All it takes is 3 chords and a dream!
Showing posts with label Tim Buckley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tim Buckley. Show all posts

Friday, January 1, 2010

Review: Conil - Strange Part Of The Country


Conil - Strange Part Of The Country
2009, Great Hare Records

If you can't get a famous producer to listen to your demo, submit under a false name that sounds like somebody famous. Dishonest, yes, but it worked for London's Conil, who got Tchad Blake (Tom Waits, Pearl Jam) to listen to his demo by submitting it under the name Phil Coltrane. With the help of double bass player Danny Thompson (Tim Buckley, John Martyn), Conil has created a stirring album in Strange Part Of The Country, due out in February 2010. Already notes as one of the finest voices in England, Conil brings the presence of a lonely troubadour and a voice that is compelling in its singularity on Strange Part Of The Country.

Strange Part Of The Country opens with the title track, a rootsy bit of musical melancholy that pulls the listener in like a subtly insistent rip tide. Conil continues down the solitary track on Years Between, sounding like a cross between Bob Dylan and Hawksley Workman with a dash of Nick Cave thrown in. Conil creates an interesting dichotomy, blending his gentle melancholia with melodies that soar even when weighted with the world. Bonediggers has a serene air about it that evaporates in the middle but reasserts itself in the end. There is a distinct Zen feel to the song, with a possible moral of accepting yourself for whom and not what you are. Time Settles follows a similar formula and sounds a bit in a rut.

Conil climbs out of the crevice with Dog Meat Stew. Repetition still holds sway, particularly in the choruses, but on the whole Dog Meat Stew is an eclectic and interesting listen. Conil gets his edge on with Grapevine, the most vibrant and quietly angry rock song on the album. Things turn decidedly more serene thereafter, however. Distances From Here is somnolent and dreamy, and History Of The Best Of Us is a mildly morose paean to love or something like it. Conil rounds the bend and heads home with After The Hole; a six minute monstrosity that wears monotony and low affect like lucky charms. Conil does break out with some of his trademark soaring melody components, but much of the song is mired in a recursive reflection that's more desolate than anything else. It's interesting at first, but becomes difficult in its relentless pursuit of negative dynamics.

Strange Part Of The Country both engages and pushes away listeners at times, creating an internal tug of war that will be fun for some listeners and a turn off for others. The album itself is a bit uneven, and I am not sure that the folks who tagged Conil with the honor of having one of Britain's finest voices were listening to the same material I was; nevertheless, Conil is engaging with a sound that draws you in even if it isn't necessarily the prettiest one in sphere. His songwriting is a plus, although his plumbing of the emotional depths is a bit too weighty for my taste at times. Regardless, Conil is a talented performer who will connect with audiences on one level of another, as per their tastes. I don't imagine this is the last we'll hear from Conil.

Rating: 3 Stars (Out of 5)

You can learn more about Conil at http://www.conilmusic.com/ or www.myspace.com/conilmusic. You can purchase Strange Part Of The Country as either a CD or Download from Amazon.com. Downloads may also be obtained via iTunes.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Review: Steve McCormick - Lowlights And Footnotes


Steve McCormick - Lowlights And Footnotes

2008, Steve McCormick

I have to admit that the United Kingdom isn't exactly the first locale to pop into my head as a place to find great Country or Americana music. Steve McCormick doesn't claim to be either of those things, although Waylon, Hank and Merle have had a fair amount of influence on his songwriting (as have Randy Newman, Leonard Cohen, Tim Buckley, The Squeeze and even AC/DC). The Carlisle, Cumbria native released his debut album in late 2008 entitled Lowlights And Footnotes to critical accolades and a slow-growing but significant amount of worldwide airplay. Lowlights And Footnotes was mastered by Simon Heyworth (Tubular Bells, George Harrison, Nick Drake) and is played entirely by McCormick with the exception of Pedal Steel Guitar, provided courtesy of Dave Midgely.

Lowlights And Footnotes opens with Another English Cowboy, rocking right down to the roots of Country in a diatribe about not fitting the country mold. You'll be driven to dance and sing along to a song that could chart on American Country Radio if given the chance. McCormick gets a bit of Southern Rock flavor on the mid-tempo If Only She Were Lying. McCormick gets a bit trite in the chorus here, but the arrangement is a great listen. Making Light (Of Being Kept In The Dark) brings a touch of British humor to the honky-tonk on a mid-tempo number that walks the line between classic Country and the Eagles brand of California Country. On I'm Alright, Jack, McCormick celebrates his state of being at the expense of a friend who's down in the dumps, all set against a vibrant classic Rhythm & Blues fueled Honky Tonk sound. Back To The Booze hits the R&B fueled Country sound another try with a kicking guitar solo in the middle to really spice things up. McCormick lights the lamp with a song that might just be a party anthem in the States.

McCormick sounds a bit like Lyle Lovett on The Other Man, pointing out that no matter which point you are in a triangle, the other guy is always The Other Man. The song is well written, with a plaintive, Tex-Mex country ballad feel. My Woman Doesn't Give A Damn deals with stereotypical country heartbreak with uncharacteristic wit and panache. Like much of the rest of the album, McCormick is a classic story-teller. When he's funny it's not because he's trying to be funny, but because real life is sometimes dotted with humor and wit. Black And White Photographs is about family, memories and how gateways to the past often pave the way to understand who we are. It's moving and heartfelt without sounding sappy and may just be the best songwriting on the disc. McCormick closes out with Living In Loserville is a tongue-in-cheek song about being happy with yourself. It's a great closer for an album that plays the country game without giving over it's essential character to Nashvillian Zombification.

Steve McCormick is a story teller in the vein of Randy Newman (although perhaps no one has the chutzpah that Newman manages). McCormick's songs work because the characters and events he portrays are honest and real; even the fictional ones are written like a good character, and the choices they make are convicted ones. McCormick's stories come to life in songs based in Country Music but ranging from Rock to Tex-Mex and every possible blending of those styles. Lowlights And Footnotes should be the darling of Country Radio. Let's hope McCormick gets the right breaks.

Rating: 4 Stars (Out of 5)

You can learn more about Steve McCormick at www.myspace.com/stevemccormickuk or http://www.stevemccormick.co.uk/, where you can purchase a copy of Lowlights And Footnotes using PayPal. You can download the full album from iTunes, or a free four song sampler from McCormick’s website.