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REVIEW PAGE 2 FOR NEW GUITARISTS :

V.A. (You can never go fast enough), Janet Feder (2 releases), Nick Thompson,
Dagobert Böhm (2 releases), Anthony De Gennaro, Dominic Gaudious
ReRJanet Feder : Speak Puppet (2000)***°
BrainboxJanet Feder & Colin Bricher : demo (2003)****

The advantage of a prepared guitar over a usual guitar, is more richness in sound colours. When fingerpicking compositions deal with the actual nature of its oddities, we can have colourful compositions (-that remind me of John Cage's prepared piano pieces, where rhythms have their own colour and rhythmical melody). Never the less Janet's compositions on "Speak Puppet" seem at first not so unusually different. In the beginning of each composition the different tuning participates a bit in its composition's structure, but further on, the guitar composition grows a bit independently from it's original sound settings, and the differently tuned strings become alienated oddities. Is it this puppet on the string (-see picture-)that tries to seek for its own life ? The guitar becomes again a usual classical fingerpicking style guitar, while this tiny puppet (as small oddly melodic touches) plays on its own independent life, as it sees the opportunity. Sometimes it plays perfectly along, although still with its own nature. This we can especially hear in the first three tracks, and on "Red Drum" a bit further on. The track "Lightning Strikes" I knew already from the compilation album, and I described this before as a genius track, because new sound invention and melody and classical guitar fingerpicking, work perfectly hand in hand. Two tracks are basically just fingerpicking, "Leaving light" and "A bird flew in". But there are also a couple of more "modern" or fashionable tracks. "Almost El Paso" is fingerpicking guitar with male voice and background turntable noise (?). "Sueno-remix" (with participation of Colin Bricker) has a very careful mix, guitar, some rhythms and background noise. The last remix, -also the last track-, from "Leaving light" by William Caslon Experiment, is as careful as the first one. It's a bit of a naive and child like experiment, not in a bad sense, as if experimenting with a new toy, -a track that could have been richer in the final production for a richer three dimensional sound.  All in all "Speak Puppet" is an enjoyable release with a certain freshness and an idealism succeeding in going beyond its own limitations.
Also participating on this album : guitarist Mike Johnson (Thinking Plague, Hamster Theatre, 5UU's) (on first track), pianist Mike Vargas (on paddlydo (?), on one track) & prepared harp player Margot Krimmel (on 2 tracks).

Audio : "Shouting Valley"
Other review : http://www.bbc.co.uk/music/experimental/reviews/feder_speak.shtml
French review : http://www.traversesmag.org/chroniques/feder.htm

+ demo (2003)****

On this release, the use of electronics with a semi-electronic part, overcoming the basic limitations of an acoustic recognisable melody, has given the music a very mature sound, which is partly based upon prepared guitars, with tiny additional sounds and friendly and soft breakbeat (?) rhythms. The fingerpicking guitar stands more on its own (as in the earlier mentioned release), which I think is a good idea to get a clear distinctive structure, leaving the 'invention' mostly for colouring the structure, as environmental sounds, enriching the basic fingerpicking rhythms, thus creating more liveable space and a more modern sound. A part of the noises and extra arrangements are like insect participations and come from the "level-of-the-grass" or something, while the fingerpicking itself works like "a-walk-outside". A few times the total structure is broken up, very carefully, with full respect for the acoustic fundamentals. All various rhythms as well as electronic sounds work very contributively. Where on the earlier release the electronics might not have been so essential, here everything is. Although not many rhythms ever make it much to the fore in the composition (except in the splendid "Sueno" perhaps) and while basically it is very relaxing music, I still recommended this to club house DJ's too, even when they might only use it after their house .. work. A splendid and highly recommended release with a very modern and vivid sound.

Info : www.janetfeder.com & www.cowhause.com
Private   Nick Thompson : Lend me your ears (US,2002)****

This guitarist was recommended to me by a specialised guitar website after I asked them to give me an example of someone who's able to play inventively with sound and composition and ideas, but with clear composition and ideas, fusing eventually various ideas and styles. A shame that I am not a guitarist who is able to describe guitar releases with the insights of a gifted musician well, but from what I hear I can already tell this was a perfect recommendation. "Serenading the L train" keeps the perfect balance between spontaneous easiness with a recognisable but original tune and a skilful invention which always is only present at the neutral spots between the fundamental clarity in melody, therefore completely convincing in maturity, skilfulness, relaxedness, spontaneity, integrity. This is followed by another beautiful fingerpicking track, "Song for Michael Hedges".  Nick Thompson has worked his whole life together with Taylor Ho Bynum who plays the tempered and jazzy cornet on three tracks of the album, perfectly timed to open the sound alternation. All other tracks are structured like the first one I described : with a clear melody on front, with beautiful intervals of vivid space, and distinctness in loudness and quietness in the fingerpicking at the right spots, with crammed framed fingerpicking as spots of tension, creating an ever evolving creative sound full of spontaneity and invention, all within a warm controlled mood. "The monkey room" is on some passages a bit more up tempo compared to other tracks, but strangely enough, at the same time, it has also something deeply meditative in its core. The timing of any of the ideas and the changes always is perfect. This makes this album a perfect listen.

