Daithi Sproule, The Crow in the Sun (New Folk, 2008) Let's start with two complaints: The first: This is only Daithi Sproule's second solo album. Such paltry output amounts to an outrage on lovers of fine music everywhere. The second: The Crow in the Sun, whose elegant beauty nobody with ears will fail to appreciate, has none of Sproule's vocals, this in spite of the truth that he's as good a ballad singer as any Irish artist currently breathing, as witness his one other disc, A Heart Made of Glass (Green Linnet, 1993), and his all too rare vocals with Altan. Is there a better version of "The Bonny Bunch of Roses" anywhere?
The folk music of the British Isles did not meet the guitar until the mid-20th-century revivals, of course, but masters like Sproule make the two feel like a natural match. Two of the most influential figures in that transition, Bert Jansch and John Renbourn, taught and cast their shadow over a whole generation of acoustic guitarists. Their influence is apparent (and acknowledged) in some of the earlier pieces here. Later, Sproule went on to absorb more -- "A Shot of Ry," last name Cooder, nods to one of them -- and to refine his own delicate finger-picking, with classical and, more faintly, blues echoes, into his own unique approach. It is grand and glorious stuff, and I've listened to Crow repeatedly since it arrived in a package from Rambles.NET a few weeks ago. I just hope we don't have to wait another 15 years for the next one. And next time -- there will be a next time, I hope -- I would be thrilled to hear some ballads along with the instrumentals. Crow will do for now, however, and it does very well indeed. [ visit the artist's website ] ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET review by Jerome Clark 8 November 2008 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |