Compiled and annotated by
Steve Ashley himself,
The Test of Time compiles 17 tracks from throughout
Ashley's career -- infuriatingly sporadic though it has been. Three songs apiece from the albums
Stroll On (1974),
Speedy Return (1975),
The Family Album (1982), and
Mysterious Ways (1990, but incorporating material originally scheduled for release in 1978) are joined by three more only ever available on a couple of only-briefly available
Demo Tapes cassettes, and two songs taped in 1998. What's remarkable is, neither the passing of time nor the cloak of obscurity have diminished
Ashley's powers in the slightest. The listener comes out of the closing
"Over There in Paradise" as breathlessly as he or she entered the opening
"Fire and Wine," with its haunting monk song introduction, and a flaming
rock band aching to escape. Some remarkable collaborations are unearthed.
Ashley's links with
Fairport Convention,
Ashley Hutchings, and
Robert Kirkby were all illustrated by his debut album, and these links continue throughout the collection. But there is also a rare appearance from
Linda Thompson, duetting with
Ashley on 1983's
"Easy Come." Indeed, each of the early-'80s
Demo Tapes tracks are remarkable, all the more so since the original cassettes have long lain unheard. Both
"Easy Come" and the chiming
"Before the Fireballs Fall" ache with the embittered defiance of the anti-nukes movement that led to the resurrection of Britain's long-fallow CND (Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament), while
"I Depend on Jesus" is
Ashley's attempt to reaffirm his religious beliefs, at a time when Christianity itself seemed in real danger of being hijacked by the warmongers of the extreme political right. Of course, even the best conceived compilation is no substitute for full reissues of each of
Ashley's albums, and the restoration of his name to the highest annals of
British folk history. For anybody uncertain where to begin approaching this canon, however,
Test of Time solves all dilemmas. ~ Dave Thompson