Music Reviews
Reviews: Crooked Still, Von Freeman, & more
November / December 2006
Staff Utne Reader
Crooked Still
Shaken by a low
sound
(Signature Sounds)
RELATED ARTICLES
Making music and exploring movement is for everyone. It’s not about performance; it’s about express...
Saharan Blues The only thing hotter than the sun in West Africa is the music September October 199...
Medical researchers discover that our ears can help us heal...
Punk and alt country labels get into children's music...
From traditional chants to native language rappers, Hawaiian music is booming...
The string-band revival has a growing number of young musicians
claiming as their influences American fiddle tunes and folk ditties
that far predate rock 'n' roll. And the influence cuts both ways.
The restless generations that bequeathed punk rock, hip-hop, and
mashups aren't content to polish up museum-piece Appalachiana.
Instead, they're bringing traditional music into the 21st
century-and bringing it to life.
The most stylish, talented, and soulful of these revivalists is
the Boston-based Crooked Still, an unusual four-piece that recently
signed with the Signature Sounds label to record their growling,
danceable, and utterly infectious second album, Shaken by a Low
Sound.
The group-Gregory Liszt on banjo, Rushad Eggleston on cello,
bassist Corey DiMario, and singer Aoife O'Donovan-are expats from
classical music, and it shows in their technique. But boy, can they
rock. The cello/bass combo provides a bottom-heavy foundation for
Liszt's blues-inspired riffs, and an aural friction results from
the contrast between Eggleston, who abuses his instrument into
absurdly energetic leads, and O'Donovan, who sings so sweetly and
intimately it makes you blush.
The tracks on Shaken by a Low Sound range from familiar
to obscure-highlights include a swinging cover of Bill Monroe's
'Can't You Hear Me Callin'' and a holy rendition of 'Lone Pilgrim.'
There's nothing stuffy, archival, or didactic about the band. They
appear, quite simply, to be having a ball with music that speaks to
them. And this quality is the most traditional thing about
them.
-Joseph Hart
NOVALIMA
Afro
(Quango)
When life steals your lemons, grab an empty fruit cart, smack it
like a drum, and turn the musical world on its head. That's what
African slaves toiling on Peru's coast in the 16th century did,
when their Spanish oppressors forbade them to play drums. Lacing
rhythms coerced from crates, donkey jawbones, and church collection
boxes with Spanish lyrics doused in African and Andean traditions,
they gave birth to 'Afro-Peruvian' beats. The genre continues to
captivate new audiences hundreds of years later, thanks, in part,
to the internationally based foursome Novalima, whose latest disc
infuses historic chants with electronic dance strokes. And if the
group's friend list on MySpace is any indication, the 13-track
album will be a sure hit among DJs and dancing queens
worldwide.
-Kristen Mueller
VON FREEMAN
Good Forever
(Premonition)