Bill MacKay - Esker (2017)
BAND/ARTIST: Bill MacKay
- Title: Esker
- Year Of Release: 2017
- Label: Drag City
- Genre: Folk
- Quality: FLAC (tracks)
- Total Time: 32:28 min
- Total Size: 151 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Aster 1:31
02. Twilight 2:01
03. Candy 3:22
04. Clementine Cotton 3:52
05. Persona 3:09
06. Powder Mill Park 3:15
07. Rise 2:13
08. The Hollows 0:56
09. Wail 4:42
10. Scarlet's Return 7:34
01. Aster 1:31
02. Twilight 2:01
03. Candy 3:22
04. Clementine Cotton 3:52
05. Persona 3:09
06. Powder Mill Park 3:15
07. Rise 2:13
08. The Hollows 0:56
09. Wail 4:42
10. Scarlet's Return 7:34
ill MacKay is an acclaimed guitarist-composer-improviser based in Chicago whose music ranges freely across experimental folk, rock, and avant-garde scenes. His creative, unpredictable approach to the guitar is augmented by his original approach to songwriting. He is also a writer and visual artist. He has been recording & releasing records, and contributing to those of other musicians, since 2004. He is best known to rock fans as the founder of the bands Sounds of Now, Broken Things, and Darts & Arrows. He is also a prolific collaborator with artists across the musical spectrum.
MacKay was born in Tarrytown, New York, on April 3, 1968. He grew up in Rochester, New York, and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the son of a trumpeter (both parents were fans of Broadway show tunes, classical music, and jazz). His early influences included the Beatles, Frédéric Chopin, John and Alice Coltrane, Jimi Hendrix, Laura Nyro, Olivier Messiaen, the Velvet Underground, Duke Ellington, Jerry Goldsmith, and Astor Piazzolla. MacKay was also moved by literary figures like beat poets Kenneth Patchen and Jack Kerouac, Thomas Wolfe, Sylvia Plath, Hermann Hesse, Arthur Rimbaud, Michael McClure, Edgar Allan Poe, and Antonin Artaud. In Rochester, he briefly studied classical guitar with Kevin Morse, and in Pittsburgh he was in the music program at Chartiers Valley High School from 1982-1984 and Penn Hills High School, graduating in 1986, taking further instruction with guitarists Eric Susoeff and Joe Negri. MacKay attended the Berklee College of Music in Boston for the next two years and took a course in improvisation and composition with pianist, violinist, composer, and singer Frédéric Alice Orpheus at the New England Conservatory in 2005.
Shortly after arriving in Chicago he networked across several musical communities. In 2005, he contributed to vanguard jazz violinist SavoirFaire's Running Out of Time on Delmark. The same year, Bill Mackay & Sounds of Now was issued by Sons of Fire. Broken Things made its recorded debut in 2007 with the wildly eclectic album Swim to the River, a set that wove soundstack-style sounds with hard rock and modal and free jazz. It proved a busy year as MacKay also played with Colorlist on their debut Lists, and with bassist Jason Ajemian's unit Who Cares How Long You Sink's debut offering Folk Forms Evaporate Big Sky. In 2010, MacKay was an integral part of the band that brought late songwriter Paul Mooney's Because of a Woman to fruition. The songwriter/poet who fought a lifelong battle with cystic fibrosis had recorded vocal and guitar tracks with the hope of completing an album. He died after finishing six songs. His brothers enlisted MacKay, Dorian Taj, and Ronda Duvall to complete them. The same year, Bill MacKay and Darts & Arrows released their eponymous debut. The band included Matthew Golombisky on bass, Ben Boye on keyboards, and Charles Rumback on drums. Greg Ward contributed clarinet to the set's most poignant tune, "Black Leaves."
The next few years were full of frenzied activity. In 2011, he was a recording member of jazz bassist Marc Plane's Walk East on its self-titled debut. Darts & Arrows dropped MacKay's name from its moniker and released the full-length Eyes of the Carnival in 2012. Two years later, the guitarist issued two of his own albums, December Concert in duet with guitarist Matt Lux, and Chatham Park, as well as contributing to a pair of albums by singer/songwriter Angela James. The following year he issued another duet set with Ryley Walker titled Land of Plenty. Darts & Arrows issued its third offering, the acclaimed Altamira. MacKay also played on The Gravity of Our Commitment by the large vanguard jazz ensemble Never Enough Hope, a unit that plays compositions by Toby Summerfield. To round out 2015, Tompkins Square issued the solo acoustic set Sunrise: Bill Mackay Plays the Sons of John Hulburt.
