Tony, Caro and John
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tony,_Caro_and_John an entity of type: Thing
Tony, Caro and John is a British psychedelic folk trio who recorded the album All on the First Day in 1972. The threesome took much of their inspiration from the Incredible String Band's eclectic strain of psychedelic folk, although songwriter and singer Tony Doré's compositions had a sound and voice of their own. The All Music Guide writes of the trio, "Tony, Caro and John were also wont to embellish their basic male-female vocal harmonies, and one electric guitar-one-acoustic-guitar-bass line-up, with weird touches of hippie psychedelia in the occasional electronic effects, tinkling percussion, flageolet (a type of small flute), wah-wah, and violin... Slightly sardonic but cheerfully playful, and with strong tunes effectively blending major and minor modes, they're more approachable for
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Tony, Caro and John
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Tony, Caro and John
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Tony, Caro and John
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32988428
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1071583226
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John Clark
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Caroline 'Caro' Clark
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Tony Doré
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Sample of the song "Cinquefoil and Tormentil" from the 2001 album Retrospect.
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Sample of the song "Breakdown" from the album Fall Away Like Leaves.
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Sample of the song "Sargasso Sea" from the 1972 album All on the First Day.
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Breakdown.ogg
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Cinquefoil.ogg
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Sargasso.ogg
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Shadoks, Gaarden, Drag City, Tapete
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Derby and Bristol, England
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"Breakdown"
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"Cinquefoil and Tormentil"
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"Sargasso Sea"
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1972
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Tony, Caro and John is a British psychedelic folk trio who recorded the album All on the First Day in 1972. The threesome took much of their inspiration from the Incredible String Band's eclectic strain of psychedelic folk, although songwriter and singer Tony Doré's compositions had a sound and voice of their own. The All Music Guide writes of the trio, "Tony, Caro and John were also wont to embellish their basic male-female vocal harmonies, and one electric guitar-one-acoustic-guitar-bass line-up, with weird touches of hippie psychedelia in the occasional electronic effects, tinkling percussion, flageolet (a type of small flute), wah-wah, and violin... Slightly sardonic but cheerfully playful, and with strong tunes effectively blending major and minor modes, they're more approachable for listeners with conventional rock and pop tastes than the Incredible String Band, or Incredible String Band-like bands of the period, such as Forest and Dr. Strangely Strange."
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8011
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1972