Intermezzo
General 12"
| Jul 2012
Reviews
Lestrygonian
Reviewed 2012-07-11
Reviewed 2012-07-11
The unknighted Sir Richard Bishop is a folk guitar virtuoso whose solo work after Sun City Girls has spanned a broad range of worldwide influences. His keen ear for harmony provides even his most repetitive motifs with colorful complexity. On this record, the almost entirely unaccompanied Bishop delves into a blend of Indian raga, Saharan music, American folk, and even jazz, with a humble yet vibrant approach, prompting comparisons as diverse as Chet Atkins, Jack Rose, David Gilmour, Steve Gunn, and Omar Khorshid. Most tracks are beautiful; those that aren’t are fascinating nonetheless.
33rpm
A1. Bright and energetic Arabic-flavored tune, deep and hypnotic ostinatos
A2. A drifting electric haze of vaguely raga-esque half melodies wandering around, aimless but entrancing
A3. A joyful and bombastic Saharan jam, definitely sounds like an oud + some Berber percussion
A4. Epic acoustic raga contemplation, pure meditation bliss… if Steve Gunn wrote a lullaby, it might sound like this.
B1. Cheesy, old timey bluesy jazz romp, total Chet Atkins / Les Paul worship with a rich, surf-like electric tone
B2. Haunting electric meditations, sparse and melancholy. David Gilmour suffering from altitude sickness in a Tibetan monastery.
B3. Gentle, dreamy ballad. Delicate, bittersweet arpeggios stumbling in a somnambulant haze.
B4. Frantic, cluttered dissonance—totally incoherent sliding up and down the frets.
B5. Shimmering raga textures—some exotic scales over sparse, droning bliss
33rpm
A1. Bright and energetic Arabic-flavored tune, deep and hypnotic ostinatos
A2. A drifting electric haze of vaguely raga-esque half melodies wandering around, aimless but entrancing
A3. A joyful and bombastic Saharan jam, definitely sounds like an oud + some Berber percussion
A4. Epic acoustic raga contemplation, pure meditation bliss… if Steve Gunn wrote a lullaby, it might sound like this.
B1. Cheesy, old timey bluesy jazz romp, total Chet Atkins / Les Paul worship with a rich, surf-like electric tone
B2. Haunting electric meditations, sparse and melancholy. David Gilmour suffering from altitude sickness in a Tibetan monastery.
B3. Gentle, dreamy ballad. Delicate, bittersweet arpeggios stumbling in a somnambulant haze.
B4. Frantic, cluttered dissonance—totally incoherent sliding up and down the frets.
B5. Shimmering raga textures—some exotic scales over sparse, droning bliss
Recent airplay
Inner Redoubt, Dance Of The Cedars
Catharsis — Sep 27, 2012
Khajuraho
The Sunset Life — Sep 26, 2012
Inner Redoubt
Songs: Cantan — Sep 25, 2012
Inner Redoubt
minimum entropy ii — Sep 20, 2012
Dust & Spurs
maximum entropy — Sep 19, 2012
Dance Of The Cedars
Catharsis — Aug 30, 2012
Charting
2012-07-15 — 2012-09-16
| Week Ending | Airplays |
|---|---|
| Sep 2 | 1 |
| Aug 26 | 1 |
| Aug 19 | 1 |
| Aug 12 | 3 |
| Jul 29 | 3 |
| Jul 22 | 2 |
Track listing
| 1. | Dust & Spurs | ||
| 2. | Reversionary Tactics | ||
| 3. | Dance Of The Cedars | ||
| 4. | Inner Redoubt | ||
| 5. | Hump Tulip | ||
| 6. | Dhumavati | ||
| 7. | Molasses | ||
| 8. | Cranial Tap | ||
| 9. | Khajuraho |