Red Guitar Music

News, reviews and more

  • Home
  • News
  • Album Reviews
  • Live Reviews
  • Features
    • The Baker's Dozen
    • Inside The Song
  • Interviews
  • Tour News
  • Contact
Torgeir Waldemar No Offending Borders

Torgeir Waldemar - No Offending Borders (Album Review)

March 20, 2017 by David Vousden in Album Reviews, Alt-Country, Classic Rock, Folk, Singer-Songwriter

Norwegian singer-songwriter Torgeir Waldemar released his debut album in 2014 to widespread acclaim, and a Norwegian Grammy Award nomination, for a record that had a marked 70’s Laurel Canyon influence. At first glance, the tall and bearded Waldemar looks like he should be fronting a Black Metal act with an indecipherable logo, luckily images are often deceptive, and Waldemar is more folky troubadour than extreme metal screamer as his debut disc proved. Three years on and ‘No Offending Borders’ finds Waldemar intent on expanding on his musical palette.

It might be considered an unusual decision but Waldemar opens his sophomore album with a cover of ‘Falling Rain’ originally recorded by Link Wray in 1971. Surprisingly this decision works perfectly as gently picked acoustic guitar and mournful harmonica form the backdrop to enable Waldemar to make the song his own with an impassioned vocal. ‘Falling Rain’ may have originally been written in an America struggling with social upheaval and the war in Vietnam but the relevance of the song continues to this day.

Things take an unexpected left term as dirty fuzz electric guitars usher in ‘Summer in Toulouse’ and Waldemar’s background in rock bands comes to the fore. Epic in every way ‘Summer in Toulouse’ features extended guitar breaks a plenty and a lovely mid-section where guitars, rumbling bass and spectral vocals intertwine. The result is classic 70's American rock, more Crazy Horse than CSN. ‘Among The Low’ follows and Waldemar seems intent on subverting traditional folk/roots as he utilises tribal drums, banjos and distorted wailing harmonica on a bedrock of nasty, squally electric guitars.

unnamed(86).jpg

The quietly stunning ‘Island Bliss’ dials things back considerably with Waldemar adding a swell of synthesizers to his picked guitar to imbue a small intimate song with an almost cinematic grandeur.  Those Neil Young influences, hinted at earlier, are fully to the fore on the slow building ‘Sylvia (Southern People)’ which shares a vibe, and more than a little geographical familiarity, with the ‘After the Gold Rush’ era. Waldemar, to his credit, makes this readily apparent in the lyrics and I can’t think of a better way to spend 7.01 of your time.

The haunting ‘Bottom of the Well’ features picked guitar and the sounds of sawing and hammering in the background, which is initially very odd indeed, but the sounds of carpentry merge with the percussion and a ragged, passionate vocal allows all these disparate parts to gel beautifully. An odd thought struck me, with the despair in Waldemar’s voice you have to wonder if they’re building gallows… The slow build approach is again to the fore as ’Souls On A String’ lives up to its title as lightly strummed guitars hover over a bed of organ, warm bass notes, strangely oscillating synthesizer, strings and slide guitar lines. Top this off with a vocal track that expands on the ethereal nature of the backing track and the result is beguiling. The album concludes with the unadorned folk of ‘I See the End’ a tale of devotion which is a quite perfect amalgamation of guitar and vocal harmony.

Buy on Amazon

‘No Offending Borders’ is a fine multi-layered record that touches on a range of rock and folk influences but remains consistent despite, or maybe because of, this approach. If you want to dig a little deeper under the impressive musicianship and delve into the lyrics and the cover art (another important factor to Waldemar) there is much more to discover here and you’ll find the journey very rewarding.

RGM REVIEWS
The Happy Couple - Lullaby of Broadland
Dec 2, 2024
Acoustic, Album Reviews, Ambient, Folk
The Happy Couple - Lullaby of Broadland
Dec 2, 2024
Acoustic, Album Reviews, Ambient, Folk

One of the positive aspects of running Red Guitar Music is that you encounter all manner of different musical genres that you wouldn’t necessarily find on your own. The RGM Inbox is positively overflowing with the good, the bad and, yes, the ugly (although something we find unlistenable is probably the best thing in the world to someone). One example that falls squarely in the good category of pleasant surprises is The Happy Couple, discovered on a recent visit to London’s Green Note, where the duo opened for Dimple Discs labelmate Kelsey Michael.

