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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Impossible to describe, but I will try anyway,
By Dr Tathata (Omphalos, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Voice of the Turtle (Audio CD)
This album wasn't the first I heard by John Fahey, but it was the first music that I listened to SERIOUSLY. At the time, I had no choice--it was the only record I had. Fahey did a number of remarkable things in his early career, but with this album he created a world that is more like a theatrical illusion--as opposed an artist simply performing on a guitar. Its a collosal prank, to be sure, but, the joke isn't immediately apparent. When I first heard it, 34 years ago, I absolutely did not know how to interpret or comprehend it--it just broke down all of my cognitive categories. It was truly liberating. The thing resonates on so many different subtle levels. At that point in my life, I lived in a little shack in the canyons of northern CA, had a little old record player, and about 3 records that belonged to a girlfriend, one of which was The Voice of the Turtle. I listened to it over and over, became obsessed with it, studied every detail of the album liner notes. Tacoma Park, MD, Fahey's boyhood home, is frequently referenced in his song titles. Back in the 40's and 50's when Fahey was a kid, steam engines hauled freight and passenger trains every few minutes through the heart of Tacoma Park, spewing white steam and black smoke. They kept it up into the 60's by which time Fahey had transmigrated to Berkeley, CA. Tacoma Park had a real rural character back then, and many of Fahey's songs mythologize familiar places along the right of way through that neighborhood. For example, Fahey has a song on one of his albums titled, "The View East from the Riggs Road B&O Railway Trestle". I spent many days rolling by that location when I worked for the B&O--made a tape recording of the song and went there to listen to it--looking East, of course. Even though Voice of the Turtle was the recording that piped me into the Magic Mountain, it is not necessarily my favorite of Fahey's recordings. That would have to be Volume 6, although I love everything he ever released. Either this music speaks to you, or it doesn't. If you like the convergence of chanting monks and temple bells with locomotive whistles and thunderstorms swirled with archaic, primitive, blues guitar, that could serve as the soundtrack for Steamboat Willy, then do yourself a favor and tune in.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
a little style and humor goes a long way,
By Heavy Theta (Lorton, Va United States) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Voice of the Turtle (Audio CD)
John Fahey was truely a marvel, rediscovering, performing and recording traditional country blues with a precision and dedication unmatched by any other artist. So it might seem a little heretical to suggest that after any number of volumes of this work that there was a sense of extreme focus, or even a clinical approach. This album goes along way in rebuking that notion, showing the artist's wickedly droll sense of humor, along with a welcome experiment with some decidedly psychedelic tinge, indulging in the powerful counterculture zeitgeist.It is this unexpected quirkiness that adds real personality and affection to the steady underlying brilliance. This is a very interesting project, and highly recommended to those who would prefer their Fahey clothed with a little offbeat style.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Really, very interesting,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Voice of the Turtle (Audio CD)
Being a Fahey album, it's full of good music--but be warned--it is not similar to his other recordings. Not in sound alone--that much is obvious from the samples, I don't need to tell you that--but also in the atmosphere. If anyone is good at building up an atmosphere with one single instrument, it's John.
This album instead has a very different atmosphere... It's very subtle, but the subtle feelings it gives you are like subtle glimpses of something much, much larger. After the album ends, it's hard to tell what was behind what you just heard. Perhaps it's Fahey just messing with our heads. I have a feeling he is.
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