- Death Chants, Breakdowns & Military Waltzes
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Death Chants, Breakdowns & Military Waltzes
Cover of the second editionStudio album by John Fahey Released 1964 Recorded 1962 in Adelphi, MD and 1963 in Berkeley, CA Genre Folk Label Takoma John Fahey chronology Blind Joe Death
(1959)Death Chants, Breakdowns & Military Waltzes
(1964)The Dance of Death & Other Plantation Favorites
(1964)Alternative Cover Cover of the second 1967 release of the LPDeath Chants, Breakdowns & Military Waltzes is a 1964 album by American fingerstyle guitarist and composer John Fahey. Various sources show either a 1963 or 1964 original release. It was Fahey's second release and the first to gain a national distributor.
Contents
History
John Fahey’s first album was self-released on Takoma Records although the label didn’t formally exist until 1963. Fahey and ED Denson formed a partnership with record distributor Norman Pierce which led to increased sales and distribution for this and all Fahey's future releases.[1]
Death Chants, Break Downs & Military Waltzes was recorded in both Adelphi, Maryland in 1962 and Berkeley, California in 1963, the same year as Fahey's and ED Denson's "rediscovery" of delta blues guitarist and singer Bukka White. Fahey had earlier left the East Coast to attend UC Berkeley and later the graduate program at UCLA in folklore. According to Byron Coley in his article "The Persecutions and Resurrections of Blind Joe Death", "Because a local 78 dealer was also a national distributor, [Death Chants] sold much more quickly than the first had, and it got favorable press in places like Peter Stampfel's influential column in Broadsides. Stampfel recalls, 'Death Chants really blew my mind. He used a traditional guitar style to play modern-based compositions in an extended way. And his liner notes were way cool.' The press garnered by Death Chants was enough to get Fahey his first paying gig—a weeklong engagement at Boston's Odyssey Coffeehouse in the summer of '65."[2]
In his 1992 article "Reinventing the Steel" for Acoustic Guitar, Dale Miller described the liner notes that Fahey began including on his releases as "hilarious yet profound and somewhat disturbing phony folklorical ramblings that spoofed the pedantic notes on many folk releases of the day." Denson agreed with this assessment and stated "Fahey mythologized his life in the liner notes," and guitarist Leo Kottke referred to both the liner notes and music together as "a whole world that he sort of chips little pieces off of. It's intact, and you get glimpses of it through him."[3] The liner notes to Death Chants are attributed to Chester C. Petranick (Petranick was a music teacher from Fahey's youth)[4] and carry on the myth of Blind Joe Death:
- "Blind Joe never sang. He had no voice. He had been struck blind and dumb at the age of three by a local member of the NAACP, for not complying with the organization's demand to learn bar chords and diminished augmented sevenths, so that he might disassociate himself from the myth of the Negro past. Here, thanks to the intensely personal stubborness [sic] of an old man who refused to bow to the dictates of crass commercialism and political interfuge, sat John Fahey at the feet of this old man, listening and waiting for his hands to be big enough to play the surrogate kithera as did his mentor. For in Blind Joe's music, the young white boy could discern a way in which he could express the intensely personal, bitter-sweet, biting, soul-stirring volk poetry of the harsh, elemental, but above all human life of the downtrodden Takoma Park people (volk)."[5]
Reception
Professional ratings Review scores Source Rating Allmusic [6] Allmusic [7] In reviewing the 1967 reissue of Death Chants, Breakdowns & Military Waltzes, music critic Richie Unterberger writes the material "...is still outstanding..." and comparing to the original release "The fidelity is clearer."[6] Of the 1999 reissue, Unterberger claims it "...does Fahey fans a massive favor by combining both versions onto one disc.... Fahey achieves a full and reverberant quality that sets it off not just from the average country blues revivalists of the period, but from vintage country blues itself... it must be said that the originals have an intangibly more affecting, more mysterious quality that does not come through as strongly on the more carefully executed rehauls."[7]
In his piece for The New York Times, Ben Ratliff called Death Chants, Breakdowns & Military Waltzes "dense with eccentricity."[4]
Reissues
- The original cover of Death Chants, Breakdowns & Military Waltzes was simply a white cover with black lettering of the title. Subsequent reissues included Vol. 2 in the title. In 1967 Fahey re-recorded ten of the twelve songs for reissue.
- In 1999, Takoma reissued both the original recordings and the later re-recordings on a single CD.[7]
Track listing
- All times are from the 1964 version.
- All songs written or arranged by John Fahey.
