Why is John Fahey So Boring?

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He divides his time between Lake Chelan, where he and his wife own and operate a vacation rental business, and Restlawn Memory Gardens in West Salem, Oregon.

christmas candy bar (al leong), Thursday, 29 August 2013 20:25 (twelve years ago)

The legend:
http://g-ecx.images-amazon.com/images/G/01/ciu/e1/80/d79086cff4280a7f02359d.L._V146557155_SY470_.jpg

Evan, Thursday, 29 August 2013 20:29 (twelve years ago)

Revelation on the Banks of Lake Chelan

tylerw, Thursday, 29 August 2013 20:32 (twelve years ago)

it's weird if they didn't reach out to peter lang and leo kottke

everything I do is funky like Debussy (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 29 August 2013 20:33 (twelve years ago)

guess it was shown in NYC w/ screenings in seattle coming up
USA Theatrical Release:
August 16-22 New York City, NY. Cinema Village, Manhattan.
September 6-12 Seattle, WA. Grand Illusion Cinema.
http://www.johnfaheyfilm.com

tylerw, Thursday, 29 August 2013 20:40 (twelve years ago)

they should have talked to my pal doug decker. he worked at takoma for years and engineered/produced a bunch of fahey stuff. he's a wealth of info. then again maybe they did. i haven't seen the thing.

scott seward, Thursday, 29 August 2013 21:25 (twelve years ago)

screened in portland last october, was serviceable

bear, bear, bear, Thursday, 29 August 2013 21:38 (twelve years ago)

way more psyched about the book

tylerw, Thursday, 29 August 2013 21:39 (twelve years ago)

xp can you resolve the hot issue of who they had as talking heads?

ogmor, Thursday, 29 August 2013 21:42 (twelve years ago)

chris funk of the decemberists explains punk rock

tylerw, Thursday, 29 August 2013 21:45 (twelve years ago)

xp not entirely, no. nnck dude definitely, decembrists guy gets a lot of time. b coley maybe? not too broad a cast. had heard that the filmmaker ran into some issues getting people on board for one reason or another. def works as a sort of primer for folks and is a net positive for that, but maybe not a lot for heads or whatever.

bear, bear, bear, Thursday, 29 August 2013 21:51 (twelve years ago)

is there any particular reason the decembrists guy is even in there? does he make cool solo records we should know about? (not picking on him, i'm sure he is a good dude, just curious, seems like a random guy to interview).

tylerw, Thursday, 29 August 2013 21:56 (twelve years ago)

Chris used to live in Eugene and is a good guy based on my experience and friends in common, fwiw but I dunno why he would be in this - Fahey played in Eugene a fair amount near the end and released a record on a local label so there are some connections.

(I am really busy and have not watched the video)

money, chicken and other DNA (sleeve), Thursday, 29 August 2013 23:34 (twelve years ago)

sufjan stevens was on a fahey tribute album i reviewed for the Voice once. does HE make cool solo albums that we should know about?

scott seward, Thursday, 29 August 2013 23:40 (twelve years ago)

who will chip in for my basho doc kickstarter if i get sufjan stevens to talk about how he was influenced by zarthus when making illinoise

ogmor, Thursday, 29 August 2013 23:55 (twelve years ago)

sufjan stevens was on a fahey tribute album i reviewed for the Voice once. does HE make cool solo albums that we should know about?
not entirely sure what your point is, but i guess you're trying to be a dick? bravo!

tylerw, Friday, 30 August 2013 05:21 (twelve years ago)

And where I was once astounded by his machine-like precision, I am now driven mad by his machine-like precision.

So, why is John Fahey's music so boring?

― valdemar (nubbin), Tuesday, January 10, 2006 2:25 AM (7 years ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

^this is kinda weird, from the original post....machine-like precision is not something i would use to describe fahey at all!

everything I do is funky like Debussy (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 30 August 2013 14:05 (twelve years ago)

No definitely not.

#fomo that's the motto (Hurting 2), Friday, 30 August 2013 14:08 (twelve years ago)

if anything he's on the sloppier side compared to like kottke or lang or lots of players really, and he really goes in and out of tempos (in a cool way IMO but still it's not conventionally "correct")

everything I do is funky like Debussy (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 30 August 2013 14:10 (twelve years ago)

If he's "boring" at all it's usually because he gets either droney or meandery, sounding like a stoned dude fucking around in his bedroom. But even his more boring moments have a certain charm to them.

