Showing posts with label Folk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Folk. Show all posts

Tuesday 10 April 2018

Ani DiFranco - Binary - Album Review


Ani DiFranco
Binary
Righteous Babe/Aveline




If you were impressed by Oprah Winfrey’s Golden Globes speech, then let me introduce you to another confident, self-made woman of integrity who has also spent her life being a committed activist for positive change against the ‘isms we are familiar with and those we may not, like reproductive rights and patriarchy.  Ani believes equality is essential before we can solve the bigger issues. 
It deserves discussion because the pressing needs facing Earth, of poverty, access to water, starvation, wars, terrorism and environmental destruction are too important not to address.

The vocals sound somewhere between Grace Jones and Alanis Morrisette and the staccato delivery, whilst fitting the jazz rhythms well, doesn't offer the variety I was expecting.  The exceptional line in the song Play God about reproductive rights, “Every chance I can, I pay my taxes like any working man, and I feel I’ve earned My right to choose, you don’t get to play God, man, I do”, demonstrates her beliefs and a mastery of the written and spoken word, but I was dying to hear more melody, less words, and a little space to hear more flair from the whole band.

Influenced by Pete Seeger, Suzanne Vega and Michelle Shocked, Ani is not your typical pop star.  She’d “rather be able to face myself in the mirror than be rich and famous”.  It’s a shame there isn’t more like her so that she could relax to include more human stories like the track Pacifist’s Lament (“But there is nothing harder than to stop in the middle of a battle and say you're sorry”) but she confesses herself that “Some people wear their heart on their sleeve.  I wear mine strapped to my boot.”

Binary may not be my first choice for my living room, but as a politician with conviction, she’s my kind of presidential candidate.

NE






Thursday 8 March 2018

Carrie Martin - Folk Review


Carrie Martin
Seductive Sky
Bucks Music Group Ltd

Returning in earnest to music following the raising of her twins, Carrie Martin has released her third LP, Seductive Sky, gently encouraged by Gordon Giltrap, with whom she has shared occasional touring stages.  She shapes her self-penned songs into a cohesive and graceful groove.  I liked the originality and creativity of her output.  Her delivery of the songs is also precise in its enunciation, that helps the listener appreciate the lyrics.  It reminds me in places, of the whimsy of Vashti Bunyan’s Just Another Diamond Day. Maria in the Moon is inspired by the third novel of the same name from her friend Louise Beech, also from Hull, which is an intelligent piece of marketing and on the strength of this track, a full album collaboration could beckon and could emulate the success of mixed media projects between poetry and painting.  The song perfectly displays Carrie’s unique singer-songwriter credentials.  Time, in memory of her friend is a beautiful piece of music with the truth of its lyrics.  No Return to Yesterday and The Woman in Me and the excellent upbeat You Make Life Look Easy also impressed. 

I would have liked just a touch of her rock roots from her earlier career and would offer that Kate Bush, Tori Amos, Caro Emerald, and Paloma Faith arguably found success from more leftfield compositions alongside their more mainstream styles, but music is often about our preferences and each artist needs the freedom to explore their creativity in the moment which Carrie ably displays.

NE


Monday 5 March 2018

Emily Askew Band - Folk Review


The Emily Askew Band
Alchemy
Askew Records





Pick at random an album from your music collection.  When were the songs written? Were they from a couple of years, twenty-five or fifty years ago? Does it feature a cover version perhaps of a classic from yesteryear?  The Emily Askew Band have crafted a thrilling debut album featuring songs and compositions from five hundred years of music from the thirteenth to the seventeenth century.

Medieval, Renaissance and Baroque tunes are skilfully brought back to life through a folk music interpretation of the source music.  The band have little to influence them. They can’t tap into famous examples of their music like a jazz, rock or country artist can.  Thus, their bravery in ploughing a furrow of Early Music, knowing mainstream appeal is unlikely, has left its mark on me.

The band has a great knowledge of harmony in blending fiddle, viola, bagpipes, recorder, guitar and frame drum to perfection.  If I knew the recorder could sound this good, I would have gladly mastered a third song after Three Blind Mice and Go and Tell Aunt Nancy.  If I was a music teacher I would play this album to my students at the start of the new term to challenge perceptions that pop and hip-hop are not the only genres of music.

Each tuneful catch on this album has been chosen with great care and relevance from all walks of life. There are dances, songs of devotion, songs of love, songs of joy and songs from the Court.  English, Italian, French, Spanish, Portuguese and Latin texts, manuscripts and melodies have been hand-picked and added to the merrily melting pot of this album, Alchemy, whose magical ingredient is a little more fun via the folk.

NE

Thursday 1 March 2018

Julie Fowlis - Alterum


Julie Fowlis
Alterum
Machair Records Ltd

Don’t be put off by the still life effect of the cover, its Latin title (Other, another, otherness), or that most of the album is sung in Gaelic.  Let me assure you that these diverse rhythmic stories are easily understood through the pitch and timbre of the delicate vocals and the melodies provided by the understated instrumentation. The pipes, flutes and whistles are pared down to provide a softer acoustic sound and the guitars, including those of her husband Éamon Doorley, cellos, and double bass benefit accordingly. The faster foot-tapping dance music accompanied by the technical fast rap delivery style of Gaelic, is astonishing with the clarity of stresses and syllables.  Yet it’s the more powerful slower tempo songs that impress the most in their emotional interpretations, that include two in English, Windward Away and Go Your Way, that contains the line “May the West Wind speed your travels and the sun be on your hair” which seems a much nicer sentiment than the hurt and anger expressed in Fleetwood Mac’s similarly titled Go Your Own Way!  Julie’s voice is the bright star of this album.  She can match the exact tone of the instruments playing alongside, including a bouzouki and flute and pipes and it creates real ambience with nuances that perfectly capture the landscape and peoples of the Highlands and Islands, from where she was brought up in North Uist.

NE

The Municipal Tip

  Following the signs for Bowels of Humanity, we descend the corkscrew of apocalypse into the cradle of filth. We are beckoned forward by a ...