What’s New for the 12th of April: Some new and recent SF; new Americana, Norwegian folk rock and jazz; and thoughts on War For The Oaks

Dan played a keyboard line like a question that demanded an answer, and Willy punctuated it with a harsh chord. After two of those, Carla joined Willy with a distant growl of thunder on one of her toms. Hedge’s bass began to throb with the hungry rhythm of tuned engines and tires on pavement seams. There was the digitally sampled crash of a cymbal that went on and on, glass breaking in slow motion—and the band welled up behind it like water, into the first verse.

Fantasies of violence breaking bottles on the wall, Hungry for the motion, for the action, For it all.

Road noise on the night street, See the taillights through the blinds, Out there where your dreams slide Toward the night side, For it all.

Emma Bull in her War for the Oaks novel

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It’s a good evening to re-read one of my favourite novels, so let’s talk about War for the Oaks, Emma Bull’s novel beloved by oh so many. As Michael says, ‘In 1987, Emma Bull revolutionized the way we look at the world around us with her debut novel, War for the Oaks , a no-holds-barred, fast-paced, magically written rock-and-roll fable about Eddi McCandry, a Minneapolis singer/musician who gets dragged into a supernatural war taking place out of mortal sight.’

I really like the novel because it takes a real setting which is the Minneapolis and imposed it upon it a fantasy reality in a way that city stays real. I’ve not been to Minneapolis but I’ve got friends there who say that you can recognise everything in the novel because she didn’t change anything.

The characters, fey and human alike, feel quite real. Eddie, our human guitarist here, is a remarkable character, fully realised in a way that fantasy characters generally aren’t. That’s not to say that the other character that are  here aren’t.

The story itself, the best one she ever is told though I am very fond of Finder, her story set in Terri Windling’s Bordertown universe. yes as a supernatural war going on but the interpersonal conflicts here are just as important and definitely told by her in a way that keeps them as important as the overarching theme is.

I’ve got on at some length about this at this point so let me stop here and say just go read the novel. copies of the original edition are still available out there unreasonable price, and Tor did a hardcover edition which has some rather great artwork as well though it officially never came out. no idea why but I’ve an autographed one here. I didn’t say it wasn’t published, just that it didn’t officially come out.

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 Gary finally got around to reading James S. A. Corey’s first book in The Expanse series. ‘I greatly enjoyed Leviathan Wakes, racing through its 500-some pages in near record time, and plan to proceed through all nine of the series novels published so far. (Taking time out, of course, for the upcoming installments in their new The Captives’ War series.)’

He also enjoyed the action and humor in a new book just out this month. ‘Award winning author Suzanne Palmer adds to her growing stack of novel-length SF with Ode to the Half-Broken, an engaging tale of friendship and treachery, adventure and revenge among post-apocalypse AI “mechs” and a few surviving humans in what used to be the United States.

And some Archival SF reviews, starting with Cat’s take on Larry Niven’s Rainbow Mars. ‘Ah, to visit John Carter and the inhabitants of Barsoom, Edger Rice Burroughs’ richly imagined Mars. The characters in Robert Heinlein’s The Number of The Beast did so, in their travels across the multiverse, and now the protaganist of Rainbow Mars does it. Well, sort of.’

Next, Kathleen’s look at Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle’s Inferno. ‘They just aren’t the writers one would expect to essay a modern version of Dante Alighieri’s The Divine Comedy. And that’s a shame, because Inferno is one of the better books either of them has written. It is clever but also wise, which is very rare in science fiction.’

And Gary’s review of the sequel, Escape From Hell. ‘I found myself wishing that the authors had delved a bit further into an obvious potential explanation for the existence of Hell — something that would incorporate quantum physics and the kind of ideas explored by Heinlein and others.’

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It’s me, Gary, with some new music. I’ve been listening to some good Americana music lately, including the new release from Cincinnati based duo The Montvales. ‘They wrote most of the songs on Path of Totality, their third album, on a 2024 cross country tour that coincided with a solar eclipse, and themes like darkness, light and shadow, poverty and living on the margins, and making community where you find it run through these 12 songs.’

‘I was surprised, perhaps even shocked, to learn that It Runs Deep is the Garrett Boys’ debut album,’ I say in my next review. ‘This collection of deeply rooted and deeply personal songs is one of the best old time Americana records I’ve heard in some time.’

‘My favorite head-banging Norwegian metal prog folk rock band is back!’ as I note in this next review. ‘Gangar’s second full-length Dreng continues in their established vein of playing knock-em-dead versions of Scandinavian folk songs and dance tunes on Hardanger fiddle plus rock instruments.’

I also cover some jazz, of course, starting with saxophonist Mark Turner’s latest for ECM. ‘A tight yet flexible boundary between improvisation and control is one of the central features of this amazing, sophisticated, and engaging album from Mark Turner’s quartet. Every one of Turner’s six compositions on Patternmaster swings back and forth from tightly composed chamber jazz to high-wire soloing and back with jaw-dropping ease. It’s a document of a composer, bandleader and ensemble in peak form.’