In 2016, MacKay was an ensemble member of Rob Frye's (Cave/Bitchin Bajas) Flux Bikes/Sueñolas for its limited-cassette issue of the same name. MacKay signed to Drag City in early 2017; they released his debut Esker in May. He described its contents as "spirit guitar played in a polyglut of styles that melt together liquidly, like the glass slide figurations throughout the album. A landscape in song, and modern guitar on a personal high." The following year he and frequent touring partner Ryley Walker issued SpiderBeetleBee, a collection of guitar duets described as "slide blues, baroque dance, percolating Latin and deep-focus space" tunes on Drag City.~ Michael G. Nastos
MacKay was born in Tarrytown, New York, on April 3, 1968. He grew up in Rochester, New York, and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the son of a trumpeter (both parents were fans of Broadway show tunes, classical music, and jazz). His early influences included the Beatles, Frédéric Chopin, John and Alice Coltrane, Jimi Hendrix, Laura Nyro, Olivier Messiaen, the Velvet Underground, Duke Ellington, Jerry Goldsmith, and Astor Piazzolla. MacKay was also moved by literary figures like beat poets Kenneth Patchen and Jack Kerouac, Thomas Wolfe, Sylvia Plath, Hermann Hesse, Arthur Rimbaud, Michael McClure, Edgar Allan Poe, and Antonin Artaud. In Rochester, he briefly studied classical guitar with Kevin Morse, and in Pittsburgh he was in the music program at Chartiers Valley High School from 1982-1984 and Penn Hills High School, graduating in 1986, taking further instruction with guitarists Eric Susoeff and Joe Negri. MacKay attended the Berklee College of Music in Boston for the next two years and took a course in improvisation and composition with pianist, violinist, composer, and singer Frédéric Alice Orpheus at the New England Conservatory in 2005.
Shortly after arriving in Chicago he networked across several musical communities. In 2005, he contributed to vanguard jazz violinist SavoirFaire's Running Out of Time on Delmark. The same year, Bill Mackay & Sounds of Now was issued by Sons of Fire. Broken Things made its recorded debut in 2007 with the wildly eclectic album Swim to the River, a set that wove soundstack-style sounds with hard rock and modal and free jazz. It proved a busy year as MacKay also played with Colorlist on their debut Lists, and with bassist Jason Ajemian's unit Who Cares How Long You Sink's debut offering Folk Forms Evaporate Big Sky. In 2010, MacKay was an integral part of the band that brought late songwriter Paul Mooney's Because of a Woman to fruition. The songwriter/poet who fought a lifelong battle with cystic fibrosis had recorded vocal and guitar tracks with the hope of completing an album. He died after finishing six songs. His brothers enlisted MacKay, Dorian Taj, and Ronda Duvall to complete them. The same year, Bill MacKay and Darts & Arrows released their eponymous debut. The band included Matthew Golombisky on bass, Ben Boye on keyboards, and Charles Rumback on drums. Greg Ward contributed clarinet to the set's most poignant tune, "Black Leaves."
The next few years were full of frenzied activity. In 2011, he was a recording member of jazz bassist Marc Plane's Walk East on its self-titled debut. Darts & Arrows dropped MacKay's name from its moniker and released the full-length Eyes of the Carnival in 2012. Two years later, the guitarist issued two of his own albums, December Concert in duet with guitarist Matt Lux, and Chatham Park, as well as contributing to a pair of albums by singer/songwriter Angela James. The following year he issued another duet set with Ryley Walker titled Land of Plenty. Darts & Arrows issued its third offering, the acclaimed Altamira. MacKay also played on The Gravity of Our Commitment by the large vanguard jazz ensemble Never Enough Hope, a unit that plays compositions by Toby Summerfield. To round out 2015, Tompkins Square issued the solo acoustic set Sunrise: Bill Mackay Plays the Sons of John Hulburt.
In 2016, MacKay was an ensemble member of Rob Frye's (Cave/Bitchin Bajas) Flux Bikes/Sueñolas for its limited-cassette issue of the same name. MacKay signed to Drag City in early 2017; they released his debut Esker in May. He described its contents as "spirit guitar played in a polyglut of styles that melt together liquidly, like the glass slide figurations throughout the album. A landscape in song, and modern guitar on a personal high." The following year he and frequent touring partner Ryley Walker issued SpiderBeetleBee, a collection of guitar duets described as "slide blues, baroque dance, percolating Latin and deep-focus space" tunes on Drag City.~ Michael G. Nastos
Year 2017 | Jazz | Instrumental | Folk | Rock | FLAC / APE
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