Listen to Nick Drake with one ear and youโ€™ll hear a (self-)parody of the Sensitive Young Troubadour โ€“ the posh Poor Boy, long ways from his country home. Thereโ€™s a peculiarly English bashfulness to Drake that suggests some coy conflation of Donovan and Colin Blunstone.

Listen with both ears and you hear the monkish beauty of that light baritone alongside its close companion โ€“ Drakeโ€™s inimitably intricate fingerpicking. Together these intertwined โ€œvoicesโ€ create a melancholic magic that sounds completely unique to this day.

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Long bootlegged, these domestic performances captured at the Drake family home and during Nickโ€™s 1967 sojourn in Aix-en-Provence give us the roots of the music on Five Leaves Left, Bryter Later and Pink Moon. In places as grainy as Dylanโ€™s Basement Tapes, Family Tree is heavy on country- or folk-blues from the Warwickshire delta.

Tape-hissing covers of songs by luminaries like Bert Jansch and Jackson C. Frank are interspersed with treatments of traditionals (โ€œCocaine Bluesโ€, โ€œBlack Mountain Bluesโ€, โ€œAll My Trialsโ€) โ€“ pretty much the repertoire of the workaday late โ€™60s jobbing folkie. Dylan (โ€œTomorrow Is a Long Timeโ€) and Dave Van Ronk (โ€œIf You Leave Meโ€) pop up alongside Drakeโ€™s Aix mate Robin Frederick, whose previously unearthed โ€œBeen Smoking Too Longโ€ lays bare the downside of marijuana intoxication.

A revelation the album isnโ€™t: Family Tree presupposes or even requires a basic familiarity with the Drake oeuvre. But presuming you have at least a nodding acquaintance, the 28 tracks here are a fascinating window into a young manโ€™s musical soul, featuring amusing asides and mistakes. Also included are two wistful pieces of Victoriana by Nickโ€™s mother Molly, one of them a riposte of sorts to โ€œPoor Boyโ€ (โ€œPoor Mumโ€) that could almost hail from the first Kate and Anna McGarrigle album.

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Tellingly, one of the earliest Drake compositions (โ€œTheyโ€™re Leaving Me Behindโ€) hints at the darkness to come, with the young manโ€™s future already looking bleak. โ€œBird Flew Byโ€ questions the basic fact of earthly existence. A tentative Cambridge airing of Five Leaves Leftโ€™s โ€œDay Is Doneโ€ โ€“ with Drake breaking off to chastise himself for his sloppiness โ€“ says it all: โ€œWhen the partyโ€™s through/Seems so very sad for you/Didnโ€™t do the things you meant to do.โ€

Far more than a scrapbook retrieved from a dusty attic, Family Tree is essential listening for anybody in thrall to the spell of Saint Nick.

BARNEY HOSKYNS