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Jw new songbook
Jw new songbook











jw new songbook

People get angry about that sort of stuff.” Maybe he’s been advised by his lawyers. When I try to ask him about it, he suffices with “ I have to be careful with what I say. While acoustic is still in his plans (his most recent tour was a solo affair: just him and a gorgeous 1937 Epiphone Deluxe), it seems like he’s ditched the banjo for good he’s been known to go on the occasional but vicious anti-banjo tirade. After charming his audiences with acoustic parlour guitars, National resonators, tenor banjos and a band laden with brass on his first two albums, he dropped all of that to go electric with his latest, 2014’s Gon’ Boogaloo, which was all about his Fender Jazzmaster and doo-wop backing vocals. Stoneking’s work can never really be second-guessed you never know what you’re going to get. Back in the day, no-one was ‘just’ a blues musician, or a jazz or country musician, and so neither is he. That’s sort of what I’m trying to do, I guess.” When so many on the blues scene are trying to sound ‘authentic’ – whatever that is – it’s that unity of sound that allows Stoneking to actually achieve it, and with apparent ease, too.

jw new songbook

If you did, then the meaning would also flow. Then I guess having the lyrics and the meaning that flows in that too, you know? Getting it all to knit together in a way that, if you didn’t speak English maybe, you’d still be able to feel the melody, or the sounds of the words. The music, the flow of it, keeping it moving, with no dead spots. It’s what he values more than anything: “ It’s getting everything to unify really. He finds the strands that connect all of these different styles and gently braids them together. His gift is that he brings them all together without anything sounding out of place. A 1920s pre-war blues sound is key, but there’s almost equal helpings of New Orleans jazz, jug band music, hokum, country and calypso, and he’s lately brought in elements of jump jive, early rock’n’roll and gospel. It’s probably easiest to describe him as a ‘blues artist,’ but the term disguises what makes his music special. There are multitudes in Stoneking’s music. How else to describe such a fine purveyor of American roots music who also happens to be a towering, youthful-faced white Australian man? He surprises first-time listeners, throws curveballs at long-time fans, and everything he does contains at least some background level of bafflement for all involved.

jw new songbook

Stoneking is an artist for whom ‘unexpected’ is probably the default setting. Stoneking: Musings from the Deep South to Kanye Westįirst published in fRoots issue 423, Winter 2018Ĭ.W.













Jw new songbook