‘After recording their first album from within the claustrophic confines of pandemic enforced digital collaboration, the American jazz quarter Triple Blind’s second effort is all about reconnecting,’ I opine in this next one. ‘They recorded together live in the well known Dreamland Recording Studios in an old church near Woodstock, New York, and the resulting album Cold Walk comes with an invitingly spontaneous and organic feel.’

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Our musical offering is ‘For It All  which is from the Another Way To Travel album by Cats Laughing, used here courtesy of Will Shetterly. We’ve reviewed both of their albums here, of which the Another Way To Travel album is by far the best. Years later after the band was no longer, they came together again and released a CD and DVD, A Long Time Gone: Reunion at MiniCon. The concert’s fun, the rest of the material here is great.

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A Kinrowan Estate story: A Unified Theory of Libraries (A Letter to Anna) 

imageDear Anna,

I overheard an interesting conversation in the Library this evening. Mackenzie was lecturing the Several Annies on the history of private libraries such as ours down the centuries in the British Isles. (He claimed that ours is the oldest known, but that can’t be verified.)

A Several Annie wanted to know if there was a Unified Theory of Libraries, a metanarrative, she said, that connected all the libraries in existence, past and present. I don’t know if she was pulling his leg, but it certainly was an interesting question, one that made me stop and wait for his answer.

He said after a long silence, ‘I have a tale to tell of a Christmastide Ceilidh here in the Great Hall. One of the players, a pretty red-headed fiddler dressed all in green, remarked that the building and its inhabitants formed what she called a ‘tea cup culture’ in that one could learn all one needed to know about what was going on here over a cup of tea and a tatty scone or two while sitting in the kitchen on a winter’s afternoon gossiping with the staff.

‘Couldn’t disagree with her, as I’ve heard more interesting news over a few pints of Little Sir John Ale than bears ‘membering. Some of it is rather mundane — oh, a musician telling another musician that their band which was River Gods is now called Grendel’s Den as they’ve added a carnyx player to the band and the sound is really dark now.

‘Or the concertina player with Nobody’s Wedding Guests was telling the tale of what she called the ‘blood wedding’ where everything went wrong. I’m still not sure the priest could have done that, but Reynard, anti-papist that he is, says anything is possible with a priest. Especially a defrocked one. Maybe that was why it all went wrong!

Librarians exist in a tea cup culture of their own, one connected by letter and telegraph across the civilized world that allowed them to know each other and share gossip and information as need be. If there is a Unified Theory of Libraries, it’s based on the long established fact that any librarian worth his or her salt is curious about everything. Oh, they have their areas of keen interest; e.g., there’s a Norwegian librarian I know who has collected bloody near every printed work on trolls she could find. Justina, our consulting potter, used her as a resource for the Troll Under the Bridge project. I’d not heard of her but a librarian I knew in London knew another librarian who remembered her interest in trolls, as he talked with her while at a conference in Iceland a decade back.

So it’s not really that there’s a Unified Theory of Libraries, but more that they are all interconnected by shared interests and passions that are strengthened by the odd conference, the papers we write, the Internet discussion groups, the busman’s holiday spent visiting other libraries, and the exchanges we do among staff. And all of you who are Several Annies will in turn become part of that tea cup culture as you settle into your careers in libraries and elsewhere.’

I’ll need to think about what he said. Much might be true, but I’m not sure how truly unique that tea cup culture is, as I’d say any profession, such as the musicians he mentioned, form a similar one. Certainly there’s a network of Estate Gardeners who share stories and seeds and gossip as I’m part of it.

Tills nästa gång

Gus

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What’s New for the 29th of March: Beer and spirits, in song and text, some new Scandinavian fiddle music and jazz flute music, and more

There were two things Janey Little loved best in the world: music and books, and not necessarily in that order.

Her favorite musician was the late Billy Pigg, the Northumbrian piper from the northeast of England whose playing had inspired her to take up the small pipes herself as her principal instrument. — Charles de Lint‘s The Little Country

Raspberry divider

Greetings on this fine post-Equinox day. I’m Gary, the music editor, sitting in. They installed me and my ink-stained fingers here in the unusually quiet Pub while most everyone else on the Estate is out doing useful and needful things involving dirt and stones and various hand tools and such. So naturally, my thoughts turned to the subject of Drink and the many pieces of music and literature on that topic that we’ve covered down the years. I’m not saying I sampled any of the ample wares by which I’m surrounded, but you  may notice that things get a bit confused, with music stealing over into books and vice versa … but well, Art is an expression of the Divine and Eternal, and all categories are but human constructs, right?

