04-06-2011, 16:12
![[Image: Roy_Harper_-_In_Between_Every_Line_-_Front.jpg]](http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_Mig0Nzx-fN4/SRgdWZl4BUI/AAAAAAAAC0o/Pg5AqyeO3Mk/s400/Roy_Harper_-_In_Between_Every_Line_-_Front.jpg)
Live double album (ask your Dad...) from 1986, from the man to whom Led Zeppelin took their hats off.
Harper at this stage would routinely tour with a full band, as a duo with son Nick, or solo. This album covers all bases, and is pieced together from performances from the previous couple of years.
Much of this is solo & Folkey, but there's enough of the band material to nudge it into being a Rock album. Fine line.
The songs are really poems set to music, and I've almost always preferred the intimacy of his solo performances.
Goodish.
AllMusic 3/5 stars.
"Writing about music is like dancing about architecture"
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