Tag Archive: Josephine Foster


MY TEN FAVOURITE ALBUMS OF 2012

bestalbums2012

Tom Carter who, with ex-wife and musical partner Christina, makes up one half of Charalambides had more opportunity than most for self reflection this year but not in the happiest of circumstances.

During a UK tour he was struck down with severe pneumonia and spent long periods in isolation as part of his treatment. Due to the absurd health system, this also meant he faced huge medical bills.

Thankfully, if his prolific contributions to Twitter are anything to go by, he now seems to be on the road to recovery. One of his Tweets was to the effect that, this year, instead of making lists of the best new albums, we should go back to past years and check if those records we raved about have stood the test of time.

While I understand where he’s coming from, for me, one of the key appeals of contemporary music is that it fuels an insatiable desire for something truly radical and fresh. Needless to say, 2012 passed with plenty of good new sounds to enjoy but nothing that could be described as life changing. Continue reading

Part of an irregular series of bite-sized posts about 7″ singles I own – shameless nostalgia from the days of vinyl. (Search ‘Backtracking’ to collect the set!)

JOAN BAEZ – One I Had A Sweetheart (Fontana EP, 1963)

As I was just 5 years old when this record was released so I obviously didn’t buy it myself. I grabbed it off my elder brother when he was having a clear out.

The quality of the disc is pretty bad , a couple of scratches and major surface noise but this adds character.  The sleeve notes are by an anonymous Vanguard Recordings scribe who waxes lyrical about the healing power of folk music. Quoting Shakespeare he (she?) gushes: “Perhaps we turn to folk music because we feel too ‘cabin’d, cribbed, confined’ by the standards of our world, where to be cool is to be wise, and to avoid complications (such as other peoples’s troubles) is the road to suburbia and its house so fine, a world where love is a sometime thing and the voice of the turtle-dove is hushed in the shadow of the mushroom cloud”.

Joan Baez is praised for her ability to draw emotional depth from our “shared fund of experience” which in the case of this disc consists of renditions of four traditional songs. Two feature dead lovers, one is about a dead dog and one is about being spurned by a cad.

From the brief flurry of applause, the title track was recorded live somewhere though nothing on the sleeve indicates when and where. “One I had a sweetheart and now I have none” is the self explanatory message of this song.

The Trees They Do Grow High is about an arranged marriage between a 24-year-old woman and a boy half her age. It’s in the form of a dialogue with her dad, understandably pissed off about the situation. She comes to terms with it because he is the handsome son of a Lord. She reflects philosophically that  and  “he’s young but he daily grows”. The boy/man  fathers a child and then promptly dies at the age of 16. Life can be cruel.

Wildwood Flower is a song made popular by The Carter Family whose version is far superior.

Old Blue is about a faithful dog who ups and dies. The singer hopes to be reunited with him in heaven.

On the songs Joan Baez accompanies herself on acoustic guitar and sings in her plaintive, lovelorn fashion. It’s a screechy love it or hate it  style that contemporary female artists like Marissa Nadler and Josephine Foster have adopted as their own.

BODUF SONGS:CHASING SHADOWS

Mat Sweet, aka Boduf Songs, has just released a new collection of morbid tunes via the Kranky label called ‘How Shadows Chase The Balance’- a fascinating un-light journey into a nightmarish world of dread, death and despair. Needless to say that Mat is no party animal!

The record is great for reasons I explain in my review over at Whisperin’ & Hollerin’.

I talked briefly Mat in February 2007 after a gig in Ravenna, Italy where he played support to the lovely Josephine Foster (reviewed at last f.m) .

The interview is part of a now longstanding personal project to write a book about the strange mutations of what is loosely branded as ‘Folk Music’ yet dwells in a kingdom apart from the homely traditions normally associated with that genre term.

Until such time as my magnum opus sees the light of day, it seems timely to publish Mat’s illuminating replies to my queries: Continue reading

THIS COMING GLADNESS

Female singers in mainstream pop like Mariah Carey and Leona Lewis habitually sustain and mangle vowels to engender fake emotion into banal love songs. The intonation of Josephine Foster is also mannered and eccentric but the effect is much more profound. It sounds like she is singing from the heart and not the head.

Just take a listen to the way she pronounces simple words like ‘adore’ , ‘ground’ or ‘coca-cola’ on her wonderful new album ‘This Coming Gladness’ (out now on Bo Weavil Recordings). Above all, the feeling that come from being exposed to her extraordinary voice is one of longing. This is encapsulated in one of the standout songs called ‘All I wanted was the moon’ where there’s a delicacy to her vocals but also a plaintive quality that is hypnotising.

Her MySpace page refers to the songs “transcendental art-rock” which sounds Pseudy yet highlights the difficulty in classifying exactly it what it she does. Her sound floats between experimental folk and rock without falling easily into either category.

On many of her earlier solo records, particularly the cdrs, her voice is more exposed with just a simple backing from guitar, mandolin and auto-harp. Here she is backed by some neat psyched guitar moves by Victor Herrero and the ubiquitous and inspirational drumming of Alex Neilson. This fleshes out the ten songs beautifully to produce one of the albums of the year.