Pyg: Gruntings

by Wud Records

Gruntings by Pyg.

The original Gruntings recording was not to the satisfaction of Pyg so they re-made the thing and this was the result.

These songs were recorded by Martin Dearmun.
Copyright Transit Recordings 2001.

All arrangements by Pyg.
All songs were written by Malcolm Learmonth except Crying Shame which was written by Martin Dearmun.

Martin Dearmun – vocals, acoustic guitar, dulcimer
Malcolm Learmonth – acoustic and electric guitars, bouzouki
Kes Cross – electric fiddle
George Davies – bass
Dave Danielli – drums

Some quotes:
“A stomping good gyg.” – Pyg Breeders Weekly
“We danced ’til our tales dropped off!” – Trotter Times
“Possibly the best gig since feeding time.” – Scratchings Gazette

Pyg were mostly a really good live band and their studio recorded material never quite managed to entirely capture the essence of their live power. They played a loud kick-ass brand of what they termed ‘caustic folk’, quite a rocky variant of folk music, perhaps in a similar vein to The Levellers or The Waterboys but with a harder, edgier approach. The songwriting duo of Martin and Malcolm crafted wonderfully thought-provoking and hauntingly beautiful songs that stay in the memory once heard.

See also:
wudrecords.co.uk/archives
wudrecords.co.uk/archives/pyg-2
wudrecords.co.uk/archives/pyg-...pyg-2/gruntings
twitter.com/WudRecords

read more

Gruntings by Pyg.

The original Gruntings recording was not to the satisfaction of Pyg so they re-made the thing and this was the result.

These songs were recorded by Martin Dearmun.
Copyright Transit Recordings 2001.

All arrangements by Pyg.
All songs were written by Malcolm Learmonth except Crying Shame which was written by Martin Dearmun.

Martin Dearmun – vocals, acoustic guitar, dulcimer
Malcolm Learmonth – acoustic and electric guitars, bouzouki
Kes Cross – electric fiddle
George Davies – bass
Dave Danielli – drums

Some quotes:
“A stomping good gyg.” – Pyg Breeders Weekly
“We danced ’til our tales dropped off!” – Trotter Times
“Possibly the best gig since feeding time.” – Scratchings Gazette

Pyg were mostly a really good live band and their studio recorded material never quite managed to entirely capture the essence of their live power. They played a loud kick-ass brand of what they termed ‘caustic folk’, quite a rocky variant of folk music, perhaps in a similar vein to The Levellers or The Waterboys but with a harder, edgier approach. The songwriting duo of Martin and Malcolm crafted wonderfully thought-provoking and hauntingly beautiful songs that stay in the memory once heard.

See also:
wudrecords.co.uk/archives
wudrecords.co.uk/archives/pyg-2
wudrecords.co.uk/archives/pyg-...pyg-2/gruntings
twitter.com/WudRecords