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SINGSONGPR NEWS |
Songs From The Acid Folk - Sonja
Kristina
(MSMCD109)
Released: 18-2-02 Market Square
Records
A critically-acclaimed but hard to
find solo album by former Curved Air singer Sonja Kristina makes a welcome
return to the retail racks from February 18 in the shape of "Song From The
Acid Folk" (Market Square Records MSMCD109).
One of rock's best known singers, the
striking and individualistic Sonja Kristina returns here to her folk
/ psychedelic roots, alchemised in a highly original, fiery form of acoustic
music which she refers to as "acid folk".
"Songs From the Acid Folk," was released
in 1991 to critical acclaim and includes twelve acoustic workouts, amongst
them Curved Air classic, "Melinda (More or Less)", which Sonja and the excellent
band supporting on this album had been playing live.
Standout tracks include the album's singles
"Anna/Devil May Care" and an acid folk reworking of the Curved Air
hit, "Back Street Luv". This release comes with strong bonus tracks including
the lovely "Penumbra" (which had been left off the original record) and the
moving "Free to Be," a song for the production of Shona, a West End play
starring Sonja and pre-dating "Acid Folk" by one year.
"Songs from The Acid Folk" is a must-have,
not only for Curved Air fans and devotees of Sonja's solo work, but for anyone
who appreciates fine songwriting, excellent musicianship - and those
extraordinary, beautiful vocals.
"From rock goddess to mother to cult heroine? Stranger things have
happened." Evening Standard
"Kristina succeeds on her own terms." Q Magazine
"
this marks renewed commitment to fresh routes. There's a shout
going out, bagsful of energy and acrobatic parameters. Smart move, Sonja!"
Folk Roots
Sonja Kristina writes
In 1988, a new club for offbeat Acoustic music was running at the Troubadour,
Earls Court, London. The Troubadour was a very special place for me. As a
student I had been a regular visitor in the late '60s and had also run a
performance and music 'happening' there on a Wednesday night. So one summer
evening in 1988 I went along to see what was happening, to listen and watch
and sing.
The charismatic Roddy Harris ran this club as a vehicle for his band Miro.
Strangely, it was also on a Wednesday night.
A writer and performer of songs with tumbling gypsy melodies and poetic
tangled lyrics he cast a spell over the packed, hushed audience and his fellow
artists. He had gathered together a unique and colourful bunch of characters
and players to perform regularly on his club night.
I was excited and inspired by what I saw and heard. It felt like a homecoming
yet was fresh and alive. I began to write a new set of songs, encouraged
by my new Troubadour friends and my longtime friend Sue Burkett-Smith.
The first performance of the new songs was at the Troubadour in summer
1989. I was accompanied by Julian Jackson, a brilliant young violinist I
had seen performing with Darryl Way, and was honoured also to be backed by
Julia Palmer from Miro, on cello, and Roddy Harris on guitar.
Also in 1989 I discovered Club Dog, a psychedelic night run by Bob Dog
at the George Robey in London's Finsbury Park. Strange and exciting music
and musicians performed on the three stages there to a wild and ragged crowd
. They also felt like family and I wanted to play for this audience also.
As Julian had joined Miro, I hunted for a new violinist and heard talk
of an amazingly dynamic player and performer seen busking solo in Kingston
market. This was Paul Sax.
I managed to track him down and enlist his services. He invited Honk,
a veteran bass player from Cardiff, to join us and provide the deep and heavy
bass needed for Electric gigs. Tylor were two fiery brothers cooking up a
storm on the New Acoustic circuit. Simon Whitaker plays inventive, high energy
percussion and steel drum. Tim Whitaker is a unique acoustic guitarist. I
asked them to be part of our band and to my delight they agreed. The line-up
was completed by a gifted sixteen year old cellist, Ali Mackensie, one of
the top young Royal Academy of Music students.
The approach in rehearsals was to create atmospheres through improvisation
around the simple structure and 'lilt'of each song. In performance that freedom
was retained, so the parts could be different every time, each player in
the moment responding to the others. The time was a very fast pulse set around
the phrasing of the song so the rhythms are often busy and intricate.
We embarked upon an extensive tour of Psychedelic, Acoustic and Rock Venues
playing with no amplification at all (except a tiny amp for the electric
bass) in smaller venues and very loud, spacey and electric in others. A lighting
person called Torquil soon joined the band on oil wheel and projections,
flooding our stages with colours and patterns.
This was a special time filled with life and energy and I am happy that
this recording captures the magic of these players and their eloquent
music.
Sonja Kristina London 2001
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