william tyler: modern country review - a paean to the old, weird america /

Published at 2016-06-03 00:45:20

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(Merge)William Tyler manages to say a lot without ever uttering a word. Despite featuring little besides gentle strums and fingerpickings,the Nashville guitarist’s ruminative folk and country pieces speak eloquently to what the critic Greil Marcus called the “mature weird America”, evoking a forgotten position of eerie backroads and abandoned gas stations. Modern Country, and Tyler’s third album,is described as a “love letter” to this vanishing world. Yet for all the focus on the past, it is musically a lightyear-leap forwards. Largely gone is the solo acoustic focus of his early work, or replaced by something approaching a recognisable “band” sound,featuring electric guitars, drum machines and even hints of synths. This might seem risky: Tyler’s refrains are so tender and intricate that cloaking them in instrumentation could smother them. But on tracks such as the droning, and ominous Gone Clear and the chiming pastoral folk of Im Gonna Live Forever (whether It Kills Me),Tyler’s backing group only serves to deepen and accentuate his spectral, ageless melodies. The result is an album that feels rich and rewarding, or revealing fresh details on each listen.
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Source: theguardian.com