Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Road Cone. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Road Cone. Afficher tous les articles

mercredi 11 mars 2009

Loren Mazzacane Connors - The Little Match Girl (Road Cone, 2001)






1 Falling Snow
2 She Was Hungry And Very Very Cold
3 The Veil
4 Grandmother
5 Falling Star (Comets Light The Way)
6 The Dawn
7 The Art Of The Blues, Part 1
8 The Art Of The Blues, Part 2
9 The Art Of The Blues, Part 3
10 The Art Of The Blues, Part 4
11 The Art Of The Blues, Part 5
12 The Art Of The Blues, Part 6
13 The Art Of The Blues, Part 7
14 The Art Of The Blues, Part 8

Ce disque est constitué de deux séries de morceaux qui forment une suite. Les six premiers morceaux sont une adaptation du conte de Andersen à la guitare électrique où les notes rendent bien mieux la tristesse et la solitude que les mots.... Les huit morceaux suivant "The Art of the Blues" rendent parfaitement la sensation de vide que procure le blues... Musique sombre....

It was late on a New Year’s Eve. The snow was falling. A little girl wandered through the streets. She had no hat and no shoes”. So starts the Hans Christian Andersen story of “The Little Match Girl”, as adapted by Loren MazzaCane Connors for the liner notes of his album of the same name. As Connors presents it, it’s a mysterious tale of sadness, fantasy and beauty, death, loneliness and the afterworld. Connors adapted the story for the liner notes, and also presents his musical adaptation of it on the first six tracks of the CD.

The six-track suite “The Little Match Girl” finds Connors using his guitar to express feelings that words can only hint at. He has an amazing expressiveness that he draws on in quiet, moody abstract instrumentals, mostly for solo electric guitar. Titles like “She Was Hungry and Very Very Cold” and “Falling Star (Comets Light the Way)” communicate the basic narrative of the fable, while Connors’ guitar shoots to the gut feelings beneath the plot, churning out sadness and hunger and gently channeling light and hope. On the opening track, “Falling Snow”, he uses a solitary echoing pattern which gets right to the heart of the story as described above: a girl wandering alone as the snow falls. From there, he uses his guitar in a meditative way that swirls up emotions with a minimum of notes. He manages to tell the story in less than 15 minutes, ending with a perfectly affectionate tone on “The Dawn”.

In “The Little Match Girl”, Connors achieves a certain kind of bluesy bliss through a sound which is at times rather simple and sparse. The rest of the CD is filled by another song suite, this one titled “The Art of the Blues”. Here, over eight untitled tracks, he delves into darker, gloomier territory, capturing the heart of the blues by delivering feelings of emptiness and horror. The first and last of these tracks were recorded live at NYC performances (one at Downtown Music Gallery, one at the Cooler); each pairs him with an accompanist, guitarist Andrew Burnes on one and Persian daf player Neel Murgai on the other. The opening track is especially heart-stopping, as Connors and Burnes combine noisy electric whirring with mad soloing.

Loren MazzaCane Connors isn’t a cult hero for no reason. His music is awe-inspiring for those listeners who relate to it and difficult to those who don’t. His use of empty space in his pieces and his quiet approach make this album, like his music in general, something that might not appeal to your average person on the street. But pay close attention and he will sweep you away like few guitarists can. A one-person gentle tornado, Connors can get deep into human feelings with a single guitar, and The Little Match Girl is more fine proof of that.

Popmatters

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Loren Mazzacane Connors - Evangeline (Road Cone, 1998)




1 Evangeline
2 Dance Acadia
3 Ships
4 The Burning Of Grand Pre
5 Two Paths
6 The Bridegroom Of Snow
7 Voice Of The Ocean, 'Despair Not!'
8 Once You Touched Me
9 Jesuits
10 Sister Of Mercy
11 His Room (In The Almshouse)
12 Oh, My Beloved
13 Gabriel Dies
14 Evangeline

Sur ce disque Loren Mazzacane Connors retrace l'histoire d'une ancêtre de Suzanne Langille, Evangeline Bellefontaine à la recherche de son fiancé après que les anglais contraignirent les acadiens à l'exil en Nouvelle Ecosse, cette histoire étant également le thème d'un poème de Longfellow: atmosphère éthérée et beauté tragique....

This is an excellent starting point for those unfamiliar to Loren Mazzacane Connors, deftly combining an uncompromising take on the guitar with melodic grace. 'Evangeline' is a short (30 minutes) and austere suite, centered on the narrative of wife Suzanne Langille's distant ancestor, Evangeline Bellefontaine (also the subject of a famous Longfellow poem). Tragic and romantic, the story deals with the heroine's search for her beloved after the British exiled Nova Scotians in 1746, and Connors' abstractly conveys the story brilliantly. The disc may take a while to assimilate due to quiet, unassuming nature: most of the songs are short and sparse, and the lo-fi recording intensifies its ethereal atmosphere. This is a wonderful album by a remarkable artist.
Music Hills

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