Thursday, May 1, 2008

Music Review: Jeff Bell

Bucyrus acoustic guitarist Jeff Bell is an accomplished musician, known from the years he performed as half of the Bell Brothers acoustic duo.

Bell has been making solo appearances recently throughout the area, including in at Sips Coffee House in Mount Vernon, performing songs from his collected body of work, which is influenced by such musicians and bands as Leo Kottke, Son Volt, Steve Vai and Bela Fleck. Bell ties these influences to a blues framework, then leaves room for touches of exotic influence, such as African drumming and Middle Eastern melody.

Newly added to Bell's body of work are two albums released in December on his own Faultline Records label. "Liar's Smile" is a mixture of instrumentals and narratives, while "Pavonia" is purely instrumental.

"Liar's Smile" opens with "Hobet 21," a bleak song from the point of view of a coal miner at the massive, destructive Hobet 21 strip mine in West Virginia. Bell's bluesy guitar-work comes to the fore in the next track, a catchy instrumental titled "Hornet's Waltz." While it isn't really a waltz, it definitely buzzes and broods like an angry hornet. The opening and closing sections of the song are slower and intensely bluesy, reminiscent of the East Texas blues style immortalized in the early 20th century recordings of such players as Blind Willie Johnson and Blind Lemon Jefferson.

"Send Up the Moonshine" brings in a lighter, more buoyant tone for contrast, setting up the plaintive "Sell Me a Story," with its evocatively sung lyrics, "It's a medicine for the dead, I've got the world at my feet and flowers in my head." In the five-spot, "Come People" is a delightful surprise, featuring vigorous rhythms on African hand-drums, underlying French lyrics chanted by Bell and Kate Westfall.

The album's title comes from its sixth song, "Liar's Smile," a song about overcoming past disasters: "I have been down to the bottom, and I have climbed the highest mountain, and I have given back all my commandments, but I won't be down again." Like so much of Bell's work, the song is bluesy and melodically catchy. While most of his songs feature intricate finger-picking, this song is played bottleneck style. The dark and compelling "Slow Song" comes next, the rise and fall of its Middle Eastern melody alternates with a faster section, which itself frames a very slow central part of strongly ambivalent emotions. Another instrumental follows, "Sycamore Road," lightening the mood and interweaving intricate finger-picking like the busy patterns of growth in a garden.

The final third of the album starts with "Walter Rollins," an excellent narrative about a Prohibition-era moonshiner, driven by poverty to a life in the shadows, outside the law. A mellow instrumental, whimsically titled "Chicken Feet" follows, before the last narrative song, "King," struts in with controlled nonchalance. The album closes with the return of the African drums in "Drum I." The track starts simply, then grows in complexity and intensity, propelled forward by vigorous beats. The hurtling drums are joined by an Australian didgeridoo, bringing the track to an exotic peak before it fades out.

The more introspective instrumental album "Pavonia" opens with the lullaby, "Whale Song," which seems to cradle the listener with warmth. A brief flurry of gentle finger-picking follows with "20 Watt," quickly succeeded by the spell-binding "Sleeping," which, like "Slow Song" on the other album, melds Middle Eastern arabesques to bluesy brooding, to very impressive effect. Bell's ability to make his instrument sing makes up for the lack of words. As the song unfolds, Bell also drums rhythmically on his guitar in places, adding a new dimension to an already striking song. The song grows with trance-like intensity as it unfolds over a bass-string drone, sustaining interest for its 10-plus minutes of length.

"Charge of Amber" comes next, mellow and laid-back. A brief continuation of "20 Watt" comes next to perk things up for a moment, before continuing in a meditative groove with the intimate and attractive "Song for Kate." "Engineering Clouds" continues the lullaby-like mood of the album in a more pensive style, leading to "Finding Artifacts," which opens with bell-like harmonics, then continues on its quiet way. The final track of the album, "Pavonia," takes its name from an obscure crossroads village in Richland County, and is more quirky and upbeat than anything else on the album.

The album "Pavonia" features smooth and excellent recorded sound, while "Liar's Smile" has some sonic problems in places. Some tracks or parts of tracks on "Liar's Smile" sound as if they were recorded at a lower resolution, giving some tracks the sort of "digital decay" in upper registers that is typical of lower-resolution MP3 formats. This won't bother listeners accustomed to listening to low-res MP3s, but listeners with high-end equipment and expectations may find it annoying. Also, a few of the tracks suffer from rough edits, though Bell's musicianship carries the day, making a few glitches worth tolerating in order to hear his superb music. Bell's talent and intensity are not to be missed, either in recorded form or live in person.

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