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The Acoustic Guitar Method: Complete Edition
Begin understanding, playing, and enjoying everything from the folk, blues, and old-time music of yesterday to the rock, country, and jazz of today on the instrument that truly represents American music, the acoustic guitar. [Buy now]
For single copies, shop acousticguitar.com/books
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FEATURE: THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN
Whether revolutionary or refinements of the form, the Torres classical, Martin D-28 and OM, Gibson L-5 and J-200, Ramírez 1a, and Taylor 12-string changed the way we played—and in some cases, music history itself. [More]
NEW GEAR REVIEW: BREEDLOVE C25/CR HERRINGBONE
Distinctive, upmarket style and copious tone come together in a concert-size fingerstyle guitar that's more affordable than it looks. With video. [More]
NEW GEAR REVIEW: GODIN 5TH AVENUE ARCHTOP
Canadian innovator revives the affordable archtop and delivers a gem that sounds great in any style. With video. [More]
NEW GEAR REVIEW: FIVE UNUSUAL CAPOS
To increase the guitar's tonal potential, partial and harmonic capos do more than just press six strings at once. With video. [More]
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Gene Bertoncini, Concerti
On Concerti, fingerstyle jazz guitarist Gene Bertoncini teams up with a string quartet and bassist to play ensemble arrangements of seven jazz standards, a 20th-century classical piece, and a rare Bertoncini original ("For Chet"). Several of Bertoncini's long-time colleagues from the Eastman School of Music penned string arrangements specifically for this date (with one exception), and those arrangements are more than just background settings for his guitar. While there are sections in most tunes where the quartet backs Bertoncini's single-line solos (like on "Every Time We Say Goodbye"), the arrangements feature authentic ensemble playing in which all players contribute significantly. On the Beatles' "Eleanor Rigby," Bertoncini and the quartet pass the tune's melody back and forth, building the song to a powerful crescendo with simultaneous improvisation from all the musicians. The album's final track is a beautifully rendered arrangement of the Adagio from the Concierto de Aranjuez by Rodrigo combined with Chick Corea's "Spain." The elegance and complexity of this arrangement and the material on which it is based suits perfectly Bertoncini's unique melding of classical guitar technique and masterful jazz sensibility. Here, as on the rest of this CD, Bertoncini plays with the sensitivity, inventiveness, and inspired musical purpose for which he is deservedly celebrated. (Ambient Records, ambientrecords.com)
—RON FORBES ROBERTS
Terence Martin, Even Trade
Guitarist and songwriter Terence Martin delivers another set of well-crafted, confidently performed contemporary folk songs with the release of Even Trade. Martin's music and smoky voice are consistently compared to the likes of Bruce Cockburn and Greg Brown, and those comparisons are apt because he readily acknowledges those musicians as influences. But you can also hear bits of Richie Havens, Graham Parker, and Bob Dylan in that mix, and those varied references add up to a sound that is familiar yet still original. The instruments (guitars, bass, drums, harmonica, mandolin, and accordion) are tastefully and cleanly produced by Martin and Dennis Hrbek, and the lyrics are loaded with clear and effective imagery. California ends with these nice lines: "They seem to ask was it always / Waiting here for us / An empty glass to pour your life in / Or a handful of dust." The album doesn't forge new musical or philosophical ground, but I doubt that those are the goals of Martin or his audience. Even Trade deserves the attention of anyone interested in the state of modern folk songwriting and performance. (Good Dog, martinsongs.com)
—GARY LEE JOYNER
James Jackson Toth, Waiting in Vain
In his first solo effort, Tennessee-based singer-songwriter James Jackson Toth, formerly of Wooden Wand and the Vanishing Voice, is like a kid in a music shop. It's as if he's trying to stuff everything he loves into one album: drenched in influences from Bob Dylan and Neil Young to Steely Dan, Waiting in Vain is crowded with rock, soul, country, blues, and ballads. But what the effort loses in cohesiveness it gains in richness. Toth's core band—Jexie Lynn Toth (vocals), Jarvis Taveniere (guitar), Shayde Sartin (bass), Otto Hauser (drums) and Jason Quever (piano)—is joined by guitar heavies Nels Cline (Wilco) and John Dietrich (Deerhoof) on electric. Although Toth plays acoustic only on "Do What You Can," using a simple strum to great effect, Cline and Dietrich are beautifully broody on "The Dome," and Taveniere is thrilling and spare on "Look In on Me," with its Rolling Stones (think "Wild Horses") echoes. Toth's strengths are his mercurial, down-and-dirty voice (set off strikingly in close harmony vocals and ambiguous lyrics that take a walk on the dark side ("there's always some devil that has my ear"). Toth is well on his way to forging an exciting "alt" identity. (Rykodisc, rykodisc.com)
—CÉLINE KEATING
For more CD reviews, go to acousticguitar.com/playlist. |