Dan McCarthy - Songs of the Doomed: Some Jaded, Atavistic Freakout (2022) [Hi-Res]

  • 11 Nov, 09:10
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Artist:
Title: Songs of the Doomed: Some Jaded, Atavistic Freakout
Year Of Release: 2022
Label: TPR Records
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / 24bit-44.1kHz FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 57:12
Total Size: 322 / 622 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Morning in Woody Creek (1:51)
2. Hell's Angels (4:36)
3. Some Jaded, Atavistic Freakout (7:32)
4. Irresponsible Gibberish (0:54)
5. We Were Somewhere Around Barstow (5:22)
6. Kingdom of Fear (3:13)
7. What Limes? (4:54)
8. Strange Rumblings in Aztlan (4:35)
9. The High-Water Mark (8:19)
10. Owl Farm (6:30)
11. Gonzo Journalism Article #3 (4:17)
12. White Rabbit (feat. Jenn McCarthy) (2:55)
13. Evening in Woody Creek (2:21)

Dan McCarthy’s Songs of the Doomed: “Some Jaded, Atavistic Freakout” is an album of (almost all original) music inspired by the writing of political journalist and general dingbat Hunter S. Thompson. A lot of the jangled madness that makes up this band’s repertoire comes from a new compositional style created specifically for this band called the ‘Gonzo Cypher’. The cypher allows you to take a word, phrase, or even paragraph of Hunter’s writing, submit it to the cypher, and what you are left with is a weird and likely obnoxious ‘tone row’, which is then used to compose the music - serial music rules apply.

The sound of the band is inspired by the Gary Burton Quintet from the 1970s on ECM Records, which was weird in its own right, and featured Gary on vibes, along with two guitars (Metheny and Goodrick), bass (Steve Swallow), and drums (Bob Moses). This mess of chordal instruments allows for the creation of some thick tapestries of sound, and also allows the band to get weird and intense, not unlike The Grateful Dead or Jimi Hendrix. Perhaps Songs of the Doomed will achieve fame equal to those artists.

Or maybe not. But, the uniqueness of this project leads me to believe that audiences everywhere will clammer for more. To quote the Canadian jazz legend Don Thomspon,

“(Songs of the Doomed) is killing on every level… I think you're really onto something. It's not like anything I've heard before.”

So grab a pint of whiskey, settle in, and let the vibes (no pun intended) wash over you. Once the initial waves of fear and loathing pass, you’ll probably really dig it.

Dan McCarthy, vibraphone
Don Scott, guitar
Luan Phung, guitar
Daniel Fortin, bass
Ernesto Cervini, drums

Jenn McCarthy, vocals (track 12)