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The Glass Bead Game

by

James Blackshaw

 
The Glass Bead Game
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Blackshaw goes from innovative guitarist to full-fledged composer in one leap

  • We Say...

    James Blackshaw once made Michael Gira cry. Not by sucker-punching the poor guy. It was something much simpler: Blackshaw reduced the former Swan frontman — a menacing presence even as he eclipses AARP eligibility — to tears through nothing but a finger-picked acoustic and minimal, melancholic chords. It's easy to understand why. As Gira wrote in a press release celebrating Blackshaw's signing to his Young God imprint, the widely-acclaimed 12-string maestro writes "absolutely beautiful and spellbinding music," a growing catalogue of richly-textured, deftly-delivered cuts that pull at your heartstrings like a child yanking a mother's coat.

    A natural extension of last year's Litany of Echoes LP and his Brethren of the Free Spirit side project with Jozef Van Wissem, The Glass Bead Game furthers Blackshaw's development as a skilled musician and a modern-day composer — the kind that's able to reel in concert halls and "the kids." Skip to any song on here, really, and you'll be at a loss to describe it as anything less than "mesmerizing." The trick is in how quickly Blackshaw's able to get our attention, whether it's through tenderized piano melodies and swoon-worthy strings ("Fix") or a towering triumph like the appropriately titled 18 minutes of "Arc."

    Guests include two Current 93 contributors (Joolie Wood, violin, clarinet, flute; John Contreras, cello) and a classically trained singer (Lavinia Blackwall, also of Directing Hand). Aside from adding some lovely, welcome touches to each track, they help nudge Blackshaw away from the Fahey comparisons and toward something downright orchestral. Keep an eye on this one; if Blackshaw wants to, and the right people hear him, he'll be writing sweeping, Oscar-nominated film scores in no time.

  • They Say...

    In five short years, 12-string guitarist and composer James Blackshaw has not only been prolific, he's created for himself a musical catalog that is dazzling in its range, complexity, and mystery. In addition to releasing his own recordings, he's collaborated with vanguard lute master Jozef Van Wissem in the Brethren of the Free Spirit, and has appeared on Current 93's 2009 album Aleph at Hallucinatory Mountain. In 2008, the venerable Tompkins Square indie re-released his previous catalog in the United States -- some of it was originally privately issued in very limited and/or vinyl-only editions. The label also released a then new effort, the beautiful Litany of Echoes, in the same year. The Glass Bead Game, issued on Michael Gira's Young God, named no doubt for the Hermann Hesse novel of the same name, is another step -- in fact, a leap -- forward. In addition to his own gorgeous 12-string playing, he has employed the talents of vocalist Lavinia Blackwell, and Current 93 members John Contreras on cello and Joolie Wood on violin. Blackshaw also plays harmonium and piano here. The pieces on this set are ambiguously titled with single words. The opener, "Cross," is among the most startlingly beautiful pieces he's written. A reverbed 12-string plays a series of repetitive phrases as the strings play harmonic drones in the backdrop, propelling the sense of motion on until the guitar begins its melodic journey through the foreground, repeating the original phrase often enough to keep the listener grounded even as the lyric nature of the overdubbed guitars drones and pines away at a complex and haunting yet springlike melody. "Bled" is a sparser piece. The guitar, kissed with reverb and in places overdubbed, is accompanied by a harmonium playing a single chord as it begins a slow but methodical journey toward the center of a maelstrom that embodies everything from rags and blues to even Eastern folk styles in its complex, contrapuntal melody. A lilting chamber piece for piano and strings that is full of space and delicate textures and seems to portray stillness as a place, "Fix" is followed by "Key," a guitar journey that seems to answer the former piece by tracing movement from a single place to a wide-open field of possibilities and directions. It is songlike rather than simply atmospheric. The final track -- and also the longest at nearly 20 minutes -- is "Arc," which begins as a solo piano piece. The piano is once again caressed in reverb, playing what seems like the halting beginning of a nearly forgotten melody. As the strings enter, they do so in single-note drones and begin very slowly to emerge in harmony, creating their own melodic frames while holding a series of chromatic changes very closely. The piece begins to evolve from its snail-like tempo into something beautifully pastoral and then pronounced; it's an open space of possibility for engagement between the three instruments and, eventually, Blackwell's beautiful contralto. The control by Contreras and Wood is exceptional here. Blackshaw is working out his melody very purposefully, repetitively, and in controlled bits and pieces. That said, by the time the piece reaches its center, the density of melody, sound, and texture is one of almost unbearable beauty and the release of tension is full to the breaking point of bliss itself. The Glass Bead Game is the most forward-thinking and sublimely executed of James Blackshaw's releases to date. It is a work that will hopefully introduce him to an entirely new audience who can appreciate the depth, sensitivity, and vision he brings to modern acoustic music.

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