Recommended by us on 13th May 2011
...according to our Phil on Thu 12 May, 2011.
VHF are releasing a bunch of solo guitar dudes over the next few weeks. Here's one of 'em! It's an album from New York's Alexander Turnquist called Hallway of Mirrors. It says that above so it's kinda pointless me saying that. Having said that the New York thing was a new bit of info so it's not all filler! I've not heard this chap before but I was rather taken with him on first listen. It's not a million miles away from the likes of James Blackshaw.... ie extreme 12 string fingerpluckery which is swathed in romanticism and will tug at your heartstring(s). It's epic stuff and the sound is fleshed out with a vibraphone which adds another dimension to it. The album is full of repetitive mantras which suck you into to another world and will leave you emotionally exhausted. It's moving music made from the heart. 'Waiting At The departure Gate' is the most epic 16 minutes you'll spend with a piece of music. It's absolutely gorgeous! Fans of latter Blackshaw will love this!!
On Hallway of Mirrors, young New York-based guitarist / composer Alexander Turnquist continues to forge his own radical style: a resonant and enveloping acoustic sound, full of beautiful harmonic overtone interplay, all instruments sustained. Turnquist's guitar approach revolves around a prodigious right-hand technique and a minimalist slant on composition that separates him from the retro-styling endemic to most current acoustic guitar music. Hallway of Mirrors uses much of the tonal palate from its precursor As the Twilight Crane Dreams in Color-dense twelve-string finger-picking with vibraphone and piano carrying much of the melody. On Hallway, the pieces are more concise with the added sweep of Christopher Tignor's elegant violin punctuating Turnquist's harmonics-laden forward motion and Matthew O'Koren's immaculate vibraphone (played with both mallets and bow). The additional instrumentation, inspired in part by Steve Reich's "Music for Eighteen Musicians," provides an added focus in the music, signifying each change in tone and timbre. Recorded on analog tape using traditional automatic doubletracking stereo mix techniques by engineers Henry Hirsch and Bram Tobey, the sound has an elegant soft focus that highlights Turnquist's strong and sharp performance. The centerpiece of the album, the sixteen-minute "Waiting at the Departure Gate," makes a sly nod in tribute to fellow VHF artist Jack Rose, who all too briefly explored similar techniques on his classic "Black Pearls." A truly uplifting and emotional listening experience.
Modern Dressers said:
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So, what do you think? Best reviewer each month gets £10 off their next order!