Just when you think you’re on top of all the stuff you need to review, the mailman arrives and drops a pile of CDs into the mailbox. I pile them up in front of my computer so I remember the order in which they arrived. I simply don’t have time to listen to all of them. I’ll pop one in to the CD player every once in awhile and try to work through it, but if it’s a good one I get distracted from what I’m supposed to be doing, and if it’s a bad one I may never give it another chance. And when I say a bad one, I don’t necessarily mean that the artist and his/her music has no redeeming qualities, I simply mean it didn’t grab me on first listen. The trouble with having so much to listen to is that you may never get back to something just because so much more has arrived in the meantime.
The CD is solo, just Bill and the
Gibson and a foot-stomp box. Well, for a stinging change of pace from
the finger-picked bluesy folk songs that comprise the rest of the
album, he does pick up an electric guitar for “We Animal” which
he plays bottleneck style. Bourne is a political person. His Facebook
page is filled with links to new items that give one pause, or make
you shake your head. His songs range from the spooky opener, “Scent
of the Bloom,” which gets into the head of a sociopath, to Bill’s
renditions of traditional folk songs like “Hand on the Plow”
(which appeared on Bob Dylan’s first album). Bourne’s guitar
playing is assured, and his voice is strong (reminds this listener of
John Hiatt). After the African experiments of Bluesland this
is a fascinating reversion to a stripped-down sound. Whether solo or
with a band Bill Bourne is unafraid to take us to new places.
Annabelle Chvostek spent two years as
one of the Wailin’ Jennys assisting with their Juno nominated album
Firecracker. After going solo (again) in 2007 she released
Resilience which many saw as her solo debut (even thought she
had put out three of her own records previous to joining the Jennys)!
Now she has put together a band called the Annabelle Chvostek
Ensemble and released a new and powerfully political CD entitled
Rise. Produced by ex-Rheostatic Don Kerr and mixed by Roma
Baran and Vic Stoll the album sounds great. Its full sound features
guest vocals by Bruce Cockburn and Oh Susanna, guitars by David Celia
and percussion by Debashis Sinha, but this is completely Annabelle’s
album. It starts with her mandolin riff leading into “End of the
Road,” a song about the students’ Occupy movement in Montreal,
and features a percussive backing of casseroles dishes played by Don
Kerr and Annabelle. This echoes the pots and pans the students banged
on earlier this year as they protested Bill 78 in Quebec. The second
song is called “G20 Song” which refers to the G20 protests in
Toronto in 2010. Having just spent last weekend in Muskoka where the
Harper government built a lake (in a county which is filled with
lakes) one understands the attitude of protest that led to the
unfortunate violence and oppression of that weekend in June.
Did I mention that the album was
political? How appropriate in Woody Guthrie’s 100th anniversary that
songwriters continue to take on the government in lyric. The third
song is “Baby Sleep ‘till Sturovo” and the lyrics seem to
capture a long history in only a few verses.
I’m in the train a-rolling by
Water reaches toward the track
Hilltop castle safe from attack
What used to be, what used to be
The saviour or a sword through the
belly
Red as the spill at the factory
Brought by the empire’s own army”
It goes on to conclude:
“Count your seed and store them well
Save them from the after-hell
A fruitful garden will again swell
SAVE YOUR SEEDS
Baby sleep ‘till Sturovo
Then we gotta pack up and go
Baby sleep ‘till Sturovo
Then we gotta pack up and go”
I think I would want to “pack up and
go” too. Not sure if Chvostek is talking about a specific incident,
or is just describing fleeting images as her train passed the city.
Either way the song is one that you won’t forget.
In fact, that’s true of the whole
album, in fact. As mentioned above, guests include vocals from Bruce
Cockburn and Roma Baran, who adds Weissenborn guitar to “Ona (In
Toronto I Get More Hugs, In Montreal I Get More Kisses)”. Chvostek
wrote ten songs for the album, and plays a variety of instruments
from mandolin and guitar to accordion, kanjira and tuba! The CD
concludes with two covers. Lou Reed’s “Some Kinda Love” from
the Velvet Underground’s third album (1968) is taken at a slow
pace, and features Annabelle’s own acoustic guitar over subtle
percussion. She sings so much better than Lou! The last song is
“Equal Rights” by Peter Tosh. It’s the message not the reggae
that matters here.
“Everyone is crying out for peace yes
None is crying out for justice
I don't want no peace
I need equal rights and justice”
Annabelle Chvostek has given us an
album that speaks to the state of the world in 2012, and wrapped the
message in a beautiful acoustic wash. She’s as mad as hell, but she
tells it to you with such style that you’ll be listening to her for
a long time.
The pile of CDs got a bit shorter, but
then the mailman arrived and dropped off some new blues music from
Chicago, and Irish guitar player, an album of Andean Blues and a
bunch more. When will it end? For this week, these two discs from
north of 49 will do just fine.
– David Kidney has reviewed for Green Man Review and Sleeping Hedgehog. He published the Rylander Quarterly (a Ry Cooder-based newsletter) for 8 years before turning it into a blog, at http://rylander-rylander.blogspot.com. He works at McMaster University as Director of Learning Space Development and lives in Dundas with his wife.
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