Dec 2, 2024
Acoustic, Album Reviews, Ambient, Folk
Molly Murphy - Tigers In Your Backyard (Nocturnal Edition)
Sep 12, 2024
Acoustic, Album Reviews, Folk, Singer-Songwriter
Molly Murphy - Tigers In Your Backyard (Nocturnal Edition)
Sep 12, 2024
Acoustic, Album Reviews, Folk, Singer-Songwriter

A new name to me, but based on the new EP, ‘Tigers in Your Backyard (Nocturnal Edition)’, Molly Murphy is one to watch. Initially, Molly embarked on a promising college career as a double Film and English Major pursuing a career in screenwriting but left all that behind to form a band (as you do). Murphy’s latest release finds the singer-songwriter adding a modern sheen to her traditional Celtic roots.

Sep 12, 2024
Acoustic, Album Reviews, Folk, Singer-Songwriter
Scott Matthews - Restless Lullabies (Album Review)
Apr 28, 2023
Acoustic, Album Reviews, Folk, Singer-Songwriter
Scott Matthews - Restless Lullabies (Album Review)
Apr 28, 2023
Acoustic, Album Reviews, Folk, Singer-Songwriter

For bands and singer-songwriters, 2020 was hardly the best year to release a new album.  And let’s face it, 2021 wasn’t much better.  The only hope for artists with new music was that they could somehow connect online, as reaching fans via physical touring was out of the question.  As a result, countless records were overlooked, under-noticed and sailed away, unloved.  Scott Matthews released his eighth album, the sonically ambitious New Skin, in December 2020, at the start of a winter most of us are keen to forget.  Three years later, Restless Lullabies sees the same set of songs reborn, and, in an effort to ensure that each are properly heard, they have been stripped of skin, flesh and - in some cases - their very bones, in his most exposed and intimate record to date. 

Apr 28, 2023
Acoustic, Album Reviews, Folk, Singer-Songwriter
Miriam Jones - Reach For The Morning (Album Review)
Aug 16, 2022
Album Reviews, Folk, Singer-Songwriter, CCM
Miriam Jones - Reach For The Morning (Album Review)
Aug 16, 2022
Album Reviews, Folk, Singer-Songwriter, CCM

Back in 2015, Miriam Jones was treading the well-worn path of the folky singer/songwriter. Her Simon Edwards (Fairground Attraction) produced album ‘Between Green and Gone' was acoustic-based but recorded with a full band and received radio support from Bob Harris and Robert Elms. An impressive record, it looked like we would be seeing a lot of Miriam but the Canadian native slipped off the radar (well, my radar anyway) until recently when she reappeared with new music that showed a marked evolution in her sound.

Aug 16, 2022
Album Reviews, Folk, Singer-Songwriter, CCM
Maple Leaf Christmas Special: EP Reviews
Nov 29, 2021
Acoustic, Album Reviews, Christmas, Folk, Singer-Songwriter, Traditional
Maple Leaf Christmas Special: EP Reviews
Nov 29, 2021
Acoustic, Album Reviews, Christmas, Folk, Singer-Songwriter, Traditional

This is the time of year when I’m regularly called upon to make donations to the Scrooge Jar. Every time I say something even vaguely negative about the festive season (which I confess is quite often) I am swiftly rebuked by the rest of the family and duly relieved of a few more pennies. So, I am possibly not the best suited to reviewing a pair of Christmas-themed EPs, but these new releases from two of my favourite Canadian singer-songwriters have, I confess, begun to thaw my miserly, humbug-riddled heart.

Nov 29, 2021
Acoustic, Album Reviews, Christmas, Folk, Singer-Songwriter, Traditional
Michael McGovern - Highfield Suite (Album Review)
Jul 13, 2021
Album Reviews, Folk, Singer-Songwriter
Michael McGovern - Highfield Suite (Album Review)
Jul 13, 2021
Album Reviews, Folk, Singer-Songwriter

Michael McGovern’s debut album ‘Highfield Suite’ is a short but sweet introduction to the talents of the Glasgow singer/songwriter and guitarist who, at 25, seemingly has an old head on a pair of surprisingly young shoulders. Inspired at an early age by the usual suspects (Dylan, Cohen, Simon, Fleet Foxes) McGovern began writing songs while still in his teens and with the forced isolation of 2020, the time was right to embark on his debut record. McGovern commenced recording with one microphone in a small wooden cabin in Galway before enlisting Bill Shanley to co-produce. The pair subtly expanding McGovern’s intricate nylon-strung fingerpicked guitar sound into full band arrangements with the addition of a rhythm section, piano, an unexpected dash of saxophone, a smattering of pedal steel and some very pleasing vocal harmonies.