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A couple of my favorite things are history and alcohol, so you just know I’d enjoy books that combine the two. Here are a couple that I’ve covered:

How would you like to be able to buy a glass of gin from a vending machine on a public street? You could in 18th century London, according to Jessica Warner in her book Craze: Gin and Debauchery in an Age of Reason. It wasn’t a good idea. ‘Warner makes a persuasive case in Craze that the so-called gin craze in London in the early 18th century was the first modern drug crisis. And that the lessons from that period are relevant today.’

I was fascinated by Susan Cheever’s Drinking in America, a social and political history. ‘Cheever traces the pendulum swings of America’s relationship with alcohol, from nearly universal besottedness by the 1830s, through a gradual drying out through the remainder of the 19th century leading up to Prohibition, then another upswing during the Roaring ’20s to a peak in the 1950s and ’60s, then moving in ever-quicker swings to the present day.’

I enjoyed researching and writing this review of Block 15 Brewing Company’s The London Chronicle. ‘This one-off seasonal ale from my favorite local brewery is billed as ‘the perfect dark beer for a warm spring afternoon,’ and I can attest that it is so.’

One of my favorite beer reviews we’ve published was Kelly Caspari’s write-up of Russian River Brewery’s Pliny the Elder. Considering I generally dislike the hoppy bitterness of IPA’s, I’m astonished I enjoyed Pliny the Elder. I shouldn’t be, as the only other hoppy beer I’ve actually liked was another Russian River Brewery IPA, Blind Pig, which displays the same grapefruity character.’

Our much missed Vonnie Carts-Powell attended and reported on a lecture she attended, The Bacchanalian Tradition in British Isles Songs, 1600-1900, by David Ingle of the Folk Song Society of Greater Boston. ‘It’s hard to go wrong when you’re talking about (and singing) drinking songs to a group of amiable and lubricated folkies in a warm room on a cold, rainy night.’

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‘This album is like sitting on the perimeter of an after hours fiddle jam at a Scandinavian folk festival,’ I say in my review of Hans Kjorstad’s Dålågjel. That’s a good thing, mind you. ‘Five fiddlers sawing away at hoary old Norwegian dance tunes, each of them occasionally swapping out the fiddle for some kind of percussion, a lute or a lyre, a mouth harp or portable pump organ. A couple of times they even break into song, an old Norse hymn about how good it is to love Jesus.’

‘Some of my favorite jazz music is made by jazz flutists. Or flautists,’ I note in my next review. ‘That’s one of the reasons I’m so happy to have this new one Moder (“mother”) from Norwegian flautist Henriette Eilertsen’s Trio. The other reason is, it’s just great music!’

From the Archives, Chris did a dual review of an album and a book by British singer songwriter David Hughes. First up is the album, Fifty Yards Of David Hughes. ‘This isn’t an album that sounds like dozens of other albums, nor does every track sound like the previous one, nor does it ooze personal angst and sentimentality. The songs are not short on emotion but the overwhelming mood is one of slightly satirical wry humour and wit. The songs are honest, amusing and understanding comments on life’s pleasures, failures and compromises, the sort we all have to make and can relate to.

And then there’s a related book (with its own accompanying CD!) by Hughes. ‘The Fairport Tour is a book made up of David Hughes diary entries during the spring of ’98 when he was touring in the UK as the support act with Fairport Convention. Originally the diary was published ‘in real time’ day by day on the internet and the book collects all the entries together and adds a live CD.’

Lars wrote about a couple of albums of Irish drinking songs, one by the Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem and the other featuring varioius artists: Irish Drinking Songs, and Whiskey in the Jar: Essential Irish Drinking Songs & Sing Alongs. ‘Irish Drinking Songs steers away from the obvious choices. There is no “Wild Rover” nor “Whiskey in the Jar” there, but you get 14 other great songs, some quite well known, like “Finnigan’s Wake,” “A Jug of Punch” and “The Parting Glass.” ‘

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Our choice this is Northumbrian piper and fiddler Kathryn Tickell performing   ‘The Pipes Lament’, a tune written by her,  which was recorded at the Shoreditch Church, London on the 15th of June 2010, should do nicely.

Tickell, by the way, connects indirectly to The Little Country novel as smallpiper Janey Little as noted from the excerpt from the novel lists Northumbrian Billy Pigg as one of her inspirations  to become a musician, something that Tickell also claims.

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A Kinrowan Estate story: A Ghostly Librarian

Sleeping hedgehog

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I haven’t seen him despite having The Sight but several persons down the years have said that he’s a man dressed in Victorian Era clothes and looking apparently quite solid. He looked to be in his late fifties or early sixties, tall and slim, wearing sliver rimmed glasses. He was putting away books on the shelves well after midnight according to one person, and a Several Annie some sixty years ago was unable to sleep, as the Estate Journal of that time notes, and decided to get something and was surprised to see a person in the Library at three in the morning.

That’s when it got weird. She said The Librarian — that’s what she called him — turned to her and asked her what book she was looking for. She didn’t think anything of it beyond the oddness of the hour — no Librarian ever works that late not even the very much unlamented and hopefully quite dead Grubb — and so she said she was looking for the latest Christie and he said it was on the desk waiting to be put away.

