Vanguard Visionaries - John Fahey

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (13 ratings)
Vanguard Visionaries - John Fahey album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 51:13

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bicker bicker

e-strings

you are both wrong. it's all good.....The Album Requia, which a fair bit of this material, including the Molly suite, is what should be on emusic.....this omit's "Fight on, Christians, Fight On!" which is probably the most susinct and perfect Fahey recording ever.....luckily I have that on CD!

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Disagree

Wisely

The Molly Suite is actually THE reason to download this... not the albums scourge. The other songs by and large, "Lion" excepting, are rambling and ponderous.

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classic Fahey

Tonefreak

I was introduced to John Fahey o so many years ago with these tunes, which appeared on "Essential John Fahey", a repackaged lp combining the albums "Requia" and "The Yellow Princess". The first six tracks are sublime and ESSENTIAL Fahey, but the Requiem for Molly Suite is some of John's experiments with noise and found sounds, which may not appeal to you. The Molly suite is the only reaon I subtract one star. Get it!

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They Say All Music Guide

Though John Fahey cut only three records for Vanguard between 1966 and 1969 (he cut a slew for his own Takoma label as well) , some of his most adventurous — and some would say maddening — work is here. Vanguard Visionaries compiles ten cuts from the latter two of these LPs, 1967′s Requia & Other Compositions for Guitar Solo, and 1969′s Yellow Princess. From the former, some listeners will be either gratified or horrified to know that all four parts of “Requiem for Molly” — a 20-minute composition for acoustic guitar and electronic tape montage with the manipulation of found sounds — is here, as is the beautiful and moving “Requiem for John Hurt.” The other five cuts from Yellow Princess, represent Fahey’s “American Primitive” trademark guitar style, full of its mode and stylistic changes all though repetition and rhythmic shifts. These cuts, serve, as well as any, the mannerisms of Fahey’s playing on his earlier Takoma recordings. That said, he is forever unpredictable, no matter how often one hears these songs. His playing is simply the element of imagination and surprise itself. While it’s true that “Requiem for Milly,” may be off-putting for those looking for a real introduction to Fahey, this is his earliest experimentation with the electronic sounds he explored a great deal more in his later career, and stands as a singular moment in his catalog. – Thom Jurek

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