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Old 08-09-2003, 06:13 PM   #1
Fritz
Lethargic Hooligan
 
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: hello kitty found my wallet at a big tent revival and returned it with all the cash missing
CD: Mark Knopfler's The Ragpicker's Dream

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/AS...026387-1124933

First - good idea by Bucco for the CD: prefix

Second- My musical tastes are much broader than Cash/Knopfler might suggest. In the same buy that brought me this CD I picked up a Dead Kennedy's Live recording.


Mark Knopfler is one of my favorite artists. His solo work and his efforts with Dire Straits are almost always first class. He is aided by a distinctive voice and recognizable guitar sound.

The Reviews for Ragpickers Dream are generally positive:

Amazon

Even at the peak of Dire Straits' fame, Mark Knopfler's music often seemed informed by a restless worldview as abstruse as his guitar playing was fluid and expressive. This follow-up to his impressive 2000 collection, Sailing to Philadelphia, finds Knopfler chasing a similar musical and lyrical muse, with results that are even more surprising and loose-limbed. "Why Aye Man," the bracing opening chantey that sets much of the album's tone, draws parallels between Geordie pub-speak and Native American chants whilst lamenting economic refugees of Thatcherism forced to ply their blue-collar trades--and keep their Brit pub culture alive--deep in the Fatherland. From there, Knopfler takes us by "A Place Where We Used to Live" for a lounge-y, Jobim-inflected reminder that one can never really go home, drops in on "Quality Shoe" for a tribute to Roger Miller, and gives us a typically dry, so-deadpan-it's-funny rundown of his Circus Sideshow pals on "Devil Baby." "Marbletown," a graveyard folk-blues, showcases the musician at home on solo acoustic guitar, while the loping, laconic "Coyote" draws its good-natured inspiration from a beast named Wile E. But it's the way that Knopfler connects disparate cultures and histories with subliminal, deceptively effortless grace on "Fare Thee Well Northumberland," "You Don't Know You're Born" (both of which feature Knopfler's signature languorous, blues-inflected soloing), the folksy "Hill Farmer's Blues," and the country-fried "Daddy's Gone to Knoxville" that make the album a triumph of understatement. --Jerry McCulley


Pop Matters

http://www.popmatters.com/music/revi...gpickers.shtml

When Paul Simon penned the classic opening line "the Mississippi Delta is shining like a National guitar", he captured the essence of his personal journey to Graceland, a brilliant mélange of pop sensibilities and third world rhythms set against the metaphor of America's roots "down the highway through the cradle of the civil war". Months earlier, Mark Knopfler's Dire Straits released another genre bending album, the brilliant Brothers in Arms, with a cover that gleaned with its own shining National resonator guitar (remember those vibrant LP record covers?). Surely, if we measured the physical distance of each artist's journey to the home of the King, Simon would be closer from his boyhood home in Queens New York. But somewhere in Scotland, it was Knopfler who was born and baptized in the cradle of Highway 40.

Knopfler has always woven his own unique blend of rock, boogie, and shuffle. After all, Guitar George was strictly rhythm. But no longer the sultan of swing, Knopfler has recently forgone those indelible rock riffs to follow his more acoustic country instincts. With The Ragpicker's Dream, Knopfler suits those instincts with humble stories of men on the move, symbolizing his own musical journey across the Atlantic. The album opens with "Why Aye Man", a working man's song of nomadic souls keeping their "spirits level high" as they travel from Newcastle to Germany to earn an honest dollar (or deutschmark) laying bricks and mixing concrete. Reminiscent of Dire Straits' "Calling Elvis", Knopfler carries a smooth electric lead line over a hard driving shuffle. And sure enough, by the end of the album, we're not far from the King's home on "Daddy's Gone to Knoxville", where Knopfler swings a country vaudeville rag about yet another honest man on the move in search of decent pay.

Along the way, we find the honky tonk gem "Quality Shoe", Knopfler's tribute to Nashville legend Roger Miller ("King of the Road") and the wonderful unaccompanied folk blues "Marbletown". With his laid-back voice, Knopfler nudges these simple melodies like they have been around for years. At first blush, this makes the album very easy to overlook. Indeed, compared to his prior (and best) solo record, Sailing to Philadelphia, several of these tunes are a bit plain and generally more lightly sketched ideas than complete compositions. But dig a bit deeper. Upon repeated listens, there are plenty of musical nuances to enjoy.

OK, so there are no sizzling guitar solos here. But then again, I bet half of you still haven't picked up Neck and Neck, that masterful album featuring Knopfler and his late friend and mentor Chet Atkins trading their tastiest licks on a variety of country blues and jazz numbers. And sure, there are no lovestruck Romeos on this collection. But in the long run, that will only save us all from another lame genre switching cover by an Indigo Girl. Instead, the charm of this record lay in its wonderful musicianship and warm production. On that front, The Ragpicker's Dream is most akin to Knopfler's wonderful collection of mostly traditional songs with the Notting Hillibillies on Missing … Presumed Having a Good Time. Oh yeah, and wouldn't you know it, that album also had a cover with all four band members sporting their own shining National guitars.

(Note that the import pressing of The Ragpicker's Dream includes an outstanding bonus live concert disc. There are great renditions of "Quality Shoe", which really opens up and takes shape with a live band, and the terrific "Sailing to Philadelphia", which stands apart from the studio album cut sans James Taylor's soulful vocal accompaniment. But best of all is a fantastic performance of the epic classic "Brothers in Arms". As always, Knopfler fingers that sorrowfully majestic guitar melody with his trademark humbucker tone, heavy with melancholy. But wait for his solo, as he takes off in the higher registers with a building fury, opening the throttle on his custom Pensa guitar to unleash an inspiring tone.)

— 6 March 2003
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Old 08-09-2003, 06:37 PM   #2
Ksyrup
This guy has posted so much, his fingers are about to fall off.
 
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: In Absentia
This is a good idea. I think between your and Bucc's tastes, and mine, and a few others around here, it would be cool to cover a wide spectrum of new releases (or perhaps even some older CDs worth a mention) every week or so. Yes, even you guys into rap should join in!

I've bought several CDs in the recent weeks, so I'll put something together along the lines of your posts for those I've found to be particularly compelling. I've also given thought to doing this for particular artists as opposed to a particular CD - a career summary wth suggested songs/CDs to check out.
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