She said thanks, started to turn away, and remembered that she was also looking for any Sayers she hadn’t read, so she turned back and watched him fading away to nothing within a few moments. She decided that getting back to her bed was a very good idea and got out of there was fast as she could.

The last time he was seen was by another Several Annie only twenty years back when Iain and Catherine were off on a trip to the Nordic regions for a much deserved vacation. It appeared to her that he had simply decided to fill in as Librarian while Iain was elsewhere. Now that’s what I call a dedicated professional!

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What’s New for the 15th of March: some DeLint stories for early spring; lots of polskas, Serbian folk rock, progressive jazz, and Nordic music from the archives

Maybe there’s something you can learn from being a cat instead of a little girl. — Charles de Lint’s The Cats of Tanglewood Forest

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Iain here. So winter ends in just six days; sure, tell that to the weather outside. It’s been warm with temperatures being 10°C for our high and -3°C for our low high as well; we had major snow storms as well this month, so the heat is still being kept on in Kinrowam Hall for obvious reasons.

I’ve been enjoying the work of one of my favourite writers this month, that being Charles de Lint. The work of his that I’m reading right now is one of his more folkloric ones, The Cats of Tanglewood Forest with its cats, a transformation and the ancient forest.

It’s about a girl named Lillian who may or may not have been turned into a kitten — her reflection in water is human while everyone else says sees her as a kitten — the odyssey she undertakes in the ancient forest near her home, and the magical creatures she meets. It’s absoulutely charming. Did I mention it is illustrated by Charles Vess?

It has a sort of prequel in A Circle of Cats. Though that was intended to be the prequel to the de Lint/Vess collaboration Seven Wild Sisters, it can also be considered a prequel to this work in my view. It gets complicated. Really. It does. Some of the characters will that show up in Seven Wild Sisters will be in Medicine Road which is also a remarkable work indeed.

Now I need coffee and a late morning snack. I hear that eleveneses are still going. Shall we join those who are there?

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Gary here. In new music let me tell you about an album called The Power of Polska, by Swedish fiddling icon Lena Jonsson and Finnish accordion innovator Johanna Juhola. ‘This album finds them delving into their own personal takes on the dance music that crosses borders throughout the northern lands, from Estonia to Norway.’

I also review two new albums of progressive jazz, Jon Irabagon’s Focus Out, and Jon Irabagon and Dan Oestreicher’s Saturday’s Child. ‘American saxophonist, composer and band leader Jon Irabagon (a Down Beat certified rising star) gathered members of his quartet to lay down a wide ranging set of modern jazz that reflects his current reality as a working musician and parent of a young family. It’s an album that, despite some initial misgivings, continues to grow on me.

Finally, here are a couple of entertaining EPs of Serbian folk rock world music, Sekvoya’s Gathering of Enchanted Herbs, and The Magic of Slavic Rituals. ‘The music of Sekvoya seems to use Balkan folk and dance music as a starting place which Krstićs has turned into a rock-based world music. To my ear the Turkish psych influence is strong, with some of the guitars mimicking the electric oud, and the dub bass lines pushing into Baba Zula territory.’

From the Archive, I thought I’d offer up some classic revieows of Nordic recordings to complement that new disc from Lena Jonsson & Johanna Juhola. Big Earl turned in an enthusiastic review of Hardanger fiddler Anon Egeland’s Ånon: ‘As a collector of traditional songs from his area, Egeland is noted for keeping the traditions of the north alive. On this, his first solo album of his twenty-plus year career, he brings forth a beautiful collection of dances from Sweden and Norway, some learnt from the great masters of the idiom.’

Cat’s long been a fan of Aly Bain and Ale Möller, and their duo album Beyond the Stacks was no exception. ‘Simply put, they’re brilliant. The intertwining of the Shetland sound of fiddler Aly Bain meets the varied instruments (mandola, harmonica, Jew’s harp) of Swede Möller in a way which few duos I’ve ever heard match.’

The first time I saw or heard the Nordic Fiddlers Bloc was at a superb show called “Far Flung Fiddles” at the Judique Community Center in Judique, Nova Scotia, as part of the 2013 version of Celtic Colours. The show also featured local band Beòlach and American Irish fiddler Liz Carrol. I noted that the Bloc comprises Olav Luksegård Mjelva of Norway, Anders Hall of Sweden and Kevin Henderson of the Shetland Islands. ‘As is typical for an opening act here, they played four suites of tunes that included many jigs and reels but also some polskas and more.’

PSo let’s finish off with Garmarna, a Swedish group founded in 1990 after several of them who were friends saw traditional Swedish music performed in a film. Yes that’s what they claim happened. Emma Härdelin, their vocalist, would join them several years after that. ‘Vedergällningen is from a Swedish concert they did some 25 years ago.

