Don McGlashan Warm Hand (CD, Arch Hill Recordings, 2006) ***
Don McGlashan and The Seven Sisters Marvellous Year (CD, Arch Hill Recordings, 2009) ****
Don McGlashan Lucky Stars (CD, Self-released, 2015) ***
Don McGlashan Bright November Morning (Vinyl, Self-released, 2022) ****
Genre: NZ Music, pop
Places I remember: Real Groovy Records, Vinyl Countdown
Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: Lucky Stars
Gear costume: Harbour Bridge (Warm Hand), Song For Sue (BNM)
Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: Lucky Stars
Gear costume: Harbour Bridge (Warm Hand), Song For Sue (BNM)
They loom large in his legend (The Album Collection playlists): Part 1; Part 2; Part 3; Part 4; Part 5
Active compensatory factors: Don McGlashan has become a legend in NZ music circles thanks to his seminal work in From Scratch, Blam Blam Blam, The Front Lawn, Muttonbirds, and his solo career.
Active compensatory factors: Don McGlashan has become a legend in NZ music circles thanks to his seminal work in From Scratch, Blam Blam Blam, The Front Lawn, Muttonbirds, and his solo career.
Sidebar: We are close in age (I'm two years older) and we attended Auckland University at the same time - we once shared a University of Auckland poetry course and on a weekend poetry retreat we had a difference of opinion about Dylan's Live at Budokan album (he liked it, I didn't). Now, here I am, casting willy nilly opinions about his own work. Funny old world innit.
Warm Hand was his first of four solo albums to date. It's a considered series of songs with a fairly consistent pace going on.
His observational style of writing (something that kicked off in The Front Lawn) emerges as a strength again. Harbour Bridge is a fine example, but so is Courier. Great pedal steel from John Sergovia on those songs too.
Second album - Marvellous Year, is with the band he assembled to tour behind Warm Hand - The Seven Sisters. It's a tougher sounding album, not as polite as Warm Hand, and I like it more for that reason.
Lucky Stars is a great song and the album it houses is very assured. Don is well into his mature artist years by this time. For me, the first half of the album is stronger than the second.
No such issues with Bright November Morning. I've written about his latest solo album (and his best so far) on a sister blog - Destination Records. You can read the fulsome comments here.
Where do they all belong? I enjoy his solo albums more than his work in other bands for some reason. I'll be at the front of the queue for his next one.
Where do they all belong? I enjoy his solo albums more than his work in other bands for some reason. I'll be at the front of the queue for his next one.
No comments:
Post a Comment