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Feb 8th, 2010 07:20 PM | |
Aaarg |
Rock and roll, man. This is how people should be playing. I wish I could! America has some good stuff on it, but yeah I tend to not pay as close attention to it as some of the others. |
Feb 8th, 2010 11:56 AM | |
Babs |
Lately now, I've been listening non stop to John Fahey. Been listening to the album America lately which isn't necessarily my favorite album but it's also not a bad album. I've also taken the liberty to tune my guitar to open C and start doing a little finger pickin myself. |
Feb 7th, 2010 07:56 AM | |
Aaarg |
Hell yeah. Fahey's got a song in memory of John Hurt. ![]() |
Feb 6th, 2010 05:19 PM | |
Babs |
John Fahey has that Mississippi John Hurt feel to him. Speaking of Hurt, check this out. |
Feb 6th, 2010 10:17 AM | |
Aaarg |
Oh hell yes, the opener on Death Chants... Good stuff. My favorite is "Dance of Death." |
Feb 6th, 2010 04:29 AM | |
Babs |
By the way, this is my favorite song by John Fahey and I think you'll find it rather amazing as well. |
Feb 5th, 2010 10:03 PM | |
Aaarg | He will be, really. It's more the recent discovery that's made him a current favorite. He ain't going anywhere. |
Feb 5th, 2010 09:34 PM | |
Babs |
John Fahey should not be a current favorite, he should always be a favorite. He definitely does have that bukka white feel to his music. I love how his songs seem to resonate perfectly. His music tells the tale of his liberation through music. Rest in peace John. |
Jan 31st, 2010 03:38 AM | |
Aaarg |
No, but now that you mention him I'll have to look into him. I've been trying to get into Leo Kottke but he's so hit-or-miss and the damn vocals don't help at all. There's this kid named James Blackshaw that seems like he'd be pretty cool, but I only know one song (and it's 16 minutes long). Jack Rose also seemed cool and he just died last month unfortunately. But I don't know, John Fahey's totally got enough of a catalogue to keep me interested for a while. |
Jan 30th, 2010 08:31 PM | |
Grislygus |
You like Jon Jorgenson at all? another helluva picker right there |
Jan 30th, 2010 08:27 PM | |
Grislygus | |
Jan 30th, 2010 07:43 PM | |
Aaarg |
my current musical obsession. John Fahey. The man has dozens of albums, mostly solo acoustic guitar stuff. A few albums here and there with other people accompanying with other instruments. A few songs along the way in which he plays with another guitarist. Some of his later albums have weird electronic stuff added as he started experimenting more. Generally six-string acoustic. Rarely a 12-string (I only know one song off the top of my head in which he used 12-string, and that's "America"). I haven't heard any of the "orchestra" stuff and only two duets (one with another guitarist, one with a flutist). Most of the music is just him, alone, with a guitar, making excellent songs. Six strings, two hands, one track, no vocals. He was a young student of philosophy and collector of records. A very lonely and sad person with a natural ability to make beautiful music. Alcoholic to the end, he died in the early 2000s. "Red Pony" (published as "Wine and Roses" for some reason - an original composition) "Poor Boy" aka "Poor Boy Long Ways From Home" aka "Po' Boy Blues" - a traditional blues song, his version is based on Booker "Bukka" White's (a man who would not have returned to making blues music in the 60's if not for John Fahey, actually) "Tell Her To Come Back Home" (the first part is an original composition and the second and longer part is his rendition of an Uncle Dave Macon song though he turns it into something far more beautiful. The audio in this clip is pretty low quality, it's definitely not that tinny on the album) Unfortunately "Dance of Death" is not on Youtube. If you're interested in the songs posted here, buy/download Dance of Death and Other Plantation Favorites. Most of it is your standard Fahey fare, but it includes "Dance of Death" and "Variations of the Coocoo" and the studio version of "Red Pony" (listed as "Wine and Roses"), as well as a 10-minute song that is a few different variations on a song that originally came to be "On the Sunny Side of the Ocean," an outstanding song on another excellent album. |