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Kirk Rundstrom and
his virtuoso musical pranksters are back and country music is
no safer now than it was when Rundstrom last played with his
musical chemistry set and created an entire new atomically charged
element, "Wicked Savior," his innovative and genre-busting
previous independent release. With "Blue China," Rundstrom
continues his mission to stretch the limits to which banjos and
mandolins and acoustic guitars grounded in the bluegrass tradition
can play. "Blue China" is another burst of brilliant
innovation and creation that takes these simple instruments into
the realm of jazz, punk rock, speed metal, Indian ragas, and
to classical Middle Eastern and Far Eastern music.
Rundstrom's composition and
studio engineering skills continue to expand. The songs on "Blue
China" are even more conceptually complex and intricate
than those on "Wicked Savior." Rundstom's musical dictionary
is the unabridged version and with his Einsteinian musical vocabulary
he has created an album of songs that contains even more complex
structural movements and color textures than "Wicked Savior."
There is so much new and completely unique music on "Blue
China" that, when combined with the music on "Wicked
Savior," it is rapidly becoming quite apparent that Rundstrom
and his friends Mike West, Myshkin, Colin Sean Mahoney, Brain
Schey and Eric Mardis (Split Lip Rayfield) are creating a whole
new as-yet-unnamed genre with the on-going round of musical experiments
in their Lawrence, Kansas sound laboratory.
This new music features chord progressions the likes of which
have never been heard before within the context of popular music.
These progressions are so quick, nimble and precise that they
give the music a dense underlying punk percussiveness that is
absolutely attention-gripping. One thing is for certain: the
new genre is the anti-Muzak, the exact opposite of background
music the listener takes in without any conscious thought process.
With Rundstrom's compositions and his supersonic playing partners,
the brain is engaged by every note and shift of nuance. This
is not music for the close-minded, the musically restricted,
or for genre purists. This is music for the curious and open-minded
(i.e. it won't be getting much radio play).
The record opens with Rundstrom on his acoustic guitar rocket,
but from the first notes it is obvious that this is no Doc Watson
record. The scale is too wide, the rhythms too off the beaten
path. When Mardis falls into the mix with his jackhammer electric
guitar playing in concert with Mahoney's drums and Schey on bass,
the whole composition takes on a punk-rockers-with-jazz-training
feel. There is an orchestral intensity to the rhythm section
playing, while Rundstrom's acoustic guitar and his singing with
Myshkin seem to be on a completely different plane. The effect
is intense and trance-inducing.
But this is just the warmup. 'John Farmer (I, II, III)' finds
the ensemble moving effortlessly through a complex composition
that takes them from mountain music to hot jazz sounds which
gradually progress via interpolation into the boundaries of raga
via Mike West's banjo. Although I spent considerable time in
India and am quite familiar with Indian musical forms, I had
never considered the banjo as an approximator of the sitar, but
Mr. West takes us straight to India with his dexterous playing
as Rundstrom lays in some incredible acoustic guitar support
for West's stratospheric flights. This is one of the most interesting
pieces of music I've heard in years.
The title track could be considered a jazz composition for
banjo and guitar were it not for Rundstrom's penchant for switching
genres movement by movement. 'Blue China' has a lilting, otherworldly
jazz feel until the band progresses into a crash-banging punk
interlude. But just as easily, the band retraces it steps and
simmers back into cool-jazz mode, with Myshkin adding some tantalizing
and evocative scats in the background.
'Gentleman' is one of those bareback rocket rides of Rundstrom's
in the same vein as 'Outlaw' on "Wicked Savior." This
cut explodes like a 10-shot Roman candle. The Weather Channel
should broadcast a tornado warning every time this cut comes
around on the CD player.
Myshkin, the New Orleans-based folk jazzer, wrote the lyrics
and sings the lilting 'Cherry' in a cool blue voice reminiscent
of 'Girl from Ipanema.' West turns his banjo into a first-rate
jazz lead instrument here.
'Gold' might be described as in the Split Lip Rayfield vein.
Rundstrom's SLR work has always been marked by dark, threatening
lyrics that waffle along the psychopathic edge, and 'Gold' certainly
qualifies in that respect.
Take the bitterness pill
Help you describe what I feel
Raging inside of my brain
I run in the night, screamin' with fright
I can't be happy no more
'Catch Me, I'm In Hell' finds Rundstrom, the composer, grafting
country banjo and acoustic guitar movements onto the steam engine
of hard rock with amazing effect. This is another composition
the likes of which most listeners have never experienced or even
conceived. There is dark, mystic alchemy at work here with Mr.
Mardis' electric guitar work, made even more dramatic and effective
by a sophisticated segue into a distinctly separate banjo-led
hot jazz movement, with Myshkin taking the lead vocal that is
reminiscent of Sade or the Brazilian whisper of Flora Purim and
is made all the more transfixing by a where-the-hell-did-that-come-from
steel guitar solo that absolutely works and makes the listener's
brain glow like a glob of Kryptonite. But Rundstom isn't through,
as he again deftly segues into another mixed bag of jazz, rock
and Mike West banjo insanity. There are echoes of Arthur ("I
am the God of hellfire") Brown in Rundstrom's sinister vocal
delivery on the final movement. This song is a mad symphony in
and of itself.
'Stranger' is a beautiful country doo-wop tune with typical
Rundstrom/SLR complicated-life lyrics.
She's barely legal and I'm hardly free
Who'd ever figure that she'd run with me
Can you help me, stranger, can you help me friend
There's no help comin', you'd better start runnin', you're in
trouble again
'Salena' is another percussive speed-of-light atomic meltdown
that challenges all the conventional rules. The split second
timing and coordination among the players would be a thing of
wonderment were it not for our knowledge that we are dealing
with players who are first and foremost bluegrass virtuosos here.
Rundstrom has reworked two tracks from his latest Split Lip
Rayfield release, "Never Make It Home." 'Thief' is
rendered here with a little less intensity and more darkness
than the SLR version, while 'Record Shop' is given more crash
and bang due to drums and electric bass.
Kirk Rundstrom is establishing himself as one of the most
original innovators and interpolators on the popular music scene
today. The fact that he remains a cult-like figure completely
undiscovered by the mass audience and ignored by commercial radio
explains more about the rut that popular taste is in than anything
about Mr. Rundstrom's extraordinary music. If we can rightly
call popular music a true art form, Mr. Rundstrom is our misunderstood
and wrongly ignored Van Gogh. And that kind of misunderstanding
and ignorance should be a crime.
* Kirk Rundstrom's amazing musical masterpieces aren't available
at the Louvre or at the Museum of Fine Arts, but you can find
them at www.catamountco.com
, the far-sighted record company that brought us Gurf Morlix's
"Toad of Titicaca."
Contact William Michael Smith at: wms-at-rockzilla.net
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