Info : www.nickthompson.com & http://www.guitar9.com/undiscov10d.html
& http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/nickthompson03
Ant-Man Rec.      Antony De Gennaro : Acoustic Sensation (US,2003)**°'

I find it a good thing when guitarists fall back on their guitar sound itself for expressing themselves. It gives clarity over the talent behind the guitar. No unnecessary trickery. Just the talent, the player and the guitar. Antony proves this here being able to create fluid play, a consistent sound and a perfect mood for an enjoyable listening pleasure. On track 7, "News for the pub" the style is a bit more bluesy. The track is a bit different, but still fits in with the rest. In general the style is warm and gentle with clarity and a certain purity. Only some sparse colouring is permitted by tape delays and phasers. It's just perfect in what it is.

Webpage : http://www.ant-man.com/
with info on this release : http://www.ant-man.com/Acoustic%20Sensation.htm
Soundfiles : http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/degennaro4
Other reviews of his other works at http://singersong.homestead.com/REV.html
Canadian born Indian raga-guitarist Nadaka I gave reviews at a seperate page :
see review page for Nadaka ->
Plain RecordingsVarious artists : "You can never go fast enough" (var,2003)**'

Filippo Salvadori compiled this after spending some time organizing and asking around for tracks as a tribute to the road movie "Two-Lane Blacktop". Having seen some of my favourite guitarists on it I did not need much time to decide to trace it. Not knowing the movie I can only judge the CD for its music and for what is my own impression of an American road movie. I saw only some road-movies. "Paris-Texas", for instance, another combination of movie and guitar music that struck me and many other movie fans.
Hearing the tracks of this album I heard a deadly melancholic loneliness, as well as a very American feel throughout most of the album. My favourite tracks here are Sandy Bull's "Little Maggie", a perfect American styled inspired banjo fingerpicking track, Calexico's "No Doze", and Suntanama's "Parallels", with a fresh and rewarding band sound,.. Except for Calexico, which sounds very lonely, with acoustic fingerpicking and electric slide guitar and drums, my preferred tracks were the more clear, and uplifting ones with a lighter sound. Most of the album is not light. For a fluent listening experience it lacks some coherency, but as conceptual mood creation in general it's compiled very consequently. The switch from the first track of the technically crafty Sandy Bull however to the depressed Will Oldham is rather big. I found such a sudden change difficult to listen to. The Will Oldham track works on its own, describes filmicly, with narration ; the band sounds nice, but the track still has a boring production, for almost 9 minutes. Alvarius B's track of a guitar improvisation is extremely melancholic too, but this time it sustains the basic feel of the album. Also Steffen Basho-Junghans succeeded in describing the American downtrodden feel very well, in his own original style (with acoustic slide guitar). Never the less this particular doomy American feeling I personally can not find myself getting into it very much. It's a kind of hopelessness, directing forward without many perspectives and visions. Beside the already mentioned tracks we hear also two old American songs, one by Roscoe Holcomb, and one by Leadbelly (both earlier published by 'Smithsonian Way'), an American styled song by Wilco, a third grade urban experimental track by Mark Eitzel & Marc Shapelle, a Giant Sand instrumental with some unclear musical perspectives, a Charalambides track sounding like afterlife rock, followed by a fine but somewhat long experimental Sonic Youth instrumental track based upon loops, slow electric guitars, bowls ?, called "loop cat", fitting nicely with the Charalambides track. 'Cat Power' is a female singersongwriter with guitar with another ok / nice track, in an urban mood. It sounds like a song with some personal introspective over something with no perspective. The last 13 minutes are psychedelic guitars from Roy Montgomery, in the mood of a "back on the road again", completely stoned and with mind blanked. If all these loaded and cloudy feelings should be an example for a life's vision, we will never see the light. With lights out, heading down the road you can never go fast enough. The indifference of its nature has no limitations in time(s perspective). These expressions only fill up the empty goal which started off at first. For every visionless victim of this society, this is describing live for what it is not.

