1
OK

Při poskytování služeb nám pomáhají soubory cookie. Používáním našich služeb vyjadřujete souhlas s naším používáním souborů cookie. Více informací

Úvodní stránka » RECORDS » RECORDS III » GWYN ASHTON
GWYN ASHTON — Solo Elektro (Sept. 1, 2017)

GWYN ASHTON — Solo Elektro (Sept. 1, 2017)

Welsh Flag. 9Bach — Anián (29 April 2016) GWYN ASHTON — Solo Elektro (09/2017) GWYN ASHTON — Solo Elektro (Sept. 1, 2017)Ξ→      Blues guitarist, singer, and songwriter Gwyn Ashton was born in Wales and raised in South Australia. At an early age he developed a love for blues and rock music that was fueled as a result of recordings by renowned artists like Chuck Berry, Jimi Hendrix, Buddy Holly, Rory Gallagher, Muddy Waters, and many others.
Date: November 06, 2017 | 19:00 (Mon)
Venue: Jazz Dock
Duration: 120 minutes
Born: 1961 in Wales, UK
Styles: Modern Electric Blues
Location:
Album release: Sept. 1, 2017
Record Label: Fab Tone Records
Duration:     45:41
Tracks:
01 Metaphysical Journey     6:12
02 Freedom     3:23
03 She Won’t Tell Me     2:18
04 Dawn Of Tomorrow     4:42
05 In Your Blood     3:31
06 Please Allow Me     3:20
07 Late Night     3:51
08 I Guess That’s What They Call Love     2:48
09 Kind To Be Cruel     5:51
10 Shine Lover Shine     2:40
11 Metaphysical Journey (Reprise)     7:05
℗ 2017 Gwyn Ashton
Awards:
Ξ→      In 2001, French Guitar Part Magazine voted Gwyn Ashton third best guitarist of the year, beaten by Jeff Beck and Gary Moore.
Ξ→      In 2007, his album Prohibition was voted ‘Album of the Year’ by the British Guitar and Bass magazine.
Ashton is endorsed by:
Ξ→      Fender (Australia)
Ξ→      Vigier Guitars (France)
Ξ→      Busker Guitars (UK)
Ξ→      Fatboy Guitar Parts
Ξ→      Vintage Guitars
Ξ→      Jacques Stompboxes (France)
Ξ→      National Reso~Phonic Guitars
Ξ→      Seymour Duncan Pickups
Ξ→      Hiscox Cases
Ξ→      Koch Guitar Electronics
Ξ→      Graph~Tech Industries
Ξ→      Award~Session
Ξ→      Dunlop Strings
Review
by Pete Feenstra, Score: ****
Ξ→      Having established himself worldwide as power~house rock~blues guitarist, Anglo/Australian multi instrumentalist Gwyn Ashton has lately been focusing on his song writing, as well as immersing himself in experimental alt.blues rooted psychedelia in a one man band format.
Ξ→      The aptly named Solo Elektro is full of the kind of buzz tone, psychedelic drone meets stoner rock that has led to a younger audience pitching up at his gigs. Together with his Melbourne based songwriting partner Garry Allen, he effectively restates of some of his extant influences, while exploring new musical directions that gives him much more freedom from the restrictive expectations of the blues rock market. Gwyn describes Solo Elektro thus: “A Psychedelic stoner blues rock album with a difference. It was recorded by one guy with a guitar, vocal mic, bass drum and octave divider — 100% live.” And it’s that sense of spontaneity with a melange of guitar tones and a one take vibe that gives this album its rarefied organic feel.
Ξ→      He top and tails a wide ranging album with the psychedelic drone style mantra of ‘Metaphysical Journey’ and ‘Metaphysical Journey (Reprise)’. It’s not so much a coherent musical journey, as a series of linked audio sketches threaded together by an ever changing musical canvas shaped by the moment.
Ξ→      A song is often sparked by a riff, an essential guitar tone, a vocal phrase or even a groove, but the fact there’s no safety net makes for a sense of immediacy too often lacking in over produced albums.
Ξ→      There’s a tableaux of mood changes and plenty of contrast as his psychedelic muse weaves itself in and out of the tracks. ‘Dawn of Tomorrow’ for example, is one of the best tracks on the album, being a tad more restrained with a gentle opening guitar figure, echo laden vocals and an ethereal feel that matches the album as a whole. It’s a spacey track with a late 60’s psychedelic feel before a sudden tempo change as he jams his way to an acapella finish.