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A Kinrowan Estate story: Hedge Witches

PDear Anna,

As you well know, I, unlike you, was schooled in the university of the land. I don’t regret it but it was a very good thing that I apprenticed to Macpherson, the Head Gardener before me, as the man knew more about botany than anyone save a hedge witch. And he knew one of those, too, so she filled in my education where he couldn’t.

Scots are an odd bunch — even when they were strongly Christian, they believed deeply in hedge witches. Oh they might have called them healers, they might have called them herbalists, but they were hedge witches. Almost all were women, though a few down the centuries were men.

The particular hedge witch Angus had me work with was Lisbeth ab Owain Gwynedd, a lady who had been given a cottage on the Estate many decades ago. She helped Angus keep the animals and humans here healthy. She rarely went off the Estate, but that wasn’t unusual, given that we operate pretty much as a self-sufficient affair. She certainly didn’t need to leave the Estate for any of her botanicals, as she claimed only the plants that grew here would actually be beneficial.

Macpherson and ab Owain Gwynedd deeply believed in leylines, which they said ran across the entire Estate. They said that the best medicinal plants were found were the lines intersected, forming pools of geomantic energies. In her cottage was a map on sheep skin she said was many centuries old that showed all these lines.

Remember the circle of stones we found a few years back? They’re on the map as are several sacred springs and what ab Owain Gwynedd called fairy circles. Though there are superb mushrooms growing in the latter, no one harvests them.

Sadly ab Owain Gwynedd apparently passed on several decades back. No one knew how old she was but some claimed she was well over a hundred. Another hedge witch, Tamsin Sorenson, now occupies her cottage. The odd thing is that Tamsin attracts owls, lots of owls, with the woods around the cottage full during the day with them sleeping. But that’s another story for another time!

with affection, Gus

P

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What’s New for the 1st of March: Emma Bull’s War for The Oaks, Rosanne Cash’s ‘Runaway Train’, Johnny Cash at San Quentin, plus new Americana and jazz music

I’m worried about you
I’m worried about me
The curves around midnight
Aren’t easy to see
Flashing red warnings
Unseen in the rain
This thing has turned into
A runaway train

Rosanne Cash’s ‘Runaway Train’

P

There’s always music playing here in our Pub. Sometimes it’s a band such as Gentle Jack Jones out of what they called Big Foot country, often it’s just a fiddler by herself, it might be a group of whoever is playing here that’s been called the Neverending Session as it doesn’t really end, stopping for now but always starting up at some point, and then there’s whatever I like to play for recorded music.

On this colder than usual even for February day with a fire in the fireplace, behind glass so we don’t make this place cold with Pixel, one of our resident always stumped tailed black cats sleeping near  it, I’m watching a heavy snow fall outside.

So what am I playing? Well a little bit of the the Grateful Dead, their newer stuff as Garcia’s now in his eighties but bless him still fine vocally; Johnny Cash and his daughter Roseanne, sometmes making music together; Hunter from the Grateful Dead who has passed on, the Charlie Daniels Band with a new lead singer who did much more than ‘The Devil Went Down to Georgia’, and even Mark O’Connor, the trad fiddle player.

So what is playing now? Johnny Cash’s ‘God’s Gonna Cut you down”, and one minute while I ask Shazam on one of iPads to tell where it from. It’s from American  V: A Hundred Highways which was released by him a few yew years back.

It’s time for more coffee, mine’s black though I’ll have several with Irish Whiskey when I’m not working. So what’ll you have?

P

Carla looked out the window. “Listen. You don’t become a bar band and work your way up from there. There is no up from there. It’s a dead end. All you can become is the world’s best bar band.

We have only one novel this time but it’s an favourite of mine that I’ve read many times. Emma Bull’s War for The Oaks, s battle between the Fey and some of we mortal humans that is settled using music on Midsummers Eve. It tells the story of Eddi McCandry, a  musician who finds herself pulled into the faerie conflict between good and evil, though those labels are far too simple for what happens here.

It features music from Cats Laughing, or perhaps Cats Laughing plays music from the novel. I needed to ask Will Shetterkly, husband of Emma, which it is and  he said the band comes after the novel. So the band is named after the band here. Interesting.

We’ve got the trailer for a film version of the novel didn’t happen which has some of the music in the novel. For such a short trailer, there’s a lot there including Emma as a Fairy Queen and more than a few of Minneapolis fandom.

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Gary here with some new music, starting with a new country duo record, Melissa Carper & Theo Lawrence’s Havin’ A Talk. ‘Whether fronting her own band on three acclaimed solo albums or part of a collaborative group like Sad Daddy, chronicling humorous human foibles or lovelorn heartache, or even celebrating the winter holidays in down home country style, Melissa Carper is surely one of the hardest working and most productive musicians on the Americana roots scene. Mere weeks after the release of A Very Carper Christmas she’s back with yet another album on an iconic theme, that of the male-female country duo.’

Next up is jazz trumpeter Ingrid Jensen’s Landings. ‘The lineup of this quartet is a bit unusual, with Jensen on trumpet joined by her longtime collaborator Gary Versace on organ, plus Marvin Sewell on guitars and Jon Wikan on drums. That make for some very interesting and engaging textures and colors in these selections that also have lots of melody and swing.’

I’m always up for a reissue of a rare or classic jazz record, and that describes Woody Shaw’s Love Dance. ‘Love Dance is a sterling example of soulful ’70s jazz, Shaw’s second release for Muse. For it, Shaw enlisted an amazing ensemble of young progressive players: saxophonists Billy Harper and René McLean, trombonist Steve Turre, pianist Joe Bonner, bassist Cecil McBee, drummer Victor Lewis and percussionists Guilherme Franco and Tony Waters.’

More new jazz is up next, with an album from Los Angeles alto saxophonist Nicole McCabe. ‘Color Theory is chock full of engaging melodies courtesy of McCabe, and she and her guest trumpeter, the hotshot Brooklynite Adam O’Farrill lay down loads of harmonies that range from creamy to eye-opening.’

From the Archives, to go with today’s theme here’s a deluxe box set of Johnny Cash Live at San Quentin. ‘This set is an excellent document of Johnny Cash at the top of his career. If you got interested in the man and his music from watching the 2005 biopic Walk the Line, you should check out San Quentin for a look at the real thing.’

PWe have a song written and performed by Johnny Cash’s daughter, Rosanne, that shows that she’s every bit as great covering her own material as she is covering his material as she did here. It’s ‘Runaway Train’ which comes from the same Bimbos concert in San Francisco that January evening. It details the end of a relationship that may or may not have been about her own such ending but it’s certainly heartfelt.

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A Kinrorwan Estate story: Cranachanh

oak_leaf_fallen_colored2

Good Evening Ekaterina,

Ingrid sends her love and hopes your trip to Canada is going well.

Mrs. Ware cooked the traditional Scottish dessert that you love earlier tonight — Cranachan, which you know is made with oats, cream, whisky and raspberries.

Scottish cranachan is a very quick, easy recipe. It is also a very festive recipe and perfect for any celebration especially Christmas, Hogmanay and rounds off a Burns Night Supper quite beautifully.

However, Scottish cranachan is too good to save just for special occasions and is especially good in the summer, making the most of the delicious raspberries found on this Estate growing wild in immense brambles for a truly authentic recipe. But don’t worry if you can’t find them, use any raspberries, as with the other wonderful ingredients in the cranachan it’ll taste good anyway.

If you use frozen raspberries, make sure to decrease the amount of sugar you use as most of them come in a sweetened syrup. Though I’ve noticed that the natural foods movement has resulted in just raspberries, no sweetener, being sold as well.

Mrs. Ware has been pondering the idea of substituting blueberries in the recipe which should be tasty as well.

Yours with affection,

Gus

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What’s New for the 15th of February: Some Seanan McGuire fantasy, Alison Bechdel’s latest, Pamela Dean’s Tam Lin; Nordic sounds, old time, Americana and Tex-Mex music

Under the Earth I go,
On the oak leaf I stand.
I ride on the filly
That was never foaled,
And I carry the dead  
in my hand

Scots trad

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If Reynard didn’t exist, it would be necessary to invent him. Or so I said  while enjoying a rather spectacular Two Ravens Stout. He went to say that ‘He’s a singular force, and we’ve lucky to have him. He showed up here about a decade after I did with a travelling bag and pulled a concertina from that bag and started playing. Bloody good he was.

What endeared him was not his music but that he noticed we were decidedly short-handed behind the bar and said he had more than a bit of experience tending bar. So the staff there said ‘Sure, come help us.’ He worked ten hours from early evening to the wee hours. Smiling, not looking harried and pleasant as well. Made sure everyone was treated right too, a neat ability as we were slammed by having a wedding that afternoon.

Our Pub Manager was from the Border area that Reynard was from and they had friends in common, so she hired him on the spot: he’s worked his way up over the past twenty so years to Pub Manager. Now in his Fifties, he’s been married to Ingrid, our Estonian born Estate Steward for a decade now. 

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Cat, our Editor in Chief, found a lot to like in Seanan McGuire’s Indexing books: ‘I’m re-listening right now to one of those things that Seanan McGuire does so ever well: she takes a familiar story and make it fresh. … I first read it as novels when they came out some six years ago and then listened to it a few years later. Now being home confined due to three knee surgeries, I’m doing a lot of audiobooks and this was a series I wanted to revisit while working on other things.’

Cat also looked at the urban legend (retold yet again) of a ghost girl asking for a ride home on the anniversary of her death: ‘Seanan McGuire decided to tell her own ghost story in Sparrow Hill Road which, like her novel Indexing, was originally a series of short stories published through The Edge of Propinquity, starting in January of 2010 and ending in December of that year. It appears they’ve been somewhat revised for this telling of her ghostly narrator’s tale but I can’t say how much as I’ve not read the original versions.’

