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Posts Tagged ‘folk’

Ethel's current members (from left): Ralph Dufallo, Jennifer Choi, Cornelius Dufallo, and Dorothy Lawson.
Photo credit: James Ewing

At Joe’s Pub, the night was all about breaking strings and breaking boundaries. Under the moniker Ethel, cellist Dorothy Lawson, violist Ralph Farris, and violinists Jennifer Choi and Cornelius Dufallo turned the “genteel string quartet” into a fierce aural army, unafraid to snap a few bow strings if so compelled. The latest to sprout from their edgy hands is Heavy, an album that grasps the ears and never quite lets go.

Without a word, all four musicians took the stage, immediately immersing the senses in a pungent velocity. Choi’s quick bow slides swooped into Farris and Dufallo’s intense streams, all three nearing their peak as Lawson urgently tapped at her cello. At a single note’s notice, Ethel stopped in its tracks, met first by stunned silence – and uproarious applause a few seconds later. Once the room wound down, Lawson explained the feisty piece, “Arrival”: “It’s an announcement of what we are.”

Pioneers of the stringed craft.
Photo credit: James Ewing

Ethel expanded upon that announcement on “No Nickel Blues” and “La Citadelle”. Founding band-member Mary Rowell graced the stage as a special guest on the former tune, scraping her bow across the violin to seep out long, stark notes. The surrounding band (also featuring Kenji Bunch as guest violist) flooded the desolate ambience in plucks, taps, and maraca-like notes. Dufallo especially rejuvenated the air with an upbeat, folksy solo that might have elicited some dancing, had it extended longer. Rowell launched into some down-home fiddling of her own, offering a smooth melodic contrast to Bunch and Farris’ percussive plucks.

“La Citadelle” was the evening’s most outspoken work, and one look at the album track list yields no surprise: the composer is dubstep pioneer Raz Masinai. His eclectic brilliance flourished as Choi sped out one bundle of notes after the other, Farris interlacing with needle-thin accents. The scene soon evolved into a synth-rock-jazz hybrid à la Daniel Bernard Roumain.

Ethel did soften its stronghold for a few introspective moments, poignantly in David Lang’s “Wed” and  Mark Stewart’s “To Whom It May Concern: Thank You”. Both pieces were curt and compelling, elegiac yet hopeful, and searing but soothing before skidding to a halt. And it was in these ephemeral and bittersweet interludes that Ethel shone most, delving in, delving out, and striking the deepest of heartstrings along the way.

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Dave Barnes and his guitar - a truly classic combination.
Photo credits: Rachel Parker

In a rare New York City appearance, singer-songwriter Dave Barnes stood on the stage of B.B. King’s Blues Club (Oct. 12) with only his guitar as company. His intro for the Christian rock band Jars of Clay was as brief as it was richly poignant, pared down to the acoustic basics that Barnes crafts irresistibly well. Without a word of introduction, his Southern-lilted, rugged crooning took flight in “Grace’s Amazing Hands”, adorned with pungently raw but harmonious plucks of guitar. Selected from Barnes’ early album Brother, Bring the Sun, the track resonated with hearty soul and a curiously appealing quaintness, setting the evening’s brewing, down-to-earth ambience.

Though his dramatic jump into “Grace’s Amazing Hands” echoed the quietly introspective approach of alt-rock vocalist Dan Layus, Barnes emerged from the tune with charming wit, peppering the remainder of his set with comedic jests and playful quips. He strung together his tunes of love and life with endearing anecdotes of on-stage mishaps, even beckoning listeners to sing the chorus lines to “Little Lies” and “God Gave Me You”. The latter tune, however, saw more than just the audience’s back-up vocals. Jars of Clay band members Charlie Lowell and Matthew Odmark appeared on stage with the accordion and the ukulele respectively, underscoring Barnes’ guitar with an added layer of musical depth. But when left to his own passionate momentum, Barnes rose to full musical impact. The Tennessee-native brought “On A Night Like This” to magnetic radiance, delivering the sparse, romantic piece with lingering reflectiveness. Barnes took his time hitting the high inflections, though always reaching them with soul-drenched perfection and whole-hearted immersion.

Barnes, keeping the music pure and real.
Photo credits: musiccityrambling.wordpress.com

Barnes’ musical artistry truly shone in his unplugged renditions of “Until You” and “You Give Me What I Need”, which on their respective albums (Me and You and the World and What We Want, What We Get) are propelled by powerful, rock-inspired rhythms. Without drums, a piano, or any instrumental accompaniment save for his guitar, Barnes propelled each tune forward with power of a different sort. Mingling his grainy vocals with lightly assertive guitar rhythms, he cleared through the fog of polished sound editing and loaded instrumental loops, bringing his music into its native, ruggedly pure context.

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