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Old 01-10-2009, 04:50 PM   #1
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Default Otis Taylor - Recapturing the Banjo [2008]





Otis Taylor - Recapturing the Banjo
February 5, 2008 Telarc/mp3 vbr 192k/68,6 MB/53 min


1. Ran So Hard the Sun Went Down, written by Otis Taylor
2. Prophet's Mission, written by Alvin Youngblood Hart
3. Absinthe, written by Otis Taylor
4. Live Your Life, written by Otis Taylor
5. Walk Right In, written by Gus Cannon
6. Bow-Legged Charlie, written by Otis Taylor
7. Hey Joe, written by Billy Roberts
8. Little Liza Jane, traditional
9. Five Hundred Roses, written by Otis Taylor
10. Les Ognons, traditional
11. Deep Blue Sea, traditional
12. Simple Mind, written by Otis Taylor
13. Ten Million Slaves, written by Otis Taylor
14. The Way it Goes, written by Keb' Mo' and Lisa Linson



All Music Guide, February 2008
"Recapturing the Banjo remains very much an Otis Taylor release, full of the kind of driving, modal trance tunes that he has always done so strikingly well...Taylor has yet to make a disappointing album, and Recapturing the Banjo is yet another striking example of how he combines the past and the present in a powerful contemporary cultural statement that informs and instructs even as it keeps the feet moving. So don't expect "Orange Blossom Special." This is the banjo in its original habitat given a 21st century twist while still paying tribute to its African past, and that's quite an impressive hat trick indeed."

Product Description
The concept of America as a great melting pot is a double-edged sword. In the great sweep of cultural evolution over the past two and a half centuries, certain lines of connection and distinction have been obscured. American popular music, a hybrid and distillation of sources too numerous and diverse to mention, is perhaps one of the best examples of the difficulty in determining exactly what came from where.
The banjo, for example, is an instrument whose historical roots dig much deeper than the American folk and bluegrass traditions with which it is commonly associated. The banjo ultimately originated in Africa, and made its way to America with the African slaves who were brought to the fledgling colonies as early as the 1700s.

Bluesman and multi-instrumentalist Otis Taylor, who shatters the illusions of the status quo time and again via his uniquely haunting songcraft and musicianship, sheds new light on this centuries-old instrument with his new Telarc recording, Recapturing the Banjo. The album includes riveting performances by Taylor along with some of the most accomplished banjo players on the current roots mus"The banjo has become so closely associated with folk singers and bluegrass players," says Taylor. "Over the years, the instrument just lost touch with its roots, and I'm just trying to re-establish that connection." ic scene: Guy Davis, Corey Harris, Alvin Youngblood Hart, Keb' Mo' and Don Vappie - a group that collectively boasts an impressive array of GRAMMY Awards, Handy Awards, Blues Music Awards, a MacArthur Fellowship and numerous other accolades.

The musicians on this recording utilize a variety of banjo styles, notes music historian Dick Weissman, author of the album's liner notes. Guy Davis' version of "Little Liza Jane," which showcases the clawhammer picking style, is probably the closest thing contemporary audiences will hear to a traditional banjo performance. Alvin Youngblood Hart performs "Deep Blue Sea" in a modified traditional style, using the sort of syncopation that's reminiscent of Dink Roberts. Keb' Mo' plays with finger picks in a style reminiscent of the period where mountain banjo turned into bluegrass, while Don Vappie plays tenor banjo in a more modern version of what St. Cyr and Scott were playing in New Orleans during the 1920s. "Walk Right In," originally penned by banjoist and jug band musician Gus Cannon, recaptures the vintage jug band feel that Cannon helped define.

Other tunes on the recording utilize contemporary blues banjo interpretations that pay homage to the work of such seminal mid-20th century blues musicians as John Lee Hooker and Muddy Waters. Even Jimi Hendrix fans will find a familiar touchstone in the banjo rendition of well known "Hey Joe."


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