Tuesday, September 09, 2008

CDReview: what else but love - Jon Redfern

Painful Beauty.

Jon Redfern's second album 'what else but love' has an impact that creeps up on you, you hear it for the first time and it's subtlety almost acts as self defence like a deep felt wounded soul that pushes away its warmest friends because of the pain involved. But listen to this album a second and third time and I guarantee you will find yourself having to listen repeatedly, for it repays you the effort and time with the deepest music to be found anywhere today.

Jon went through the trauma of losing his father during the gestation of this record, and the whole thing is simply dedicated "for dad" on the sleeve. This has naturally had a big impact both on Jon and on the
record - in fact "record" is a fairly apt description of the CD - it feels like it is a record of the period. The songs are littered with anxiety, fear, and the inexorable passing of time:
"so many years ago, so wrong, but how could you know,
so many miles apart, you always let me know that you loved me too"

The first track starts off in a reflective mood, Jon's voice low and getting lower, his distinctive guitar sound underpinned by co-arranger Pat Durkan's drums and piano, the song slowly builds and begins to sparkle, Jon's slide guitar and then with a heartfelt cry "Heaven - beyond the void..." Jon lets his voice go and soars with the melody before dropping back to a last unaccompanied phrase. Teaming up this time with fellow Tarras-man Joss Clapp producing, engineering and playing bass on almost everything, they have delivered a great record.

Second song "Part of you" reveals a hint of something of an aural trademark for this CD - Jon's voice is overdubbed with itself, but in the higher register, a technique repeated throughout, albeit sometimes reversed, the lower register providing the harmony, but the overall effect is rather pleasing. It returns triumphant for "play of fear" - though Joss Clapp has used his own voice for backing on this track too.

Instrumentally this is a relatively simple album, keeping to a core of instruments with a few excursions into strings, but there is still a big sound in there - the percussion remains a strong feature. Pat Durkin is also responsible for another of the strong musical themes here - a dark and sometimes threatening, grinding Wurlitzer can often be heard underpinning the whole sound - a beast in the basement determined to be heard - deserving to be heard too. The sixth track, "forever bound" is a bit of a departure with its jingle jangle dulcimer-esque sounds, a clock-like ticking and sublime organ sounds, a mighty wall of percussion that
becomes almost manic as the song wanders away into the distance. For track 8, "rowing away" there is a bit of an orchestral sound with Pete Tickell adding violins, but otherwise the core band manage to come up with a good spectrum of sound, drummer Sam Murray is key thoughout and the occasional use of Jon Redfern's harmonica adds real atmosphere to the sound.

Jon Redferns' voice reminds me rather of Robert Wyatt's at times - with a thin fragility that threatens to break, but it has a power to raise itself up a level or two when the song demands it and the passion flows,
so Jon is able to produce a good range of feeling throughout the record, with plenty of tension and emotion in the delivery.

By the end of the CD, the listener has run a gamut of emotion, so the final track is perfectly placed. A rather subdued, pained vocal over a basic piano starts almost dull, then the hint of another voice backing,
female brightens it slightly before she is given her own voice - and the voice is none other than Becky Unthank - a voice to melt the heart after all that has gone before: "I'll always love you, love you forever, how
ever long that is". Then, in chorus, the two voices conclude the song, the record and underline the title "what else but love"? It feel like Jon has finally reached that warm loving place he needs. A delightful ending to this CD that is chock full of painful beauty - of one man's pain turned, by some sort of musical alchemy, into gold.

1 comment:

FRANCIS BACON said...

Great text!
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www.porcariasonora.blogspot.com