Buck Dharma
(5RC)
XIAO
The Flood
(both
Troubleman Unlimited)
Wooden Wand
Harem
of the Sundrum & The Witness Figg
(Soft
Abuse)
Comus
Song To Comus: The
Complete Collection
(Sanctuary)
Village Voice, 2004
Village Voice, 2004
by
Simon Reynolds
It’s
the “what’s it all about” factor. I’m digging this free folk stuff as pure
sound, but the movement’s unwritten manifesto is harder to get a grip on, and,
in my (possibly atypical) case, that’s always an impediment to buying into a
scene wholeheartedly. Perhaps that’s why I literally don’t buy it (the f-folk scraps I have were all acquired by, erm, other
means, shall we say). Just as well, perhaps: mapping this genre properly would
entail a financial bloodbath, given its norm of incontinent productivity. Check
the intimidating discographic delta-- cassettes,
lathe-cut 7 inch singles, 3-inch CDs--issuing [http://woodenwand.sinkhole.net/
] from a single group, Wooden Wand & The Vanishing Voice,
plus extended family of side projects, in just two years
of existence. This season alone has seen Wooden Wand’s solo debut and two
re-releases of small-run vinyl-only albums (XIA) and Buck Dharma), while an
all-new Vanishing Voice full length , The
Flood, is due November.
“Pure
sound” assessment first: “free folk” verges on a misnomer. As genre expert Jon
Dale points out, it’s a highly recombinant style whose warp’n’weft includes
threads of not just traditional music but West Coast acid rock, prog, free
jazz, Dead C-style noise, musique
concrete, and “outsider” minstrels such as Jandek. XIA0’s best tracks, “Caribou Christ in the Great Void” and “Return of the Nose”
resemble nothing so much as the raga-rock trance and narcotic wah-wah torpor
of “We Will Fall” by The Stooges, while Dharma’s
“Satya Sai Baba Scuppety plays ‘Reverse Jam Band’” is
a strange shimmer-slither of a keyboard etude, like Morton Subotnik turning
into the Blob. If Vanishing Voice have
anything like a standard-mode, it’s the long pieces like “Weird
Wisteria Tangles Carrion Christ But Intends No Harm” (and yes, the track titles
are major stumbling block to full-on fandom) or the 14-minute “Satya Sai Sweetback
Plays ‘Oxblood Boots’,” which closes The
Flood. Cantering calvacades of just-barely-integrated instrumentation
(rustling bells, tunelessly parping woodwinds, Cale-like drones, listless
percussion, thrumming steel-cable bass-drones, and so forth), these tracks
either dissipate into oxbow lakes of abstraction or gradually accumulate
disparate jetsam into tripnotic juggernauts. Still, we’re not exactly talking
“Scarborough Fair” here, and the only truly folksy element is a slight bias
toward sounds of acoustic provenance.
But
what’s it all about, Alfie? I fear
that Wand (real name, James Toth) hits the nail on the head with his
self-description as “spiritual dilettante.” The f-folk genre gestures at the
shamanic and visionary, but in this easy-going way that feels not so much
syncretic as plain eclectic. But isn’t the spiritual path actually hard work, a
discipline? When Vanishing Voice overtly invoke the transcendental, it can come
over schlocky, the group’s intermittent female vocalist Satya
Sai Baba Scuppety ululating lines like “I sought the truth so long” in a voice so
piercingly pure-toned and mystical-me the effect verges on parodic. On Dharma’s “Wicked World,” Toth mutters
like a bum/seer whose desolation-row jeremiad (“the mystical power
of the beautiful flower has turned sour”) is ignored by passers-by. On his solo
album, there’s similar penchant for parable and prophecy (Toth’s a
Scripture-fan) but the accompaniment is pared-back minstrelry elevated by an
exquisite attentiveness to the creak-glisten textures of semi-acoustic guitar.
“Spiritual Inmate” distils a hallmark attribute of f-folk that highlights its
debts to the Beat movement: condescension toward the benighted square, who’s
“passing so much beauty/passing on
so much beauty” because he’s, like, imprisoned by his own obsession “with
protection.”
It’s shtick, really, this idea of seeing clear because
you’re outside society, but then so are other “performative enactments of the
authentic” like gangsta or grime, so nothing wrong with that. This element of
theater can also be seen in a group regarded by many f-folks as an illustrious
ancestor, Comus, whose 1971 album First
Utterance has just been reissued in a double-CD that scoops up everything
else the UK
outfit recorded in its brief existence. That Bowie was a Comus supporter seems especially
revealing. This isn’t British traditional music in the Martin Carthy sense
(unadorned and faithful) but closer to Jethro Tull: ripe, rustic-flavored rock
with frenetic hand-percussion a la Tyrannosaurus Rex and orchestrated elements
redolent of Italo-horror soundtrack proggers Goblin. Roger Wooton’s
vibrato-rattling cackle and frolicking woodwinds conjure an indeterminately
pre-industrial Albion, all gibbets and
gargoyles, merlins and may poles and maidenheads. A tale of deflowering
and murder, “Drip Drip” is all the more creepy for the grotesque
tenderness with which Wooton delivers lines like “your lovely body soon caked
with mud/as I carry you to your grave/my arms, your hearse” (the last line
borrowed by black metal outfit Opeth for an album title). On “Song To Comus”
itself, his hideously capering voice impersonates a Pan-like satyr
whose piping music lures “an enchanted damsel” to
his forest lair of depravity. First Utterance courts absurdity, but like a great
horror movie (and The Wickerman would
be the apposite reference) it draws you in completely. Wooton brings a
conviction to his roles as warlock/sprite/all-purpose bucolic bogeyman that
takes it beyond play-acting. Whereas with Wooden Wand there’s still a faint
aura of make-believe, even put-on. Such that, as absorbing as the sonix
can be, I still don’t… quite… buy it.
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