#fomo that's the motto (Hurting 2), Friday, 30 August 2013 14:17 (twelve years ago)

I hate this fucking thread title.

Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Friday, 30 August 2013 14:50 (twelve years ago)

I received a DVD of the Fahey documentary a few months back in return for supporting the project via Kickstarter. I was very much looking forward to it but found it disappointing. Somehow fails to get beyond uninspiring talking heads telling us what a pioneer Fahey was (I can't remember an example, but I cringed on a couple of occasions).

Duke, Friday, 30 August 2013 16:16 (twelve years ago)

^ ^ I realise many music docs are like that, but I'd hoped for something more.

Duke, Friday, 30 August 2013 16:17 (twelve years ago)

"not entirely sure what your point is, but i guess you're trying to be a dick? bravo!"

people were wondering why the decemberists guy was in the doc. when i got that tribute album i kinda wondered why sufjan stevens was on it. that's all there is too it.

scott seward, Friday, 30 August 2013 16:18 (twelve years ago)

which i didn't think would be that hard to understand. cuz as far as i knew back then sufjan made twee indie rock albums.

scott seward, Friday, 30 August 2013 16:21 (twelve years ago)

ok sorry

tylerw, Friday, 30 August 2013 16:23 (twelve years ago)

i think fahey is both mechanical & meandering. as the exemplar of extreme repetitive finger-picking patterns & alternating basslines, he has a mechanical quality, his right hand an unstoppable piston looping endlessly w/ minimal left hand work. cf. night train of valhalla, on the beach at waikiki, sun gonna shine in my backdoor someday blues, america... ppl like harris newman & leo kottke have extended this, but it's all from him.

he is also the consummate meanderer imo, a flaneur in his mental archive, recycling himself & others, inventing 12 minute intros to 4 minute songs &c. all that meandering is context tho, it ebbs, builds, & allows him to do things like slam down a rendition of camptown races as a triumphant, glistening, unstoppable finishing move.

ogmor, Friday, 30 August 2013 18:20 (twelve years ago)

always meant to hear Harris Newman. Ogmor, how do you rate him? I'm skeptical of the Constellation crowd and always confuse him with Frankie Sparo for some reason, but I hear he's done some worthwhile stuff.

Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Friday, 30 August 2013 18:45 (twelve years ago)

harris newman plays standing up! i think he's underrated, he did some cool stuff. perhaps constellation association, and mb things like having star wars references for track names put some ppl off. he could play very fast, w/ very neat, clean timing, giving it a kind of hard swing. maybe it's just me but i think he is also audibly from the North, you can hear the cold steel in those strings, there are lots of tssty harmonies/dissonances in there, as well as more of yr standard constellation ghost-in-a-rusting-junkyard vibe on some of his slide stuff&duets. he has some really nice bass lines which he tends to deploy under fast droning notes, sort of like a dead-eyed viking maybelle carter.

his first album is mb a bit rougher, but i like his second record, accidents with nature and each other, after that he seems to have started to recycle himself.

ogmor, Saturday, 31 August 2013 13:22 (twelve years ago)

...he is also audibly from the North, you can hear the cold steel in those strings, there are lots of tssty harmonies/dissonances in there, as well as more of yr standard constellation ghost-in-a-rusting-junkyard vibe on some of his slide stuff&duets. he has some really nice bass lines which he tends to deploy under fast droning notes, sort of like a dead-eyed viking maybelle carter.

Sold! Thanks. You oughta write press releases!

Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Saturday, 31 August 2013 13:54 (twelve years ago)

all jobs considered.

can't find it on youtube but my single track recommendation wld be "cloud city" from accidents

ogmor, Saturday, 31 August 2013 14:12 (twelve years ago)

On it. There's a used coy of that album at my local shop, going there for labor day sale tomorrow, will pick it up. Thanks again.

Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Saturday, 31 August 2013 20:25 (twelve years ago)

if i knew dude wrote songs with star wars referencing titles i would have been buying his records like, years ago!

i guess i'd just rather listen to canned heat? (ian), Sunday, 1 September 2013 02:31 (twelve years ago)

Have you heard his rendition of the Cantina Theme? Twelve minutes if meandering introduction followed by a machine-like rendition of the main theme. Jaw dropping.

Naive Teen Idol, Wednesday, 4 September 2013 11:26 (twelve years ago)

lol, i feel like this is almost worth writing

ogmor, Wednesday, 4 September 2013 21:48 (twelve years ago)

just trying to fit my head back together after reading that Cantina Theme thing thinking it was about Fahey.

Waluigi Nono (Merdeyeux), Wednesday, 4 September 2013 22:36 (twelve years ago)

if you listen to in a persian market & do whatever the aural equivalent of squinting is, you won't be too far off

ogmor, Wednesday, 4 September 2013 22:38 (twelve years ago)

two months pass...

a fairly big fahey piece in the guardian in advance of a bbc screening of the documentary:

http://www.theguardian.com/music/2013/nov/26/john-fahey-blues-folk-guitar-pioneer

space bl00ps (NickB), Tuesday, 26 November 2013 20:25 (twelve years ago)

Fahey's so much better than any Brautigan I've ever read that fuck me like fried potatoes I don't like seeing the two linked.

_Rudipherous_, Tuesday, 26 November 2013 21:42 (twelve years ago)

half expect "fuck me liked fried potatoes" to be some reference to a song in the pop charts right now

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Tuesday, 26 November 2013 22:27 (twelve years ago)

agree about the brautigan thing, but that's not as terrible as i was expecting

ogmor, Wednesday, 27 November 2013 00:23 (twelve years ago)

uk tv alert: just remembered the fahey doc is on tonight @ 11.00 bbc4

rp boo bryson (NickB), Friday, 6 December 2013 22:45 (twelve years ago)

R. Crumb didn't think he was boring: "John Fahey – he was a crazy asshole. A psycho."

tylerw, Friday, 6 December 2013 22:51 (twelve years ago)

i know i am the biggest fahey fanboy but i am really enjoying this. having a hot friday night in naming all the tracks as they show up.

ogmor, Friday, 6 December 2013 23:21 (twelve years ago)

omg this footage of him making fun of stefan grossman! aaah i need to record this.

ogmor, Friday, 6 December 2013 23:29 (twelve years ago)

glad i saw that but shit it's left me feeling sad about fahey now

rp boo bryson (NickB), Saturday, 7 December 2013 00:07 (twelve years ago)

i have felt v sad about fahey in the past, but now watching this, and especially seeing new footage of fahey, is just really exciting.

this was much better than the trailer led me expect! i thought it was balanced, didn't leave anything really major out or get anything really wrong, and handled his personal struggles really well. there got some great talking heads too: very cool to see terry robb interviewed, as well as barry hansen, melody fahey, keith from nnck, even pete townshend's bit was sweet. if it was half an hour longer there could have been more stuff about takoma records, bola sete, kottke, basho, some stuff about his writing, something on the records themselves, the liner notes & all the mythology, and if there'd been some more musical analysis, at least a bit about open tunings, finger-picking &c., that would have been cool. but, as someone who never met him but has consumed pretty much all the widely available material on him, i thought it gave a really good sense of him and i had an awesome time watching it.

ogmor, Saturday, 7 December 2013 00:38 (twelve years ago)

Watched this half-asleep (its been a tough week). Like how there were a few readings from his books...possibly enjoy that more than the music. I felt like listening to Charley Patton a lot more than Fahey by the end.

The mocking attitude towards blues/collectors could've made the Blues doc that was on earlier in the eve a much more enjoyable experience, unlike the usual bore-fest that it was.

Didn't know Fahey was even that much of a name so that Townsend knew about him - thought he got him 'wrong' when he was describing the sensibility. Seems as if Indian Raga is a big component of what he does, not much 'rock n' roll' there at all, and by drawing on ancient court music it is THAT where the association to 'primitive' actually makes sense to me.

When is the Loren Connors doc being shown then?

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 7 December 2013 08:55 (twelve years ago)

I guess I'll see this when it comes out on DVD.

Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Saturday, 7 December 2013 09:48 (twelve years ago)


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