Review
While most musicians are content to work within the accepted boundaries of their chosen style, lap-slide guitarist Harry Manx likes to color way outside the lines. His crayons? Soulful, raspy vocals, poetic lyrics, and the whining drones and mysterious melisma of Indian music. In addition to picking Hawaiian-style flat-top a la David Lindley, Ben Harper, or Kelly Joe Phelps, Manx plays the mohan veena - a 20-string archtop developed by Indian slide wizard Vishwa Mohan Bhatt. East/West fusions can sometimes sound forced or awkward, but Manx - who studied with Bhatt for five years - dodges that bullet. On Mantras for Madmen, mandolin, banjo, harmonica, tamboura, tabla, and haunting female voices swirl seamlessly around intricate slide melodies, creating an exotic, yet strangely timeless sound. Drawing from blues, ragas, and the story-telling heritage of British Isles folk music, Manx conjures songs that are as bewitching as they are unique. --Guitar Player (online edition)
Product Description
Harry's sixth record in as many years, is blindingly unapologetic when it comes to even greater use of instrumentation. This time there's bass & drums that kick the groove level up a notch, gospel-laden backing vocals with killer harmonies that enrich the ten original tunes, and Indian instruments for the two ragas that are thrown into the mix. San Diego-Tijuana pulls out all the stops with a full Indian treatment of this JJ Cale cover song with the addition of tamboura, drums and Hang along with Manx's famous Mohan Veena. Single Spark and Your Sweet Name fuse that cultural merging of East and West in true Harry Manx fashion that remain his signature styling. The heart-wrenching, shiver-inducing It Takes a Tear features singer Emily Braden in a duet with Manx. John Reischman on mandolin is a shining addition to many of the tracks that unify seamlessly with the tried-and-true blues & ballads songs that has put Manx on the international music map. Songwriting that inspires contemplation along with his rich, world-weary vocals maintain that the inclusion of new instruments act only as a supportive layer to what is clearly Manx's territory.
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