08.08.2010, 12:51 PM | #1 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 18,510
|
This may be of interest to some of you ...
A passionately researched, carefully written and compulsively readable map of the leys and songlines of an oral culture with its roots in pre-Roman times and its branches in the charts ... Young s grasp of context is enviable, his knowledge encyclopaedic ... Electric Eden constructs a new mythography out of old threads, making antiquity glow with an eerie hue. It can sit proudly on any bookshelf beside Alan Lomax s The Land Where Blues Began, Greil Marcus s Invisible Republic, Nick Tosches Where Dead Voices Gather or Jon Savage s England s Dreaming. If Mr Young never writes another word, he can count this epic book as the fruit of a beautiful labour.' --Peter Murphy, Sunday Business Post Beginning with a striking riff on how music and image open up wormholes into past times, Electric Eden joins a multiplicity of dots. Moving from the folk revival of the early 20th century onto what the author calls Albion-centric, historically resonant folk-rock of the 60s and 70s, music fans will enjoy comprehensive analyses of Fairport Convention, Comus, Nick Drake and many others. Where Young takes more esoteric flight is when he convincingly works such disparate concepts as the free festival scene, Bagpuss and The Wicker Man into his meditations on an agrarian past that survives in the imagination. Fascinating. --Ian Harrison, Q Magazine Stunning ... The thread of mapping modern instruments on to traditional folk tunes leads Young from Peter Warlock to Bert Jansch, Steeleye Span and the Aphex Twin, via the bucolic psychedelia of the Incredible String Band, the Beatles and Pink Floyd. This is no easy path to navigate but Young rarely wavers. --Bob Stanley, Sunday Times |
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
08.08.2010, 02:18 PM | #2 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 8,744
|
Very nice. Thanks.
ps: i'm only worried about the Aphex thing etc, though. Rob Young has a tendency to call folk music stuff that isn't (check liner notes on that ''electronic 01'' or whatever it's called that came out a few years ago for proof). |
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
08.08.2010, 03:42 PM | #3 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 18,510
|
He definitely has what might charitably be described as an 'expanded' idea of 'folk', to the extent that he's in danger of making almost any British popular music qualify as such. It is a good book, though.
|
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
08.09.2010, 09:02 AM | #4 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 18,510
|
This one is about to be released and may be of interest to the same people who are into 'Electric Eden':
In the late 60s and early 70s the inherent weirdness of folk met switched-on psychedelic rock and gave birth to new, strange forms of acoustic-based avant garde music. Artists on both sides of the Atlantic, including The Incredible String Band, Vashti Bunyan, Pearls Before Swine and Comus, combined sweet melancholy and modal melody with shape-shifting experimentation to create sounds of unsettling oddness that sometimes go under the name acid or psych folk. A few of these artists - notably the String Band, who actually made it to Woodstock - achieved mainstream success, while others remained resolutely entrenched underground. But by the mid-70s even the bigger artists found sales dwindling, and this peculiar hybrid musical genre fell profoundly out of favour. For 30 years it languished in obscurity, apparently beyond the reaches of cultural reassessment, until, in the mid-2000s a new generation of artists collectively tagged 'New Weird America' and spearheaded by Devendra Banhart, Espers and Joanna Newsom rediscovered acid and psych folk, revered it and from it, created something new. Thanks partly to this new movement, many original acid and psych folk artists have re-emerged, and original copies of rare albums command high prices. Meanwhile, both Britain and America are home to intensely innovative artists continuing the tradition of delving simultaneously into contemporary and traditional styles to create something unique. "Seasons They Change" tells the story of the birth, death and resurrection of acid and psych folk. It explores the careers of the original wave of artists and their contemporary equivalents, finding connections between both periods, and uncovering a previously hidden narrative of musical adventure. |
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
08.09.2010, 10:27 AM | #5 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 11,290
|
My friend and former bandmate Jason was interviewed for that book.
|
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |