeleye Span - Live at Last.jpg
Live album by Steeleye Span
Released 1978
Recorded March 7, 1978
The Winter Gardens, Bournemouth
Genre Electric folk
Length 49:34
Label Chrysalis
Steeleye Span chronology
Storm Force Ten
(1977)
Live at Last
(1978)
Sails of Silver
(1980)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 2/5 stars

Live at Last is a live album by the electric folk band Steeleye Span. It is the first live album the band issued, after eight years of performing and releasing 10 studio albums. It was originally intended to be a farewell album. "This then is our eleventh and final album. Steeleye Span amicably disbanded five days after making this recording for reasons that are irrelevant here.”

It is one of only two albums the band issued on which John Kirkpatrick played (not counting a later live reunion album, The Journey), making it one of only two albums to employ an accordion as a primary instrument. The album is also notable because only two of the tracks ("Saucy Sailor/Black Freighter" and "False Knight on the Road") were songs that the band had recorded before, so that most of the material on the album is essentially new material. The band went on to release a second live version of "The Maid and the Palmer" on The Journey.

The departure of Bob Johnson and Peter Knight and their replacement by Martin Carthy and Kirkpatrick for this album (and Storm Force Ten) had taken the band away from its heavily-amplified rock sound of the mid-1970s, and back to the cutting edge folk rock approach reminiscent of the band's origins.

"The Maid and the Palmer" tells the story of a palmer (a pilgrim returning home from Jerusalem with a palm branch) who meets a woman washing clothes. He asks her for a cup of water, but she refuses. He comments that she would certainly give her lover a cup of water, and when she denies having a lover, he tells her that she is lying, and that she has borne nine children, all of whom she has killed and hidden. He condemns her to seven years as a stepping-stone, seven years as a clapper in a bell, and seven years of running as "an ape through Hell". Given the Palmer's supernatural powers, he may be Christ in disguise.

"Hunting the Wren" is a version of the Cutty Wren tradition. On Please to See the King, the band explored this tradition with "The King", and on Time, the band recorded "The Cutty Wren", another song about this tradition.


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