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Jo Gabriel: Fools and Orphans

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There are moments in Bulldozer, the opening song from Jo Gabriel’s new album, when Stephanie Rearick’s trumpet heralds the words ‘why should I love you’. These brief but beautiful events mark the most striking difference between this album and its more elaborate (if not immediate) predecessor Island. Fools and Orphans draws away from traditional arrangements to let the songs breathe, and in doing so allows Jo to continue distinguishing herself from the current ’..and piano’ crowd (I like Emm Gryner’s term ‘contemporary nonsensery.’) Few artists have the ability or opportunity to be this daring (mostly down to record label pressures, no doubt) and this successful. Fools and Orphans shines from its own darkness.

Kristin Hersh’s The Grotto was an album born out of loss and the resulting reflection on life and relationships. Fools and Orphans is different – its main theme is also loss, but barely offers sanctuary. The Grotto tears me apart and then rebuilds me; Fools and Orphans does the former then leaves a lingering sadness, although it’s more compelling as a result. The open arrangements, often rhythmically fluid and spontaneous are charmingly beautiful and ideal for such stories. It’s up to us to fill in the blanks, to empathise and to draw comparisons with our own lives.

Those who love Island might be surprised by the results – these songs make more sense if you were left breathless by The Amber Sessions. Jo is joined by a brilliant set of musicians who accompany her piano, synthesizer and concertina. There’s no major explosion of fireworks and no ego: Jo’s piano is here to set scenes, mark out rhythms and to dynamically sweep songs through their various emotional phases – you’ll probably end up loving every note she plays. Much of the greatness of the album is in Jo’s interplay with Matt Turner’s cello and Mark Urness’ upright bass, both of which better Andrew Bird’s string performances on The Grotto. Linda Mackley continues her percussion duties, but is barely noticeable such is the subtly of her performance – which is exactly what’s required – and Wendy Schneider occasionally adds guitar and something called ‘the little machine that could drone on.’

Melodies and rhythms often appear where they are least expected, developing their own counterpoints and shifting tempos but the experience and process of knowing each song is reward in itself. A line from Of Love and Ether, “to touch between sensations” perfectly summarises how this works. It’s just as important to delve between and beneath each note. That’s why the live birdsong on that song, and the happenstance rebar chimes on God Grant She Lye Still work their way so coherently into the mix. But it’s no coincidence – by the time these songs begin to appear, halfway out, we’re already trained how to listen to this album. The more you listen, the more you’ll learn the flow of each track.

Jo enthralls me with her unusual delivery of language, compressing or mutating phrases to track against the music, creating its own instrument: on The Habits of Shadows a moaning vocal interlude bridges the verses, later joined by Hannah Fury’s whispers for some shivery layering. Of Love and Ether, a song which epitomises the ephemeral themes of the album, echos this vocal styling. But it’s the climax of God Grant She Lye Still, when the title repeats and shatters, where the vocals have the most dramatic impact.

As is the case with albums that are as intense as this one, it’s difficult to pick out individual tracks for particular noteworthy attention. I should mention that How The Devil Falls In Love brings to mind the loneliness of The Cardigan’s 03.45: No Sleep, but adds guilt and frustration, and the final song Poison in the Well is an understated anthem, using strong piano chords where you might expect an avalanche of strings.

Fools and Orphans marks a new phase in Jo Gabriel’s musical career and although I’ve only discovered her music recently I feel privileged to witness her journey. For all its sorrow Fools and Orphans is a glorious creation.

Fools and Orphans has an artist’s limited release from 7 May 2008 through Ephemera and will also be released in Winter 2008 through Kalinkaland.

Jo Gabriel – Official Website
Jo Gabriel – MySpace

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The wrong picture

More fuddled-up musical e-commerce. I know From The Valley To The Stars isn’t released in the UK until May, but here it is on Klicktrack’s website, in my own currency at a bargain price of £5.00 (or 50p per track if you want just a couple). And I can’t buy it. Boo!