Other reviews :
http://wwww.pitchforkmedia.com/record-reviews/comp/plain/you-can-never-go-fast-enough.shtml
http://www.fakejazz.com/reviews/2003/iamaphotographer.shtml
http://www.aural-innovations.com/issues/issue24/blacktop.html
http://www.undertheradarmag.com/webonly/albumreviews/...
Label entry : http://www.buyrunt.com/plain.html
Ozella MusicDagobert Böhm : Circle Around (D,1999)** (guitar)

Dagobert Böhm has worked often together with other musicians, playing in a contributive style for a structural balance. There he created acoustic fusions, that would fit well with the ECM label's taste. I chose to check and review the album "Circle around" first, for it emphasise more on the guitar. I especially liked the first track "Open air", as it has the most musically independent fingerpicking guitar style. Other tracks are more "podium" fusion guitar with a flair of delicacy and with a kind of an early spiritual interest like idealism connected with a mood of kindness, or a kind of inner control with a soft touch, or something like that. This intention makes the playing and ideas close to a certain minimalism, with an easiness close to and comfortable with what is an easily recognisable sound. Like a softly sparkling fountain, with some reflecting leaves, and with each leaf being another melody. Each sparkle shown is like another clarity unfolding. The fingerpicking itself works as a fusing rhythm. The same minimalism could cause melancholy, but here, it's like wearing a white shirt, which is simple and clean in expression, and purity for which it stands for, is nothing more than in the sense of "clean". This clarity reflects not necessarily pure creativity, but it is at least open towards a certain "purity" as result of the final effect and intention. This is not a New Age Fusion guitar style, but for me it works a bit like that, in a similar way. It is as if a certain recognisable content is rearranged with a certain "spiritual" technique of control. I personally prefer more immediately directed creativity in guitar music. But for those who like to see a good dose of balance, and comfort could easily find their taste satisfied here.

Review of Circle Around : http://www.folkworld.de/17/e/cds3.html & http://www.rambles.net/bohm_circle.html
Sound samples of Circle Around : http://www.alpha-music.de/3874075.html &
http://www.magicmusic.de/media/3/7245.ram

Ozella MusicDagobert Böhm, Markus Reuter & Zoltan Lantos : String Unit (D,2000) **°°/***° (fusion)

Actually, I listened to "String Unit" at first. Here, I liked immediately very much the warm, slightly spacey Indian Fusion styled "Indiaespara". The gypsy violin improvisation produced in the background by Zoltan Lantos, created as a part of the spacey fusion effect, with the bass 12 string touch guitar from Markus Reuter and the guitar from Dagobert Böhm this balance works just perfectly. The combination of sounds, produced with lots of echo creating a full special vista works really very well for the (interactive) balance between the trio. And the fusing ideas deriving from world music, and beyond, with minimal trance effect works fine too. But it's especially the earlier mentioned balance which is the strongest point for this album / group. The group works and thinks very well as a whole. It gives the CD a consistent listen, within a relaxed fusion mode.

Info on Böhm : http://www.smooth-jazz.de/Artists4/Dago.htm & http://www.dagobertboehm.de/news_eng.html
Interview : http://www.gitarrehamburg.de/Interviews/dagobert-boehm.htm
Info on releases : http://www.ozellamusic.com/shop.html#dago
Review of String Unit : http://www.rambles.net/bohm_stringunit.html
BMIDominic Gaudious : All hopped up (US,2003)**'

Dominic Gaudious has a light, clear and very accessible world fusion style with a taught craftsmanship
of flamenco and other finger picking styles. No matter how fast the playing is this lightness in sound remains. The rhythms and other music instruments are basic and simple, but colourful. I like very much the variety of instruments being used on "Saboteur" . There are various worlds evoked, with romantism
& remembrance, to eastern ? touches (through use of a beautiful eastern ? instrument*) with an association towards a rock band's sound (with an electric guitar solo) -The song refers to an earlier band, Saboteur, in which Dominic participated with. "All hopped up" is with didgeridoo, popular sounding but appealing with driving rock rhythms, a song that would even lend itself to even more, and that could have more in its core, if played by musicians that would improvise in dialogue form. The play can be brilliantly fresh and clear, and appealing, but sometimes it also falls back on a more predictable sound (like on "It'll be OK"), which happens more often with musicians that arrange their work completely on their own. It's hard to take a distance to your own work and make a two way interaction kind of dynamism between the instruments, when recording the one on top of the other. Sometimes it gets this tension, otherwise it are mostly the rhythmic parts that makes the music more mainstream than it should be, because the guitar playing features itself, when pulling itself towards certain tensions, is rewarding enough. Last track gets the participation of a throat singer.

* after asking about it, it seemed to be a sitar. Then I consider it as a very unusual sound / playing of a sitar.

Info : http://www.dominicgaudious.com/ (with soundfiles).
More soundfiles of older work : http://artists.mp3s.com/artists/141/dominic_gaudious.html
Review of the guitarist : http://www.vipentpro.com/regional/dominic.htm
& http://www.guitar9.com/undiscov32c.html & http://www.unl.edu/lied/lied2k/events2k/dominic.html & http://www.mccollumguitars.com/mcartist.htm
Interview : http://www.serge.org/mm0302-a.htm
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