***1/2 John Fahey & Cul de Sac
THE EPIPHANY OF GLENN JONES
(Thirsty Ear)
These sessions became more trial than epiphany for Jones, Cul de
Sac's guitarist, when his longtime hero Fahey -- fresh from a 10-year bout with
Epstein-Barr syndrome -- proved unwilling to play the material the
Cambridge-based band had prepared. Plans thus shattered, the anarchic
improvised music here evolved from thin air. And it's wonderful -- slowly
unraveling, taking covert thematic twists and scaling plateaus and valleys of
dynamics while straddling rock, jazz, and various Latin- and African-based
strains. Cul de Sac provide a warm mesh that cradles Fahey's explorations on
electric and acoustic guitar. Pieces like the rambling "Tuff" and "Gamelan
Collage" rumble in a ruminative mix of Neil Young, Eleventh Dream Day, and
Harry Partch. Fahey's playing is full of grace and dignity; his patiently
chiseled notes are loaded with importance. And Cul de Sac interweave
electronics, tape samples, and an out sense of reverence with Fahey in a way
that preserves the music's power and imagination from oversaturation.
-- Ted Drozdowski
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