- "Sunflower River Blues" – 2:33
- "When the Springtime Comes Again" – 3:50
- "Stomping Tonight on the Pennsylvania/Alabama Border" – 6:58
- "Some Summer Day" – 3:20
- "On the Beach at Waikiki" – 2:55
- "Spanish Dance" – 1:53
- "The Downfall of the Adelphi Rolling Grist Mill" – 3:35
- "John Henry Variations" – 5:40
- "Take a Look at That Baby" – 1:25
- "Dance of the Inhabitants of the Palace of King Phillip XIV" – 2:28
- "America" – 7:52
- "Episcopal Hymn" (based on "At the name of Jesus" by Ralph Vaughan Williams) – 1:10
Death Chants, Breakdowns & Military Waltzes Compilation album by John Fahey Released February 2, 1999 Recorded 1963, 1967 Genre Folk Length 78:35 Label Takoma Reissue track listing (1999)
- "Sunflower River Blues" – 2:33
- "When the Springtime Comes Again" – 3:50
- "Stomping Tonight on the Pennsylvania-Alabama Border" – 6:58
- "Some Summer Day" – 3:20
- "On the Beach at Waikiki" – 2:55
- "Spanish Dance" – 1:53
- "John Henry Variations" – 5:40
- "The Downfall of the Adelphi Rolling Grist Mill" – 3:35
- "Take a Look at That Baby" – 1:25
- "Dance of the Inhabitants of the Palace of King Philip XIV" – 2:28
- "America" – 7:52
- "Episcopal Hymn" – 1:10
- "Sunflower River Blues" – 3:19
- "When the Springtime Comes Again" – 4:53
- "Stomping Tonight on the Pennsylvania-Alabama Border" – 5:36
- "Some Summer Day" – 3:25
- "On the Beach at Waikiki" – 2:40
- "Spanish Dance" – 2:05
- "John Henry Variations" – 5:11
- "Take a Look at That Baby" – 1:25
- "America" – 5:00
- "Episcopal Hymn" – 1:22
Personnel
- John Fahey – guitar
- Nancy McLean – flute ("The Downfall of the Adelphi Rolling Grist Mill")
References
- ^ Dunlap Jr., David (July 7, 2006). "The Cosmos Club". Washington City Paper. http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/cover/2006/cover0707.html?navEdit. Retrieved March 10, 2010.
- ^ Coley, Byron (May 2001). "The Persecutions and Resurrections of Blind Joe Death". Perfect Sound Forever. http://www.furious.com/perfect/fahey/fahey-byron2.html. Retrieved March 28, 2010.
- ^ Miller, Dale (1992). "Reinventing the Steel". Acoustic Guitar (January/February): 46. http://www.johnfahey.com/pages/ac1.html. Retrieved April 12, 2010.
- ^ a b Ratliff, Ben (1997). "A 60's Original With a New Life on the Fringe". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/1997/01/19/arts/a-60-s-original-with-a-new-life-on-the-fringe.html?sec=&spon=&pagewanted=2. Retrieved January 5, 2010.
- ^ Original liner notes.
- ^ a b Unterberger, Richie. "Death Chants, Breakdowns & Military Waltzes > Review 1967 reissue". Allmusic. http://www.allmusic.com/album/r433010. Retrieved January 26, 2010.
- ^ a b c Unterberger, Richie. "Death Chants, Breakdowns & Military Waltzes > Review 1999 reissue". Allmusic. http://www.allmusic.com/album/r106418. Retrieved March 26, 2010.
External links
Studio albums Blind Joe Death · Death Chants, Breakdowns & Military Waltzes · The Dance of Death & Other Plantation Favorites · The Transfiguration of Blind Joe Death · The Great San Bernardino Birthday Party & Other Excursions · Days Have Gone By · The Voice of the Turtle · Requia · The Yellow Princess · The New Possibility · America · Of Rivers and Religion · After the Ball · Fare Forward Voyagers (Soldier's Choice) · Old Fashioned Love · Christmas with John Fahey Vol. II · John Fahey Visits Washington D.C. · Yes! Jesus Loves Me · Railroad · Let Go · Popular Songs For Christmas and the New Year · Rain Forests, Oceans and Other Themes · I Remember Blind Joe Death · God, Time and Causality · Old Girlfriends and Other Horrible Memories · City of Refuge · Womblife · Hitomi · Red Cross78s and EPs The Fonotone Sessions · Double 78 · The Mill PondLive albums Live in Tasmania · Georgia Stomps, Atlanta Struts and Other Contemporary Dance Favorites · The Great Santa Barbara Oil Slick · On AirCollaborations The Epiphany of Glenn Jones · John Fahey Trio KBOO · John Fahey Trio, Vol. OneCompilations The Early Sessions · The Essential John Fahey · Leo Kottke, John Fahey & Peter Lang · The Best of John Fahey 1959–1977 · The Return of the Repressed: The John Fahey Anthology · The Legend of Blind Joe Death · The Best of the Vanguard Years · The Best of John Fahey, Vol. 2: 1964–1983 · Sea Changes & Coelacanths: A Young Person's Guide to John Fahey · Vanguard Visionaries · Twilight on Prince Georges Avenue: Essential RecordingsTribute albums A Tribute to John Fahey · I Am the Resurrection: A Tribute to John Fahey · Friends of Fahey Tribute · The Revenge of Blind Joe Death: The John Fahey Tribute Album · The Great Koonaklaster Speaks: A John Fahey CelebrationRelated articles Discography · American Primitivism · Takoma Records · Revenant Records · Anthology of American Folk Music, Vol. 4 · Screamin' and Hollerin' the Blues: The Worlds of Charley PattonCategories:- 1964 albums
- John Fahey albums
- Takoma Records albums
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