From the Valley to the Stars (MP3 Download) - El Perro del Mar / Klicktrack Music - Powered by Klicktrack MDT

I guess I’ll have to make do with Firefox AK’s new album If I Were A Melody instead, which you can get here. (Or iTunes, but you’ll get sucky audio quality)

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Trinity Revisited

Cowboy Junkies only extraordinary album, The Trinity Session, which is now twenty years old, has been commemorated by the band in the form of Trinity Revisited. You can read Pitchfork’s review here. It turns out to be a superfluous track-by-track recreation of the album, recorded in the same church as the original, this time with accompanying DVD and extra musicians.

Ugh.

No, really.. The Trinity Session should have been left to age respectively, because it is a masterpiece. Play it loud and you can hear everything in that church, the reflecting ambience, every brush of drums, every twang or stroke of guitar string, every syllable of Margo’s voice. Each separate and unique, but together bringing a textured intimacy that overwhelms. There’s no need for extra paraphernalia, or visuals – because they’re already in your head. Some still criticise the lo-fi nature of the recording, live to tape, with just one microphone. But that’s the point – that simplicity brings with it fidelity.

The Trinity Session – Amazon UK

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Public investigations

Yesterday was a day spent listening to a Last.fm radio station. Unusual for me, but rewarding. Here’s an unordered list of bands and musicians that are now on my radar for further investigation. Prior to yesterday I’d only heard of one of them:

Ugress, Cinephile, Dragonette, Anja Garbarek, Regina, Ephemera, Vive La Fête, Flunk, Hande Yener, Boomkat, Anneli Drecker, Temposhark, Briskeby, Machine Dominatrix

Above links are to their Last.fm page.

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Subscriptions? Moi?

Here’s something new:

As of today, you can play full-length tracks and entire albums for free on the Last.fm website.

Currently in beta to the US, UK, and Germany, which limits each track to a three plays. Last.fm plan to launch an additional tier of subscription membership which will allow users unlimited listens and ‘other useful things’. No idea on pricing yet.

Last.fm now have an Artist Royalty programme, which pays artists directly for every single track streamed via their website. So, if you’re a musician of any shape, style or size, there’s no excuse not to get yourself listed on their website.

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Half-learnt Lessons Learnt Wrong

Seth’s got a great post up today, Music Lessons, which suggests 14 lessons the music industry should learn. Included in this is the following very wise statement:

The biggest opportunity for the music business is to combine permission with subscription

Anyhow, today’s the day that Sony BMG announced they are going DRM-free, but with a couple of catches:

  1. You have to visit a physical store to get a plastic card for a specific album on which is contained a code
  2. You then go home and visit an online store, enter the code and get your album

Funny.. ‘cos if you’re at the store, you could just buy the CD. Seth says, in Understand the power of digital:

Compare [digital] to hassling for a ride, driving to the mall, finding the album in question, finding the $14 to pay for it and then driving home.

Sony’s DRM-free system is even more hassle than that.

Update: These cards first hit US stores on January 15, when a whole 37 albums will be available via this amazing mechanism.

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The Complexity of Songs

I should have spotted this years ago: Donald E. Knuth is a legend in the world of Computer Science. His writings, The Art of Computer Programming, should, despite being over 30 years old, be on every software engineer’s bookshelf. There are algorithms in Volume 2, Seminumerical Algorithms that helped me through university.

In 1977, he published a paper in SIGACT News entitled The Complexity of Songs (later reprinted in the Association for Computing Machinery’s main journal), in which he suggests that our predecessors invented choruses in order to reduce the spacial complexity of songs, thus making them easier to remember.

The article is available for download and is entertaining reading, especially for the hilarious schema for ‘Old MacDonald’.

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Apple as a Record Label?

Rumours are abounding that Jay-Z – now free of his obligations to Def Jam – is going to team up with Apple to start a record company.

Please no. My next door neighbour’s terriers are better yappers (sorry, rappers) than Jay-Z. And he like totally ruined Umbrella okay?

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