Jul 13, 2021
Album Reviews, Folk, Singer-Songwriter
John Hinshelwood - Called Back (the poems of Emily Dickinson) (Album Review)
Jun 9, 2021
Album Reviews, Americana, Bluegrass, Folk, Jazz
John Hinshelwood - Called Back (the poems of Emily Dickinson) (Album Review)
Jun 9, 2021
Album Reviews, Americana, Bluegrass, Folk, Jazz

For his sixth solo release Scottish singer and songwriter John Hinshelwood has taken a different approach to his craft inspired by the poems of Emily Dickinson (1830-1886). The reclusive Dickinson, who wrote almost 1800 poems during her lifetime, conducted most of her correspondence with the outside world via letter, especially after she retreated to her bedroom in later life. The sheer volume of Dickinson’s work was not discovered until after her death and she is now considered one of the finest American poets of her generation. John Hinshelwood readily admits that his connection to Dickinson was initially limited to a mention of her in a Paul Simon song, but the purchase of a volume of ‘Selected Poems’ would spark an interest that would become an obsession (in a good way).

Jun 9, 2021
Album Reviews, Americana, Bluegrass, Folk, Jazz
M G Boulter - Clifftown (Album Review)
Apr 21, 2021
Album Reviews, Folk, Singer-Songwriter, Americana
M G Boulter - Clifftown (Album Review)
Apr 21, 2021
Album Reviews, Folk, Singer-Songwriter, Americana

As concepts for albums go, faded Essex seaside towns might not be the most likely choice but singer-songwriter M G Boulter has carefully hewn a hugely affecting set of songs from the rocks of Clifftown, a pseudonym for his beloved Southend-on-Sea. For those new to the name, Boulter has been making solo records since 2013, having cut his teeth in various bands and he’s now signed to the independent label Hudson Records, alongside Karine Polwart, Bellowhead and Jenny Sturgeon. With a vocal that is as vulnerable as Neil Young but as English as Nick Drake, M G Boulter has concentrated the promise of his first two records into an extremely accomplished third that marries his poetic lyrics with intricate (but unshowy) guitar playing.

Apr 21, 2021
Album Reviews, Folk, Singer-Songwriter, Americana
Liz Simmons - Poets (Album Review)
Apr 16, 2021
Album Reviews, Bluegrass, Folk, Singer-Songwriter
Liz Simmons - Poets (Album Review)
Apr 16, 2021
Album Reviews, Bluegrass, Folk, Singer-Songwriter

I’m not entirely sure what it is about the best folk/roots music, but it seems to me to get it right you need experience. By experience, I don't just mean being able to play really well, as I consider that a given, it’s more about an appreciation for what has come before, and possibly the most important thing of all, is an experience of life in general. In the sleeve notes to ‘Poets’ Liz Simmons thanks her parents for the itinerant lifestyle of her early years travelling the length and breadth of America in a sky blue VW bus. From the wharfs of San Francisco to the pubs of Ketchum, Alaska before settling in New England Simmons’ early life was a whirlwind of travel and music; be it folk, rock n’ roll or the New Orleans influenced tunes her parents played nightly in the pub.

Apr 16, 2021
Album Reviews, Bluegrass, Folk, Singer-Songwriter
Amigo The Devil - Born Against (Album Review)
Apr 14, 2021
Album Reviews, Americana, Folk, Singer-Songwriter
Amigo The Devil - Born Against (Album Review)
Apr 14, 2021
Album Reviews, Americana, Folk, Singer-Songwriter

2018’s ‘Everything Is Fine’ was one of that year's finest releases and marked Danny Kiranos aka Amigo The Devil as one to watch. ‘Everything Is Fine' is a terrific record full of dark imagery unhindered by genre stereotypes. It might not be quite everyone’s cup of tea but if you like a good murder ballad delivered by a heavily bearded man with a banjo then ‘Everything Is Fine’ could well become your go-to album. As it turned out the album only told half the story as the RGM team found on our last but one pre lockdown night out in February of 2020. The Amigo The Devil live experience is something else entirely, ‘Everything Is Fine’ is a fantastic record but put ATD on a stage and the results are very special. In forty years of gig-going, I’ve rarely seen an artist connect with an audience in the same way as ATD. The subject matter might often be jet black but ATD is not without humour and his followers appreciate the honesty within and can relate to his grasp of the daily problems we all face, and how we deal with those problems that have, in many cases, been exaggerated by the world around us in 2021.

Apr 14, 2021
Album Reviews, Americana, Folk, Singer-Songwriter
March 20, 2017 /David Vousden
Torgeir Waldemar
Album Reviews, Alt-Country, Classic Rock, Folk, Singer-Songwriter
  • Newer
  • Older
News RSS
Album Reviews RSS
Live Reviews RSS
Foreign Music CDJapan

Red Guitar Music is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.co.uk and affiliated sites.

Powered by Squarespace