Iain Matthews & Searing Quartet - Joy Mining (2008) Lossless
Artist: Iain Matthews, Searing Quartet
Title: Joy Mining
Year Of Release: 2008
Label: Fledg'ling Records
Genre: Jazz, Folk, Singer Songwriter
Quality: Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
Total Time: 01:12:37
Total Size: 420 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: Joy Mining
Year Of Release: 2008
Label: Fledg'ling Records
Genre: Jazz, Folk, Singer Songwriter
Quality: Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
Total Time: 01:12:37
Total Size: 420 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. St. Theresa's Ghost
02. In Spite Of Myself
03. Fishing
04. My Town
05. Randolph Scott
06. God's Eye View
07. Waves
08. Reservoir
09. The Solid Stuff
10. Another Night In Paradise
11. Shakespeare's Typewriter
12. 1944
Line-up:
Bass – Norbert Leurs
Drums – Sjoerd Rutten
Piano – Egbert Derix
Saxophone – Peter Hermesdorf
Vocals – Iain Matthews
This is not typically what you are looking for in a Iain Matthews record. For Joy Mining, the Fairport Convention co-founder and dignified U.K. folkie joined forces with a Dutch jazz ensemble, Searing Quartet, and its leader, pianist Egbert Derix. It seems Matthews always dreamed of making a jazz album, so he took his time and, instead of opting for a jazzified set of his classic songs, he co-wrote a whole set of new songs with Derix. As a result, this album is not Matthews plus jazz band, or jazz band plays the hits of Matthews, but a bona fide collaboration between an A-list lyricist and a very good jazz songwriter. Sure, the album has a strong easy listening/baby boomer flavor, but the match is so perfectly made, and the songs so addictive, that you can only bliss out to Derix's velvety motives, Peter Hermesdorf's romantic sax lines, and Iain Matthews' experienced, well-honed voice, just smoky enough to make the project work. Highlights include "St. Theresa's Ghost" ("She won't recall...fair times at all"), "My Town" ("Let's go back to your town/We can't go back to mine/My town hit the poorhouse in 1969"), and "Reservoir" ("You are my reservoir/Life on a distant star"). Even when Matthews sings about forgotten cowboys ("Randolph Scott"), his words ring true and echo through Derix's piano keys. Iain Matthews has been quite vocal about Joy Mining being the best album of his career and, honestly, even though it stands outside of his regular productions, it's hard not to agree.