Gary greatly enjoyed Alison Bechdel’s latest comic novel Spent, in which a fictionalized Bechdel lives on a goat rescue farm financed by the proceeds of a streaming TV show based on her debut graphic memoir. ‘Lots of little plot strands keep you turning the pages. But mostly it’s Bechdel’s wry but humane observations about humans and human nature that keep you with her. This version of Alison Bechdel really does live in a Fun House.’

A version of the Tam Lin story is reviewed by Richard as he looks at a Pamela Dean novel: ‘An early part of Terri Windling’s Fairy Tale series, Tam Lin is by far the most ambitious project on the line. The story of Tam Lin is one of the better known ones to escape folklore for the fringes of the mainstream; you’ll find references scuttling about everywhere from old Fairport Convention discs to Christopher Stasheff novels.

There’s danger inherent in mucking about with a story that a great many people know and love in its original form; a single misstep and the hard-core devotees of the classic start howling for blood. Moreover, Dean is not content simply to take the ballad of Tam Lin and transplant it bodily into another setting.’

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Gary here. In new music, let’s look at a new release from the Norwegian jazz and improvised music label Hubro. ‘Two of the leading players of alternative pedal steel from Norway and the UK, Geir Sundstøl and Joe Harvey-Whyte, have teamed up to create Langeleik, which flows in a mood-shifting sonic groove largely inspired by Joe Harvey-Whyte’s favorite rivers but also incorporating noirish urban landscapes, field recordings, spoken word and vintage synths.’

I also reviewed a new release of old time music from Olympia, Washington’s Alex Sturbaum, a multi-instrumentalist who is playing button accordion on this album, Windjammer. ‘It all has the down-home feeling of a front porch jam session or a Pacific Northwest contra dance night. Which sometimes is just what you need to hear.’

From the Archives, here’s a review I did for Sleeping Hedgehog. ‘Hook & Anchor is a Portland roots music supergroup of sorts. Claborn, who plays banjo and guitar, is a member of Portland alt-folkers Blind Pilot, Clampitt (electric guitar and pedal steel) has played under a number of nameplates including Clampitt, Power of County and Gaddis & Buck.’

Since I reviewed the new Eric Brace/Thomm Jutz album last time, I dug way back into the archives for a review of Brace’s band Last Train Home’s first record following their move to Nashville. ‘Last Train Home has taken ll major steps forward with its eighth release Last Good Kiss. Not least among the positive changes are a relocation from Washington, D.C., to Nashville, and some lineup adjustments. And for the first time, all the tracks on this release were written by band members.’

If I had a nickel for every singer who’s moved to Austin (or Nashville), made a record or two, then quietly faded away, I’d probably have more money than any of those folks made from their music, unfortunately. One of those who I had high hopes for was Seattle’s Zoe Muth, when I reviewed what seems to have been her last album, World of Strangers.

And finally, Brendan gave an enthusiastic review to the debut self-titled disc from the Tex-Mex super group Los Super Seven. ‘With its regimen of Mexican songs, Los Super Seven evokes the respect and continuation of a certain musical tradition; with its inclusion of Anglo-Americans — both as musicians and as songwriters — it demonstrates a healthy fascination of artistic influence and cross-pollination.’

PAll songs are stories and Steve Goodman’s ‘City of New Orleans’ is certainly one of the better told ones. As recorded by Arlo Guthrie at a Stanhope, NJ performance on the eighth of August, twenty nine years ago, it tells the melancholy story of a train as it’s headed to New Orleans one night. Arlo, son of Woody as you most likely know, is in particularly fine voice here.

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What’s New for the 1st of February: Kage Baker retrospective; new Americana, Buddhist chants and Finnish songs, new and reissued jazz, and more

I don’t think humanity just replays history, but we are the same people our ancestors were, and our descendants are going to face a lot of the same situations we do. It’s instructive to imagine how they would react, with different technologies on different worlds. That’s why I write science fiction — even though the term ‘science fiction’ excites disdain in certain persons.

Kage Baker

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I was thinking about Kage Baker, who has been  gone 15 years the end of last month, so I decided give a selection of the reviews we have done. Of course she was much more than a writer of great speculation fiction, as she was the companion to a space pirate named Harry, a baker of barm brack,  very fond of Terry Gilliam and perhaps smitten by Bruce Campbell. English cooking with slabs of meats and desserts made with lots of butter by two fat ladies on a motorcycle with a sidecar cruising the countryside? Oh yes! And finally I must mention that she had a deep love for the early years of Hollywood and the film industry in general.

