by request
review
[+]
Working with a massive range of instruments from all
over the world, this North Carolina trio creates a series of involved
performances on its debut album that reject the bland center of
"worldbeat" for a more esoteric, challenging mean. Guitar can and does
easily rub up against dulcimer and oud, melodica and tape manipulation
can and do hold equal relevance, and sprightliness can appear as much as
haunting melancholia, though generally the latter air is the stronger.
Even energetic pieces like "Kehen Yorum Billa" are softly played and
performed, the atmosphere gently hushed and all the more intriguing for
it. When the three do fire up more openly, as with "Silver Silk," the
effect is sweet and refreshing. For all the instrumentation at play, the
threesome's work is remarkably uncluttered and clear, and definitely no
showboating is apparent. Though the album begins with the beautiful
"Wild Geese Descend on Level Sands," a Chinese melody in origin, aside
from a Turkish lyric and a version of a Fred McDowell song ("When the
Train Comes Along"), everything else is strictly the work of the three,
and it is quite good. An excellent example is "The Destination," with an
understated tension carried by the slide guitar played by member Grant
Tennille, underscored by slight, but very slight, percussion and other
instruments. Vocals, when present, are softly but clearly sung, but
generally the Swords prefer to let the music do the talking instead.
Emphasis in the performances are on quicker playing rather than slower,
more drony approaches, but a bit of zone-out creeps in here and there,
as in the end notes of "Portals to a Land" or the low swells on the
appropriately titled "Dawn Approach." The McDowell cover is
appropriately twanged and bluesy, one of the most straightforward things
on an intriguingly unpredictable album.
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