Reviews

RHYTON: Redshift (English Version)

Italian Version

“In information systems, a tag is a non-hierarchical keyword or term assigned to a piece of information (such as an Internet bookmark, digital image, or computer file). This kind of metadata helps describe an item and allows it to be found again by browsing or searching. Tags are generally chosen informally and personally by the item’s creator”

Wikipedia, the nowadays “bible”, use these words to define the term “tag”, often used by webzines’ reviewersĀ to describeĀ a musical genre or assign keywords to a group or artist. Listening toĀ the music ofĀ Rhyton, band from Brooklyn, NY, it’s easy toĀ understand how much it’s really hard just try to classify something that it’s absolutelyĀ impossible to be lockedĀ in a single container. The band consists of three musicians who like to experiment, play with sounds, improvise, exploring greedy of emotions their subconscious; even the most revivalist of the three (Dave Shuford), is absolutely ad adventurous musician.

But let’s start from the beginning. On guitar and vocals we findĀ Dave Shuford, also known as D.Charles Speer, member of No-Neck Blues Band and Helix. Rob Smith plays drums in a psych-rock band called Pigeons, andĀ Jimy Seitang lent his talents on bass and keyboards toĀ Psychic Ills and still maintains a personal musical project under the moniker of Stygian Stride. The explorative passion of the three, lead them to break the bordersĀ of their own projects, finding inside Rhyton an open space to expand and sometimes crackĀ the wallsĀ between genres, exploring different musical roots, and creating a modernist soundscape in constant motion.

Even the choice of the album title is eloquent, Redshift is, in fact, a term that indicates an astronomy phenomenon that happens when the light emitted by a source shifts to the red end of the spectrum. This can happen because the Universe is still expanding (creating new space between source and observer, and increasing the wavelength), or because ofĀ gravitational effects of massive bodies, such as quasar and black holes. This space between source and listener (in this case) is filled by the trioĀ fueling their own roots, which canĀ create new sounds, that are ableĀ toĀ go in multiple directions, sometimes bashfully, sometimes more impudently. The musicians succeed in the hard task of comparing barren alien territories with lush folk and country traditions.Ā They are also able to develop different musical origins, as in the opening of “The Nine”, where Shuford take upĀ his bouzouki exploring some Balkan traditions. The strong realityĀ of rootsĀ andĀ country music against cosmic and psychedelic suggestions: a dualism illustrated perfectly inĀ the beautiful cover art designed by illustrator and painter Arik Roper (Sleep, High On Fire, Howlin Rain, Earth), showing an american indian proudly standing, and watching fearless inside a sort of extraterrestrial machine. There is an area inside the record, where we can find aĀ challenge between earth and space, between traditions associated with popular culture and alien influences. It happens for example in the title track “Redshift”, where the country classic rock of the first half of the song is gradually replaced by a synthetic shapeshifters that seems to catch us with a dissonant tractor beam leading us into ‘other’ space.

Construction and deconstruction, two sides of the same coin, two parts that seem very distant toĀ each other, but in fact they are simply connected on a different level of reality. Get lost in the forest and in the cosmos within the same trip: in the lush world of psychedelic fingerpicking of “Concentric Village” and inside the electric ride ofĀ “End Of Ambivalence” which reminds meĀ some past Quicksilver Messenger Service journeys. They are able toĀ surprise swimmingĀ among the meteorites of a science fiction movie, going along with only bass notes to mark the passage of time, as in the finalĀ “The Variety Playhouse”.

“D.D. Damage”Ā with his complex and dissonant way linked to folk tradition, remindsĀ what was done in theĀ post-rock era by John Fahey with Cul De Sac in a treasure chest filled with absolute wonders called “The Epyphany of Glenn Jones”. The title track is not the only song where Shuford’s voice can be heard: there is also a cover of the Joe Walsh song “Turn To Stone”, featured originally in Walsh’s first solo album. The musicians are able to play with absolute mastery dilating the original version, destroying it with the sacred fire of improvisation beforeĀ re-creating it from the beginningĀ through a sort of nuclearĀ fusion. The surprise elements, the mistery’s fascination, areĀ always justĀ round the corner, ready to grab us as soon as weĀ let downĀ our guardĀ listeningĀ to the players’ skill and passion.

Redshift was recorded by Jason Meagher at Black Dirt StudiosĀ in NYC (Steve Gunn, Michael Chapman, Jack Rose). Shuford and his fellow adventurers, releasing theirĀ fifth album (third for Thrill Jockey), prove they are true masters in revival art, which is never derivative, but in continueĀ expansion and mutation. Rhyton firmly ride a wild beast, complying with their more atavistic instincts and softening the most cruel instincts; indifferent, like the american indian on the cover, to the blood flowing all around. Listen to this record opening your heart and mind, play it loud wearingĀ headphones, you will feelĀ torment and ecstasy at the same time.

TRACKLIST

01. The Nine 5:48
02. Redshift 8:55
03. Concentric Village 6:43
04. End Of Ambivalence 4:09
05. D.D. Damage 4:06
06. Turn To Stone 7:48
07. The Variety Playhouse 5:18

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