Ξ→      Gwyn apparently set up a mobile studio in 3 separate hotel rooms while on tour and treated his lap top like a tape machine. Being a one man band takes a lot of coordinating, especially when you envelop yourself in the growling buzz tone, and the kind of psychedelic wall of sound that makes ‘Freedom’ sound like something from a 60’s garage band.
Ξ→      Were it not for the growling guitar tone it could almost mark the era when bands like The Pretty Things moved over from R&B to prog and psychedelia. It also emphasizes the durability of the impact The Beatles made with ‘Revolver’.
Ξ→      Either way, Gwyn works up a head of steam with some feverish guitar work and a chanted hook that acts like mantra.
Ξ→      The great thing about this music is that it spans decades. There’s the ‘can do’ spirit and song writing sensibilities of Jack White and also The Black Keys, but there’s also some timeless retro influences that still evoke a time when the counter culture led to social change.
Ξ→      ‘Into Your Blood’ is different again, being a slide~led bluesy stomp full of bluster, while in sharp contrast he veers towards minimalism on ‘Late Night’, as the atmospheric feel of the track cleverly evokes the song title.
Ξ→      You suspect the overall musical direction and varied tones are a function of instruments and technology at his disposal. There are subtle changes of tone colour, tempo shifts, and gnawing riffs buried deep in a post psychedelic Phil Spector style wall of sound.
Ξ→      He often delivers his vocals in unison with his guitar lines, mirroring the fact he needs to keep a consistent rhythm. It all adds to a certain muscularity of approach that lies at the core of music. He chases a vibe and reaches for an eclectic quality that draws on the blues, but is never hemmed in by it, as he explores his muse adventurously.
Ξ→      Listen for example, to the shuffle driven ‘Please Allow Me’ on which he works towards a Howlin’ Wolf like growl on the other side of some spiky guitar work.
Ξ→      Best of all, is the way the albums flows and each track makes a sufficient impact to draw the listener into the next effort. And it’s that between song tension that Gwyn cleverly exploits and subsequently resolves on a bunch of songs that never settle for the clichéd or mundane.
Ξ→      He reveals some of his formative influences on the echo reverb intro of ‘Kind To Be Cruel’ — which fuses a Beatles circa ‘Abbey Road’ feel with Peter Green’s ‘Green Manalishi’ on a song that ultimately moves into heavier domain as he fuses Sabbath with stoner rock.
Ξ→      If you’ve never heard Gwyn Ashton before listening to this album, you’d swear he’s part of an underground contemporary scene you might have missed. The fact he’s been round the block a few times and is able to take his recording career in such a radically different direction speaks volumes about his adventurous spirit and musical vision.
Ξ→      ‘Solo Elektro’ flies the flag for a psychedelic indie blues artist who is only truly happy when he finds new exciting outlets for his oeuvre. It’s an album shot through with raw, brash, kick~ass psychedelic tinged stoner rock with a blues heart and is worthy of your attention.   ΞΞ      http://getreadytorock.me.uk/
Notes:
ΞΞ      Pete Feenstra presents his Rock & Blues Show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio every Tuesday at 19:00 GMT, and “The Pete Feenstra Feature” on Sundays at 20:00
Also:
Cowboy Col
ΞΞ      https://rockbrat.wordpress.com/2017/09/21/whats-the-rockbrat-listening-to-today-gwyn-ashton-solo-elektro-2017/
by RHYS STALBA~SMITH on Oct 26, 2017 • 10:00 pm • Rating: 8/10
