Ben Reynolds, occasionally joined by Alex Neilson (drums) and Simon Shaw (bass)
Influences
Ben Reynolds - Two Wings CD, Strange Attractors Audio House
£10, including postage anywhere in the world.
Sounds Like
-------"With Reynolds’ record [HOW DAY EARNT ITS NIGHT], I’m left struggling to articulate why he plays with such apparent technical skill without that technique overbearing the emotional and melodic virtues of his music, and why I’m going to have to resort, once again, to a bunch of old reference points. So the stately steel picking of “Skylark (Scorner Of The Ground!)” and “Risen”, for instance, inevitably recall John Fahey, perhaps specifically Fahey’s lustrous settings of hymns on “Yes! Jesus Loves Me”. Reynolds is at pains to assert a British take on this tradition in the press notes, and there’s a distinct hint of Bert Jansch, the milieu of early ‘60s London clubs, to the likes of “All Gone Wrong Blues” and "Kirstie" here, too. But it’s when he stretches out that Reynolds really finds his instrumental voice. On the nine-minute “The Virgin Knows”, he turns a slow blues motif into something more abstract and ethereal, a sort of parallel to Blackshaw’s experiments in formal composition. The title track spends 13 minutes mostly working on a repetitive Reichian theme that gradually accumulates more and more melodic intricacies. It’s wonderful, but I’m struggling to say how, exactly." UNCUT
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Ben Reynolds' 2009 album for Tompkins Square again shows his quietly elegant skill on acoustic guitar. With the lovely "Skylark" starting things with, essentially, a perfect pop hook -- it's one of the most immediately catchy numbers Reynolds has yet recorded, building to a soft but strong conclusion -- How Day Earnt Its Night maintains a necessary balancing act between the familiar and the quietly exploratory. If he does not completely give himself over to the full kind of agog rapture that his countryman James Bradshaw does, it's his skill in the vein of someone like Bert Jantsch that always comes to the fore. Hearing the pleasant touch of "Risen" also calls to mind someone like John Fahey at his most straightforward, as on the Christmas albums -- it's immediate, familiar, and warm rather than a bold challenge to expectations -- while the wheezing harmonica on "All Gone Wrong Blues" is a nice little exploration in a standard form. A subtle sense of drama gets aired at points -- the sudden pauses and extended notes on "The Virgin Knows" is a good example, while the mournful progression of "England" suggests a land that's been lost somewhere in the mists, and perhaps not happily. There's one full sequence of exploration that deserves note, though -- the three-part title track, portraying the cycle of a day in sometimes ominous terms (thus the first part's title, "Dawn Hurt") and with an air of nervous, plucked tension that never fully disappears even as the song moves towards its steady conclusion on a last swirl of a quick, rhythmic melody. There's also a good humor that crops up as well -- why else have an easygoing ramble of a performance be given the name "Death Sings"? ALLMUSIC
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"Two Wings effortlessly weaves shimmering melodic lines together to form spontaneous compositions of dazzling depth and clarity. Incorporating a variety of pacing techniques with his fingerpicking style, Reynolds explores a linearity that harkens back to the American ragas of Robbie Basho, while exposing Middle Eastern influences much like the acoustic trickery of Sir Richard Bishop. The last tune on Two Wings is a written composition, utterly graceful yet striking in its similarities to the spontaneous compositions, underlying the lyrical quality in Reynolds' music making. Two Wings is a remarkably unique, non-traditional take on the steel string tradition from a budding musical talent." SUNFLOWER CHAKRA MILK
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"On Two Wings, he joins fellow performers on Strange Attractors Audio House like Glenn Jones and Harris Newman in exclusively exploring the acoustic guitar, doing so on five songs with sprightly intensity. Unlike the sometimes too-obvious Fahey-isms of many of his comrades in the field -- not a bad thing, but still a bit wearying after a while -- Reynolds leavens that particular mix with a sense of his own inventive delicacy. It's beholden to other figures in turn, admittedly -- the invocation of Sir Richard Bishop on the release's cover sticker is not unwarranted, and it's often quite audible on songs like "Gravity Never Wins," which could almost be an acoustic version of a Sun City Girls melody. But the lovely "Here Toucheth Blues," which concludes the album on a sweet, almost skipping note, shows that he can be relatively straightforward with the best of them, to fine effect. His most striking moment on the album, though, ranks among his most original -- the zoned drones of "Revolution," a seesawing series of grinding tones over which gentler melodies then arrive. It's a marvelous one-man band result that's both disconcerting and captivating. Not far behind is the dramatic conclusion of "Ewige Weisheit (For Meister Eckhart)," which ends the song in a sudden jump-off-the-cliff sprawl of notes that's breathtaking to hear." ALLMUSIC
Ben Reynolds is a songwriter, solo steel string guitarist and improviser. Outside of solo concerns he has been a collaborator/contributor to various musical projects including Motor Ghost (duo w/Alex Neilson), Baby Dee, Ashtray Navigations, Nalle, Directing Hand amongst others.
