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Peter Mulvey - Glencree (1999)

Peter Mulvey - Glencree (1999)

BAND/ARTIST: Peter Mulvey

Recorded live in Ireland, with David Goodrich. Capturing the spirit of Mulvey's formative years as a traveling singer and songwriter, Glencree was recorded at three gigs in three bars in Ireland: the legendary Lobby Bar in Cork, the Cobblestone Bar in Dublin's Smithfield, and the Ballymore Inn, deep in the hills of Kildare. David Goodrich is on hand throughout, and the record is a document of his and Peter's explorations of improvised duo settings. It's bluesy, jazzy, funky folk music with a dash of country. This is as unplugged as it gets, without the MTV hype, just two men, some guitars and a little help from Juliet Turner on backing vocals here and there. The simplicity of the arrangement makes Peter's smooth, smoky voice shine. This is a mix of his own stuff and a few of his favorites, written by people like Stephen Foster, Greg Brown and Pamela Means. Pure talent without frills or adornment.

Peter Mulvey's third release is a collection of live recordings from a 1998 tour of Ireland. In contrast to the sunny romp of Rapture and the murky angst of Deep Blue, Glencree finds Mulvey in a contemplative mood, attempting, in his words, to "turn the trick of bringing moments to life while simultaneously catching and holding them." This proves to be an excellent approach for Mulvey, whose thunderously masterful fretwork makes him a heart stopping live performer. Mulvey is a guitarist in the vein of Leo Kottke and Richard Thompson, capable of six-string virtuosity so multifaceted it creates the illusion that he is playing two guitars at once. As a songwriter, he mates this intense guitar playing with lyrics that couch penetrating insight in clever wordplay like "the trouble with time is that it don't grow back" and "sometimes I feel like the man you think I think I am." Glencree opens with some of his best songwriting, following the riotous "Trouble with Poets" with the compassionate "Tender Blindspot" and the snappy "Better Way to Go." On later tracks, however, the record suffers from questionable song selection. The droning plangency of "Stretched on Your Grave" makes for an anticlimactic conclusion. And Juliet Turner's somewhat shrill background vocals don't do justice to Mulvey's sensitive covers of Stephen Foster's "Hard Times Come Again" and Pamela Means' "If I Were." Turner has a tendency to accentuate two common Mulvey pitfalls: the unnecessary affectation of his vocals and his sometimes errant sense of melody. But Mulvey's bristling intelligence and crafty instrumentalism more than compensate for these shortcomings, and Glencree is likely to leave listeners anxiously scouring their local concert listings for his next eye-popping performance.

~ Evan Cater, All Music

Track List:

01. The Trouble with Poets [3:36]
02. Tender Blindspot [4:00]
03. A Better Way to Go [3:30]
04. Ithaca [3:12]
05. Hard Times Come No More [3:44]
06. Brand New '64 Dodge [3:54]
07. Stephen's Green [3:39]
08. Smoke [4:05]
09. If I Were [3:31]
10. Stretched Out on Your Grave [5:55]

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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 19:05
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Many Thanks
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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 12:24
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Many thanks for lossless.