Drag City – DC120
Released in 1997, Jim O'Rourke's Bad Timing is the first in a trilogy of
solo releases to be named after films by British director Nicolas Roeg.
O'Rourke's significance as a guitarist and experimental composer had
already been well established, and by the time of this solo outing his
work with David Grubbs in the post-rock group Gastr del Sol had begun to
show elements of the organic, fingerpicked guitar style he explores
more deeply on these four lengthy tracks. Entirely instrumental and
mysteriously packaged with no track titles, Bad Timing was a bit of an
enigma for its time. The most obvious influence is that of American
Primitive guitarist John Fahey, whose spirit imbues O'Rourke's wayfaring
compositions with a strange but good-natured folksy charm, especially
on the front half of the wonderful second track. Also present are
avant-garde fragments of the Chicago indie scene to which he was closely
associated. Tracks that take five or six minutes to develop suddenly
change on a dime with an audible tape splice, dramatic rhythmic shift,
or the addition of a horn section. Tortoise drummer John McEntire makes a
guest appearance, as does ace steel guitarist Ken Champion, whose long,
breezy parts act as a perfect foil to O'Rourke's staccato punctuations.
Tempos and rhythms wobble and flutter, varying from one moment to the
next and suggesting a good deal of improvisation on the initial guitar
tracks, which often receive warm layers of organ, piano, bells, and
accordion, as in the midsection of the near-mystical third track. Each
track acts as its own little suite with sections that are as
unpredictable as they are enchanting, hanging together in a sort of
cerebral level that feels loosely organized yet beautifully
orchestrated. For all its eccentricity, it seems like it should be more
of a challenge to enjoy, but the wonderful thing about Bad Timing is how
surprisingly palatable it all is. By the time the final marching
band/Western swing collision winds to a close on track four, the natural
reaction is simply to press play and begin the record again.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Hi.