Coming next.... 'HOW DAY EARNT ITS NIGHT' album out on Tompkins Square records, 9th June 2009.
'Two Wings' CD out now on STRANGE ATTRACTORS AUDIO HOUSE
Ben is also a member of Trembling Bells, a band featuring Alex Neilson, Lavinia Blackwall, Simon Shaw and sometimes George Murray and Aby Vulliamy. Their debut album 'Carbeth' has been released in April 2009 by Honest Jon's to glowing reports from the likes of Will Oldham and Joe Boyd. Go to Honest Jon's for more info.
For Trembling Bells booking please contact qujunktions @ googlemail . com
Support from
Brittle Hammer Trio
Retail Unit
Lin Zhang Vs Eaten By Children Friday 20th November, Stills Gallery, Cockburn St. Edinburgh. 7pm doors – first act on shortly after! £5 entry.
Hi Ben, the new stuff is sounding very fine indeed. Managed to catch the Bells last weekend, was hoping you'd be there yourself, but alas no. Any Glasgow shows planned in the distant future? Best, Gav
Electropapknit are pleased to announce that we are back with a new club night featuring amazing bands from Wednesday 4 November 2009!!!
As a new night in the now long gig history of Electropapknit shows, we thought we had to come up with an apt name that put across what we are about: great bands, cheap prices and bloody good times.
Therefore the new clubnight will be called Panda Panda Panda!
Based at the Glasgow School of Art, door entry with be £3 with cheap drink deals on shots at £1, pints £1.50 and vodka mix £1.50. We are very excited about the first night in November as it features three of our favourite most excellent bands from Glasgow:
Vom - mind bending apocalypse space rock, with a nod to the lounge effect that might just melt you! This aggression won't stand, man!
The Ballad of Mable Wong - jangled up bloody alt fun, with progressive and decadent melodies released by sharp guitar crunch, Sexy!
Mr Peppermint - former Hyena megasexuals, with swooning noise vox and tub thumping rhythms. Killer riffs on one side, masks in the other!
TODAY, Ill be co hosting on the Dave Charles radio show 102.3 hfm. Im nervous so to have you listening would be great, from 7pm (GMT) on line or radio x
This is the first set from the slightly tweaked Beach Fuzz line-up with Fliss Horrocks now playing guitar alongside Tom Settle and Nick Mitchell. Seven tracks of clattering drums, chugging and wailing guitars, screaming keyboards, mellow, lilting pastoral improv and moaned vocals.
Pay by Paypal to goldenlabrecordings@hotmail.co.uk
Recorded at The Bowling Green pub in Manchester on 17th November 2008, when Bridget was on tour with Marcia Bassett, this is a maximal 25-minute set of epic guitar brutalising and deep, moaned vocal incantations. Employing a bow and 'metal' effects pedals, the resulting cacophony is orchestral in scope, rendering almost unreliable the memory of one woman and her instrument. Somewhat akin to Bassett's duo with Matthew Bower, Hototogisu, the deeply layered tones created by Hayden offer, upon first exposure, a somewhat icy auditory experience, but as the recording settles in, the richness and sheer breadth of sound wraps around you like a feather quilt and shifts your perception almost 180 degrees. A truly magnificent set from this former Vibracathedral Orchestra member.
Limited to 80 copies with sleeves printed on recycled paper using soya based ink
Pay by Paypal to goldenlabrecordings@hotmail.co.uk
Kneel, Sir presents... ALASDAIR ROBERTS BENJAMIN WETHERILL AND THE TRUMPETS OF DEATH NICK JONAH DAVIS Friday 6th November Surface Gallery Nottingham £6
SAT 15th AUGUST - 10PM USURPER & FRITZ WELCH/CR:ACC ENSEMBLE/PYRAMIDION/SCRIM + FILMS BY JOHN MORAN & ELAINE KORDYS St. Stephens, Edinburgh - BYOB - pay what you can