Noctambule, The Waking (independent, 2015) At its core -- that is, without supporting players and harmony singers in the recording studio -- Noctambule is Marla Fibish and Bruce Victor, Bay Area musicians with a taste for modern poetry. I reviewed their previous release, Travel in the Shadows, here on 7 September 2013. Like The Waking, Travel consists of poems set to spare but impressively imagined acoustic music that nods toward classical and Irish-accented folk.
I am impressed at how seemingly easily -- though it couldn't have been easy in practice -- Fish, Victor and associates bridge the gap between words meant to be spoken and melodies meant to be sung. In such circumstances the words often overwhelm the melody, turning the recitation more into a kind of chant than a full-fledged song. Not the case here. To my hearing the approach works particularly effectively on Benet's "Sally Dupre," which lingers on the mental jukebox long after it's aired on the player. Another highlight is the title song, from a Roethke poem, an inspired meditation on one's existential state as surveyed during a morning walk. The guitar run that opens Auden's "If I Could Tell You" affords the listener the brief impression that the late Gabby Pahinui has shown up out of somewhere. The single misfire is in the handling of Joseph's comic "Warning," which is explicitly in a woman's voice. Though Fibish is a first-rate vocalist who could have perfectly commanded the narrative (concerning a woman's vow to be unfettered and crazy when she gets old), Victor sings it, not very compellingly or interestingly. If this is supposed to be a joke, I'm afraid it falls flat. Still, this is a fulfilling and nicely conceived recording overall. The moral of the story comes courtesy of Auden: "Time will say nothing but I told you so." ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET music review by Jerome Clark 6 February 2016 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |