The Best of John Fahey, Vol. 2: 1964-1983
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Artist:
John Fahey
Label: Takoma Category: Music Average customer rating: Media: Audio CD Number Of Discs: 1 UPC: 025218891622 EAN: 0025218891622 ASIN: B00019JQZK Release Date: 2004-02-03 |
Tracks:
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Customer Reviews:
New Recordings not by Fahey.......2005-08-17
A Welcome Companion to Vol. 1 (with Bonus Material).......2004-02-25
While Fahey himself deplored being categorized as a folk artist or (heaven forbid!) a new age artist, his influences reaches deep and wide across the musical landscape of both genres. In fact, in his later interviews in the Nineties, Fahey denounced most of his earlier work on Takoma. He preferred to think of himself as an alternative artist, and it's hard to argue with that label. Fahey was an original. [Who else would release his first album with side 2 attributed to Blind Joe Death?] No one played like him before or since.
Before Fahey passed away a couple years ago, Fantasy Records bought out Takoma Records and began to re-release his back catalog. What makes this second volume of his best recordings (as selected by Henry Kaiser) special is that some of these are being heard for the first time. Three tracks are taken from an aborted Shanachie release (with the working title AZALEA CITY MEMORIES (AND DREAMS OF PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY). Two of the three tracks ("Twilight on Prince George's Avenue" and "Sligo Mud") will be familiar to longtime fans as re-recordings of tracks from DEATH CHANTS, BREAKDOWNS AND MILITARY WALTZES, but under different titles ("John Henry Variations" and Stomping Tonight on the Pennsylvania/Alabama Border" respectively). The third previously unissued track is the stately "Tuff."
There is a fourth track that will be unfamiliar to even most die-hard fans, the 13-minute "Fahey Sampler," which was originally issued in 1967 on the Takoma Records sampler, THE CONTEMPORARY GUITAR. This song includes sections from a variety of Fahey originals that had not yet been fully completed. In the liner notes, Fahey is quoted as saying that he would frequently begin any public performance with this song.
Fahey once used the phrase "American primitive guitar" to describe his playing, but that description shortchanges Fahey's music. On the surface his playing may appear primitive, but closer listening reveals a complexity, intensity and warmth to his playing that few other guitarists can match. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
A Welcome Companion to Volume One (with Bonus Material).......2004-02-25
Fantasy Records bought out Takoma Records in 1995, so this collection only includes songs from Fahey's Takoma releases, along with two tracks ("Frisco Leaving Birmingham" and "Oneonta") from his 1983 Shanachie Records album RAILROAD 1. Oddly there is nothing from his other Shanachie release, the wonderful GOD, TIME & CAUSALITY, especially since the three previously unissued tracks are taken from an unreleased Shanachie album, AZALEA CITY MEMORIES (AND DREAMS OF PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY. Also worth noting is that these songs were probably recorded in 1991, making the album title of this latest anthology a bit of a misnomer. Two of these tracks ("Twilight on Prince George's Avenue" and "Sligo Mud") had been recorded by Fahey twice before under different titles ("John Henry Variations" and "Stomping Tonight on the Pennsylvannia/Alabama Border" respectively) on DEATH CHANTS, BREAKDOWNS AND MILITARY WALTZES. The third previously unissued track is the stately "Tuff."
There is a fourth track that will be unfamiliar to all but the most die-hard of Fahey fans, the 13-minute "Fahey Sampler," which was originally issued in 1967 on the Takoma Records sampler THE CONTEMPORARY GUITAR along with other tracks by labelmates Robbie Basho, Bukka White and others. The song includes sections from various Fahey originals that had not yet been completed. In the liner notes (lovingly written by Henry Kaiser), Fahey is quoted as saying that he frequently would begin any public performance with this song.
While Fahey would publicly denounce much of his pre-Nineties music, these songs (along with Volume 1) give the listener a satisfying overview of one of the guitar world's most distinct voices. Fahey abhorred the term "new age" or even "folk" when it came to describing his music; he much preferred the term "alternative." After listening to these recordings, it's hard to argue with that assessment. Fahey once used the phrase "American primitive guitar" to describe his playing, but that description shortchanges Fahey's music. On the surface, his playing may appear primitive, but there is a complexity, intensity and warmth to his guitar playing that few other musicians can match. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
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