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ALEX WARD/JOHN
BISSET
Crypt
2:13
CD 016
ERNETO
DIAZ-INFANTE/CHRIS FORSYTH
(as is stated ... before known)
Evolving Ear/Pax Recording
EE07/PR90263
Put aside any ideas you may have about these duo guitar discs being another
installment in the Great Guitars series or cozy adult radio fodder. Even
though three out of the four guitars plucked here are acoustic and a good
portion of the tunes hover around the three-minute mark, these aren't
your fathers' guitar duos.
In
truth, both discs have a slightly more subversive bent than you find in
mainstream, Herb Ellis-Joe Pass duets, countrypolitan Chet Atkins-Les
Paul meetings or Al DiMeola-John McLaughlin speed fests. Both duos --
Britons John Bisset and Alex Ward, and Americans Ernest Diaz-Infante and
electric guitarist Chris Forsyth -- are trying to reach those sounds between
genres, referencing jazz, New music and free improv in the former case
and noise, microtonalism, free improv and electro-acousticism in the other.
Surprisingly,
considering the sources, the linkage between the across-the-ocean duos
arises from the amount of flat-picking and strumming here. Echoes of folk
music teams like Bert Jansch and John Renbourn or John Fahey and Leo Kottke
appear throughout. In fact, you might call the results avant folk.
A free
music experimenter working with the likes of percussionist Burkhard Beins
and the London Improvisers Orchestra, Bisset recorded Crypt in a church
located in Ward's hometown of Grantham, Linconshire. Additionally, although
he has recorded on guitar elsewhere, Ward is better known as a clarinetist
in sessions with guitarist Derek Bailey and bassist Simon H. Fell.
Recorded
in Forsyth's hometown of Brooklyn, the other CD links that self-taught
electric guitarist and member of the electroacoustic trio PSI, with San
Francisco visitor and experimental music cheerleader Diaz-Infante, whose
East Coast associates include pianist Dan Dechellis and drummer Jeff Arnal
who have also played with Forsyth. Crypt's quirky song titles, incidentally,
come from cribbage, a card game favored by Ward's relatives. as is stated
... before known's titles are as enigmatic as some of the playing here.
To
get an idea what both duos are doing, compare "Some weeks of close
scrutiny," Forsyth and Diaz-Infante's 91/2-minute tour-de-force,
with just about anything on the other CD. A dramatic, atmospheric instant
composition, "Some weeks. . ." features the two strumming in
unison on their bass strings until that's succeeded by rumbling amplifier
static on one side and the sound of guitar wood being hit with the heel
of a hand on the other. As Diaz-Infante maintains an unvarying four-note
pattern, Forsyth introduces irregular sine wave oscillations that could
as easily come from a laptop or synthesizer. Soon the pulsation becomes
so loud that that it threatens to drown out the guitar fills. Buzzing
as if it is the audio of a malfunctioning TV set, the oscillations move
into the foreground until the guitar chords become faint shadows and are
finally subsumed.
Contrast
that with Bisset and Ward's "Muggins," that's replete with slurred
fingering and reverberating bluesy runs. At one point one guitarist flat
picks on the axe's highest parts near the neck, then rapidly slides down
to a more moderate tone, as the other offers some raggy Blind Blake-like
finger picking.
Not
that the Americans are uninfluenced by unadorned roots techniques either.
As they're passing chords back and forth on tunes like "How little
observed ... half a mile distant" and "This same afternoon"
the results recall the sort of steady rolling flat picking that usually
accompanies rambling folk songs. Of course the mood is shattered for nanoseconds
by sharpened objects pressed against the strings. "One afternoon
last year" references harsh, bottleneck styling in a sharp, short
burst of atonal steel string blues picking. Imagine Elmore James in outer
space.
Then
there's "Tomorrow," where the doubled-gaited, authoritative
unison strumming from the two suggest the open chord style of countryrockers
the Everly Brothers. Further on, though, the ringing, foot-tapping beat
gives way to secondary Bronx cheer decorations, humming effects pedal
distortions and pulsating delay effects.
That's
the unstated challenge implicit in Forsyth and Diaz-Infante's CD: trying
to affect a mid-path between six string and non-guitar sounds. When concordance
is made among machine-like rumbles, the cavernous reverb and near silent
microtonalism that make up part of their performance, and adroit picking
and strumming, the listener can set aside the discordant experimentation
elsewhere.
With two acoustic axes, Bisset and Ward's don't have amplification to
manipulate. But they do quite well without it. Placing themselves in the
non-hierarchical centre of BritImprov, they come up with mitosis-like
creations as on "Two for his Heels" where near equivalent sounds
finally open up for flamenco-style strumming, country music flat picking
and then the hint of bent blues notes.
Other
times, as on "Pairs Royal," it appears as if entire passages
are being played on the tiny space underneath the bridge. Meanwhile objects
are being rolled along and against the strings as well as flailing thumb
plucks, wood beatings and knife-like pinpointed notes.
Applying
World Wrestling Federation grapples to certain strings so they can resonate
with abandon, doesn't satisfy the two. Elsewhere they're likely to diverge
from that patch to sound out delicate, melodic chromatic lines. On a piece
like "Fifteen six" one will strum while the other snaps out
spiky flat picking", while on "Fifteen four" one will confine
himself to finger picking on the lower strings while the other goes into
slurred fingering, sounding out arpeggio after arpeggio.
Crypt
reaches its climax on the eight-minute final track, where following the
recitation of a T.S. Elliot text, floating, chiming phrases pass from
one to another. A double quick counterline suggests "Flight of the
Bumble Bee"; another slurred passage is reminiscent of the English
folk dance tradition. Following an ensuing series of pauses and strums,
then zither-like picking on higher-pitched strings, the two exit in a
crescendo of swirling unison chording.
Two
guitar duos, two separate, if equally legitimate, approaches.
--
Ken Waxman
Track
Listing: 1. Flush; 2. Pairs; 3. Two for his Heels; 4. Pairs Royal; 5.
The Crib; 6. Fifteen two; 7. Muggins; 8. Fifteen four; 9. Fifteen six;
10. One for his nob
Track Listing:
1. The sun is shining; 2. How little observed... half a mile distant;
3. Tomorrow; 4. Some years since (the moon, supposing it to be inhabited);
5. One afternoon last year; 6. I once carried ... from time to time; 7.
This same afternoon; 8. On morning five years ago (touched my trembling
eras); 9. Some weeks of close scrutiny; 10. Six minutes last fall; 11.
Six years
Personnel:
Alex Ward, John Bisset, acoustic guitars
Personnel:
Ernest Diaz-Infante, acoustic guitar; Chris Forsyth, electric guitar
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