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Cat has a neat work for us: ‘At a mere one hundred and three pages, this is one of the best Robert Heinlein works I’ve ever read. Oops, I meant Kage Baker works. Or did I? Ok, let me reconcile the contradiction I just created (somewhat). The Empress of Mars reads like the best of Heinlein’s short fiction from the golden period of the 1940s and 1950s. It is so good that I’ve no doubt John W. Campbell would’ve published it! It would sit very nicely alongside much of his short fiction such as ‘Blowups Happen’, ‘The Long Watch’, and ‘The Green Hills of Earth’, to name but three classic Heinlein tales. It’s that well-crafted. It’s that entertaining. And it’s that rarest of short works — one that is just the right length.’

Matthew looks at a Kage Baker venture into children’s fiction: ‘In comparison to her other works,’ says he, ‘I would consider The Hotel under the Sand to be one of Kage Baker’s lesser works, but it is still highly enjoyable.’

Matthew also reviews Kage Baker’s Not Less Than Gods, her last Company novel which Kathleen, her sister, told Cat that apparently only she and Kage liked. (Cat says he liked it too.) Matthew says of this novel that ‘Ultimately, this is not going to be considered one of Kage’s strongest works. For someone who is a Company junkie, it is a nice installment, but the newcomer would not understand the novel’s position in the entire series. A lot of “inside” knowledge is required to more fully appreciate the novel.’

Robert brings us a look at two interconnected books by Kage Baker, beginning with Dark Mondays: ‘Baker is an extraordinary storyteller who refuses to let herself be bound by the expectations of genre, as the stories here show. In fact, on the basis of this collection, I think I would just call Baker a slipstream writer and not try to get any closer to a categorization of her work (“slipstream” being the genre that wasn’t, according to some people).’

The second is — well, it’s like this: ‘Kage Baker’s short novel, Or Else My Lady Keeps the Key, is not a sequel so much as a continuation of the adventures of John James, fugitive, sometime pirate, and free-lance muscle, who was introduced in her novella “The Maid on the Shore” in Dark Mondays.’ Robert explains that. Truly.

PGary here with some music. I jumped at the chance to review the new record by Eric Brace and Thomm Jutz; I’ve been writing up Eric’s music — solo, with band, and in various duos — for a quarter century now. ‘Circle and Square is full of gentle but sturdy songs about the human condition and the important role art of all kinds plays in the lives of us all. A good record for now.’

‘If you know the music of Värttinä you have some idea of what Tuuletar sounds like,’ I note in my review of Tuuletar’s third album Maammo. ‘All four of the women of Tuuletar — Venla Ilona Blom, Sini Koskelainen, Johanna Kyykoski and Piia Säilynoja — sing and do vocal effects and percussion, and Blom does some beatboxing as well.’

I also wrote about Tibet: The Voice Of The Tantra, a new two CD set of an old recording of the Monastery Of Gyütö’s monks. ‘The discs preserve a 1975 recording at the monastery and university of Gyütö performed by the first generation of Tibetan monks who went into exile from Lhasa to India with the current Dalai Lama. It’s an astonishing and utterly tranfixing auditory experience, of very high quality for 50-year-old field recordings.’

Lastly for me this time, I wrote an omnibus review of three new jazz releases, Martin Wind’s Stars, Dave Pietro’s The Butterfly Effect, and John McNeil & Tom Harrell’s Look To The Sky. The latter is a reissue: ‘These days I’m all about the trumpet, so I’m totally delighted by this classic reissue from SteepleChase. John McNeil and Tom Harrell are legendary horn players who rose to prominence in the New York scene of the 1970s, and this recording is the only one they made together.’

From the archives, Rebecca enjoyed the Christian Celtic folk pop of Ceili Rain’s Say ‘KAY-Lee’. ‘It is cheerful, enthusiastic, and well-crafted. Those people who are more comfortable with a bleak, cynical view of life will not like it, nor will those who are mistrustful of Christianity. However, those looking for a positive alternative will enjoy it. I think the warmth and optimism expressed here are as valid as any of the darker emotions expressed by musicians today.’

Finally, Richard was highly impressed by Jennifer and Hazel Wrigley’s Mither o’the Sea, one of the earliest recordings by the Wrigley Twins. ‘Most of the pieces played on this all-instrumental CD are composed by the sisters themselves (nearly always by Jennifer) or by other Orkney musicians, and respect local traditional forms. A couple come from mainland Scotland (not to be confused with Mainland in Orkney). To my surprise, a perusal of the booklet revealed that only the very last of the 23 tunes spread over 12 tracks is a traditional piece, a jig from Holm (a Nordic word that simply means “island”).’

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I’m going to leave you with the Kage‘s reading one of her own works, that being her Empress of Mars which Cat reviewed anove. It was supposed to be included on a CD in the limited edition version of the story that was going to be published by Nightshade Books but that never happened, so she gave us permission to have it here. So find a quiet place to listen and settle in to hear a most excellent sf story told by a master storyteller!

Kathleen, her sister, notes that ‘she was an old-fashioned storyteller. She loved adding dimensions, and felt that all her stories should be either copiously illustrated or read out to an audience.’

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