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Friday 23 May 2014

"Elvis is on the guest list" - Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, Gijon, Spain 22/05/2014


The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion put in a thunderous 90 minute set in Gijon, Spain last night. Although I must admit I have never been a massive fan - there just aren't the songs there for me - they are definitely a band to be experienced live. 90 minutes of non-stop relentless blues-storming punk'n'roll feedback-drenched pneumatic guitar riffage played at brain-piercing volume and blood-draining speed left those still standing at the end of the set numb, dazed and dumbstruck.

There were few technical issues - lights, dodgy sound and the band came on later than expected - but the last 30 or 40 minutes were intense and exhilarating. And proof that primordial is also eternal.

And Elvis was on the guest list. You know he was there...


Take a listen



 
Encore





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Wednesday 21 May 2014

"All Kinds Of You" - Ryley Walker's debut continues the folk tradition of Bert Jansch, Davy Graham and Tim Buckley


Ryley Walker is a 24 year-old singer / songwriter and guitarist from Chicago. I must confess I knew nothing about him until a few days ago when I chanced upon his excellent new debut album All Kinds Of You.

Walker has a background in Chicago’s experimental free/noise music scene but recently took his music off in a more folk-oriented direction inspired by 60s folk troubadours like Tim Hardin, Tim Buckley and Bert Jansch.

With an extremely impressive guitar picking style and a voice that does indeed recall Bert Jansch, the album is of a consistently high quality. All the songs were composed by Walker and he draws on a variety of musical styles including blues, jazz and especially the mid/late 60s crossover folk jazz of Jansch, Davy Graham, Pentangle, John Martyn and Nick Drake.


The West Wind
The album opener,The West Wind, has a gorgeous arrangement and one can hear Walker's jazz background in the lengthy instrumental coda.




The album has a number of remarkable highlights. Blessings also features viola and has some of the fragility of Nick Drake's work. Clear The Sky is a similarly outstanding ballad. I really like the album's use of viola (played by Whitney Johnson). It works well and adds a very ethereal "British folk" atmosphere, sometimes reminiscent of early Third Ear Band, to many of the songs. Instrumental Fonda recalls Davy Graham and the album closer Tanglewood Spaces features some really exquisite guitar playing. The album covers a lot of musical ground ranging from the atmospherically autumnal late 60s British folk sound to the wide open blues and jazz spaces of 20th century Americana.


Twin Oaks Pt. 1 displays Walker's impressive guitar style.




Since first hearing the album last week I haven't been listening to much else. This is an album which clearly returns to the source of classic mid 60s folk but breathes new life and reinvigorates it for a 21st Century audience. Walker has talent and is a spectacular guitarist. This album promises much for the future. He will be worth watching.


Ryley Walker - "All Kinds Of You" (Tompkins Square - April 2014)

1. The West Wind
2. Blessings
3. Twin Oaks Pt. 1
4. Great River Road
5. Clear The Sky
6. Twin Oaks Pt. 2
7. Fonda
8. On The Rise
9. Tanglewood Spaces

Stream the album and read Ryley Walker's own sleeve-notes here
http://www.self-titledmag.com/2014/04/08/stream-ryley-walkers-all-kinds-of-you-album-and-read-his-commentary/



Untitled
While I was looking for more info on Ryley I came across this song on Soundcloud apparently recorded a couple of years ago. Here we find Ryley in psychedelic folk mode sounding like early Tim Buckley. The droning quality of the guitars and the eerie atmosphere also bring Nico to mind. Impressive. This could be a taste of future musical developments as a recent session on World Cafe also showed a notable Tim Buckley and John Martyn influence (listen here).






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Friday 16 May 2014

Mayssa Karaa's "White Rabbit" - An Arabian Alice in Wonderland

I really like this. Before hearing Lebanese singer Mayssa Karaa's version of Jefferson Airplane's White Rabbit if you had asked me whether it was possible to cover the song and actually add anything new or positive to it I probably would have just shrugged and said no way. The song is now too iconic and has become embedded in our minds as a kind of musical snapshot of late 60s hippiedom.

Mayssa Karaa
However Mayssa's new interpretation (recorded for the soundtrack of the film American Hustle), and sung in Arabic, brings out something that was perhaps only latent in the original. There were a lot of Arabic, Asian and Flamenco influences on psychedelic rock in the mid 60s. Ravi Shankar is perhaps the obvious example. The Byrds listened to John Coltrane's Shankar inspired India and made Eight Miles High. As a result a thousand shimmering sitar drenched guitar solos were born. The stunning 12 minute East/West instrumental on the Paul Butterfield Band's 2nd album also explored similar territory. Then there was Brian Jones Presents the Pipes of Pan at Joujouka  which was a recording the Rolling Stone made of Moroccan group the Master Musicians of Joujouka playing live in 1968. In the 70s Led Zeppelin probably did the best justice to this kind of "fusion" on Kashmir from their 1975 Physical Graffiti album


The hookah-smoking caterpillar
Musically White Rabbit is inspired by Ravel's Bolero and more especially Miles Davis' Sketches of Spain rather than anything overtly Arabic. However given that there is a Moorish influence in Spanish culture and music, and that these influences can be heard quite clearly on Davis' album, one could say that from a musical point of view (let's leave the lyrics out of this) Mayssa Karaa's interpretation of the song returns it in some way to its eastern inspired musical roots.

So when I first heard this version it seemed so perfect. Not only is it a brilliant vocal performance that transfixes you right from the opening lines but it is imbued with all that middle eastern mystique that was there to begin with but was only hinted at in the Airplane's version. I'd love to know what Airplane singer (and song composer) Grace Slick thinks of it.



Take a listen.





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Jonathan Miller's Psychedelic Alice in Wonderland

Ten 21st Century Summer Psychedelic Nuggets 


Wednesday 7 May 2014

Woods "With Light and With Love" - Review

2014 has been a pretty good year for psych influenced rock with excellent albums from both Quilt and Real Estate. However with its jangling guitars and well crafted songs with brilliant tunes, the new Woods album leaves both behind.

With Light and With Love is the band's 8th album and follows on from the band's previous two superb CDs Sun and Shade and Bend Beyond both of which were chockablock with 3 minute pop wonders. Sun and Shade even had a couple of lengthy psychedelically inclined instrumentals which showed the band had an experimental side which could also impress.

What differentiates With Light and With Love from their previous outings is the sound. It is their best recorded album to date and a long way from their lo-fi beginnings. It has a much richer sonic palate and places Jeremy Earl’s high fragile voice much better in the fuller sounding mix. The drum sound is thicker and colour is added through varied use of keyboards, backward tape effects and on opening track Shepherd even a pedal steel guitar.

Shepherd opens the album in a bright and breezy but somewhat unexpected style. Reminiscent of the Grateful Dead on American Beauty or Workingman's Dead it sees the band now pushing forward into countrified territory.





Second track Shining leads us back into the familiar Woods soundscape - shimmering guitars (is that a 12 string?) and catchy choruses - and successfully maintains the direction of the previous albums.

However just as soon as we think we've  found our place on the map we are launched off into the 9 minute long title track With Light and With Love. Previous lengthy excursions Out Of The Eye and Sol Y Sombra seemed to attempt to merge the repetition of Krautrockers Neu with the psychedelic spaghetti western trippiness of Quicksilver Messenger Service (and for me both really worked but they did tend to give the Sun and Shade album a slightly disjointed feel), however this is much more of a structured "song" with an extended guitar work-out. It features some spiky guitar riffs, occasionally reminiscent of Roger McGuinn in the Byrds Eight Miles High era, over a kind of fast shuffling rhythm. There are several shifts of pace and intensity and it rocks like the clappers. I really like it. Though I can't help thinking that most bands would have put this at the end of the album as a kind of grand finale but here we are still on track 3 of a 10 track album...





This is definitely a peak and one wonders how the band are going to follow it up but the track cuts / segues quite brilliantly into Moving To The Left and the pace, quality and momentum is maintained. This is shaping up like a classic album.





Next track New Light starts with backward tape loops and an acoustic intro. A nice thick drum sound kicks in over Earl's plaintive voice and its "Your only hope for tomorrow is starting anew... May we all sleep tonight" refrain would make it an excellent ending to a brilliant side 1 if you are listening on vinyl.

For me this suite of songs makes for the most varied, consistent and exhilarating 20 minutes on a Woods album so far. Can they keep it up for the rest of album?

I'm not sure the 2nd half matches up to the sonic fireworks of the first but it does get off to a strong start with Leaves Like Glass which features a delicious swirling mid 60s Dylanesque organ sound and comes over like some obscure single from around 1969. The next couple of tracks have a distinct Beatles influence. Twin Steps is mid-paced rocker with an acid style wah-wah tinged solo over a riff and a feel that bring to mind Revolver. The guitar on Full Moon seems to be a bit of a nod to George Harrison and Rubber Soul. Maybe too much. For me the riff here is a bit too obvious in its source and the song seems to verge on pastiche.

Last 2 tracks Only The Lonely and acoustic ballad Feather Man bid us a subdued farewell and, with a disembodied voice intoning over a tolling bell, the album suddenly cuts to a close. There is a slight air of lassitude towards the end of the album but Feather Man probably does make for a better ending than the mammoth With Light and With Love. Perhaps the grand finale is now too much of a rock cliche after all.

This album sees the band maturing, better recorded and on occasion sounding like a mainstream "rock" band but still pushing forward and trying out new ideas - eg Shepherd and With Light and With Love. However I'm not sure it's as strong as its predecessor Bend Beyond - it lacks that album's classic 3 minute pop song sensibility. Nearly every track on that album could have been a single. That's not true here. But having done catchy folk-rock singles to perfection maybe that is what they now want to leave behind. This album builds on the tradition of previous Woods albums and maintains the qualities of melody, musical exploration and good-time cheeriness that the band deliver so well. This is optimistic, warm and welcoming music for which, in this day and age, one should be grateful. Either way this a very strong album indeed. My favourite of the year so far and the first half a dozen songs here are some of the best music the band has ever recorded.



With Light and With Love
(Woodsist)
Release Date: April 15, 2014
Formats: CD/LP/CS/DL

  1. Shepherd
  2. Shining
  3. With Light and With Love
  4. Moving to the Left
  5. New Light
  6. Leaves Like Glass
  7. Twin Steps
  8. Full Moon
  9. Only the Lonely
  10. Feather Man
Jeremy Earl - Singer / Guitarist
Jarvis Taveniere - Multi-instrumentalist
Aaron Neveu - Drums
John Andrews - Piano / Organ
http://www.woodsist.com/woods/



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