ギタリストJames Elkingtonによるギターを使ったインスト作品。彼は"目的のない音楽"を作り続けている。毎朝起きて頭に浮かんだことを即興でレコーディングする。唯一自分に課したルールはほとんどの音をギターで作り、自分が求めている状態に仕上げる為に後からスピードを変えたり加工したりすること。
発売・販売元 提供資料(2023/11/14)
Although he has made two solo albums of elegantly detailed singer/songwriter folk, James Elkington appears most often as a collaborator. The Chicago-based British musician has worked on a variety of projects with artists like Richard Thompson, Jeff Tweedy, and Eleventh Dream Day and teamed up with fellow guitarist Nathan Salsburg for a couple of instrumental duet records. He has also produced albums for American folk artists Joan Shelley and Jake Xerxes Fussell, but on his third solo release, Elkington offers something looser and more cerebral than anything else in his catalog. At 29 tracks, Me Neither is easily his most experimental outing. The double album consists entirely of guitar improvisations captured each morning in his home studio. For an artist who has previously presented his music so deliberately, Me Neither is rather fascinating in its freewheeling energy. As a guitarist, Elkington is naturally conversant in the kind of jazzy U.K. trad-folk of Bert Jansch and John Renbourn, but he also bares traces of American Primitive, indie rock, prog rock, and avant-garde in his style. That these pieces, recorded quickly and with little cohesion, were made with no intention for release is what makes them so charming. Solo acoustic etudes are strung between fractured ambient drones, blues-folk vamps, and shambling multi-tracked experiments, some barebones and others wonky with effects. If Elkington were any less a guitarist, this all might seem underwhelming, but his imagination and natural grace carry the day. In his notes he describes this set as "music for which there was no purpose," or more favorably "library music." Whatever his intent, or lack thereof, Me Neither is surprisingly engaging and fresh. ~ Timothy Monger
Rovi