Fingerstyle Guitar: The Other British Invasion - (Re-) Releases
dateline: 10/05/99
revised: 6/20/00
I am a lucky dog. Within weeks of starting this site, I get a package of re-releases from Fantasy/Kicking Mule that would blow anyone's mind. If you want an instant, encyclopedic introduction to the fingerstyle guitar return-to-roots explosion of the 1970s that occurred in Britain, you couldn't do better than to pick up all of these disks and hide away with them for a week. Here's what we've got:
| Baker, Duck Kid On The Mountain (1980) (Kicking Mule) |
| Evans, Dave Sad Pig Dance (1974) (Kicking Mule) |
Jazzier and more joyful than Baker, Evans is part of the British tradition of guitar fingerstylists that starts with Davey Graham and includes Martin Carthy, John Renbourn, Bert Jansch and Martin Simpson. Excellent liner notes by Duck Baker puts Evans and this work in a broad and fascinating musical/historical context. The generous nine bonus tracks include tunes from the legendary 1977 Contemporary Guitar Workshop album feature the Evans' pioneering use of alternate tunings. Very rewarding listening.
| Graham, Davey The Complete Guitarist (Kicking Mule) |
Added:
| Bert Jansch Birthday Blues / Rosemary Lane (Essential Records) |
This re-release combines two early Jansch recordings. Birthday Blues is not his best work, although there are some nice performances. But the feel is all wrong - with heavy reverb, drums, and some light-weight lyrics, this album is reminiscent of Cat Stevens' earliest efforts like Matthew & Son - a sort of Peter Pan Brit-pop. Fortunately, both artists achieved their own individual voice and depth soon after, and Jansch's Rosemary Lane is breathtaking.
Getting a disc like this in the mail makes my job worthwhile. Jansch's guitar playing is primal; like Cassals on cello, in Jansch's hands, the guitar becomes expressive, full of rhythmical oddities, woody tones, rough passages, breathing. The album capitalizes on the depth and strength of this playing with several original and classic instrumentals and three strikingly original arrangements of traditional songs. Jansch's "Reynardine," and the title track will haunt you - for years. Jansch's originals here are moody and sparse, quiet and imagistic, again giving priority to Jansch's musical discoveries. This album is essential.
Hugh Blumenfeld, Editor
hugh@balladtree.com
|
|
||||
|
|
|
|
|
|