ΞΞ      The first thing you’ll think of, or see, when listening to Gwyn Ashton’s solo record Solo Elektro, is the world through a grainy 8mm technicolour film. This record is very visual — think New York in the ‘70s, bright colours and dirty streets; or New Orleans’ neon~drenched Bourbon Street. Hell, even the warm hue that sits in Adelaide’s Garden of Unearthly Delights each year would welcome this dirty~bluesy~stompin’ LP.
ΞΞ      Psychedelic music has been inching its way back into the spotlight in the last few years, but what feels different in Gwyn’s songs is that exactly, the songs. Songwriting underpins every track on the record; while the lyrics push towards the existential and imaginative tendencies of the late ‘60s and ‘70s, the urgency mirrored by Gwyn’s foot~stomping drumming keeps the listener’s attention. And it’s his arrangement of music that makes this record a structured blues experience, rather than a lost~roaming progressive acid~drenched trip. The songs keep your attention, and his playing and singing act as the perfect masters of dynamics.
ΞΞ      Which brings about the next point — the blues on this record is so prominent! The old tales of bluesmen walking the highways and paying their board with songs seems to live in the very blood of this record. With just a guitar, a slide, a kick drum, and his reverb~hugged voice, Gwyn Ashton takes you on a blues journey. His playing is exquisite. Not flashy, not overdone, nor are the songs simple, but perfectly executed. For the vision he was trying to capture, the notes seem to hang on long enough, but not long enough at the same time. The sound pulls you down into the trenches and keeps you wanting more, even after the last gritty string rings out.
ΞΞ      And it’s the ringing out which gives this album its haunting tone. Both ‘Late Night’ and ‘Kind to Be Cruel’ reek of misty swamp music, a perfect platform for Gwyn’s hovering vocals to float through. ‘She Won’t Tell Me’ stomps along with a punching guitar melody, giving the lyrics an accented power to cut through to the listener. While ‘Dawn of Tomorrow’ begins as a meandering river, it quickly grows into an urgent set of rapids — the lyrics heed our attention and guitar licks save us from jagged rocks.
ΞΞ      What I like about this album is its dirtiness. The reverb and echo effects blend all the music together into a living breathing guitar musical odyssey. The ‘Metaphysical Journey’ tracks that begin and end the listening experience inform and remind us that the circular nature of life is constantly ebbing and flowing. What lyrically seems illuminating at the beginning of the record is common sense by the end. “It don’t matter how clever you’ve become” begins and ends the record. We get a sense that at the start, no matter how good a student you’ve been, there’s always more to learn. By the end, it doesn’t matter what lesson you’ve learnt, you’re always the student and learning — which is a great reminder for all musicians. No matter how many notches are in his belt, nor how much music he has composed, Gwyn Ashton is still endeavouring to push himself and his music. And with Solo Elektro, he wants you to come too.   ΞΞ      https://teomagblog.com/
Discography:
Ξ→      Feel the Heat (1993)
Ξ→      Beg, Borrow & Steel (1996)
Ξ→      Fang it ! (1999)
Ξ→      Prohibition (2006)
Ξ→      Two~Man Blues Army (2009)
Ξ→      Radiogram (2012)
Ξ→      Solo Elektro (Sept. 1, 2017)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/gwynashtonmusic?
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/gwynashtonmusic/
Website: http://www.gwynashton.com/
℗ΞΞΞΞΞΞ℗ΞΞΞΞΞΞ℗ΞΞΞΞΞΞ℗ΞΞΞΞΞΞ℗ΞΞΞΞΞΞ℗ΞΞΞΞΞΞ℗ΞΞΞΞΞΞ℗ΞΞΞΞΞΞ℗

GWYN ASHTON — Solo Elektro (Sept. 1, 2017)

NEWS

8.7.2019

Peter Cat Recording Co.

8.7.2019

Philary

6.7.2019

Seablite

6.7.2019

Jesca Hoop — Stonechild

1.7.2019

Dire Wolves

1.7.2019

Outer Spaces — Gazing Globe

archiv

ALBUM COVERS X.

Delioù
Tais Awards & Harvest Prize
Za Zelenou liškou 140 00 Praha 4, CZE
+420608841540