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TONY McMANUS
IN CONCERT, BAKERSFIELD, CA 4/25/10
SCOTTISH GUITAR ACE EXQUISITELY
DELIVERS THE GOODS
CD TITLE: MAKER'S MARK
(The Dream Guitar
Session)
LABEL: COMPASS RECORDS (COM 4500)
By Leo Kretzner
I don't usually drive to Bakersfield for concerts, but was
certainly glad I did a couple of Sundays ago. The hillsides along the I-5
‘grapevine' and Tejon Pass were poppy orange and new grass green, and Tony
McManus was playing at a Sunday afternoon house concert. Oh, and I was also
promised dinner in addition to a few hours of excellent music - "what's not to
like?!"
There are any number of A-list guitar players out there,
enough that one should pause before suggesting another name be added to it, but
Tony McManus ought to make the cut handily. In two hour-plus sets he
exquisitely played pieces from his native Scotland, Ireland, Spain, South
Africa and the United States. Among these was a beautiful, jazzy "instrumental
sing-along" of Louis Armstrong's late-in-life hit, What a Wonderful World, that segued improbably but seamlessly into
a minor key slip-jig - and back again.
McManus, now living in Ontario, Canada, had been in southern
California for the weekend, also playing at Boulevard Music in Culver City and
at a concert in Kernville. The Sunday house concert in Bakersfield was part of
a monthly series sponsored by the Kern County
Arts Council 661-324-9000
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His performing style between pieces was humorous and
down-to-earth, almost belying the artistry employed in each successive musical
entree. Intricate instrumentals were occasionally broken up with pleasing, warm
vocals. Between sets and afterward, McManus was friendly in answering
questions, even generously demonstrating techniques and tunings for inquiring
players.
Maker's Mark is
the latest CD by Tony McManus and it's a beautiful piece of work that holds up
impeccably through multiple plays. Subtitled The Dream Guitar Sessions, each piece on the CD is played on a
different guitar made by fifteen different contemporary master luthiers. Also
included with the CD is a full-color sixteen page booklet, containing pictures
and information on each instrument and builder, as well as the tunings used on
each piece - or, as McManus slyly summarized, "guitar porn," for those so
inclined to such ‘hard core' details.
The subtle and sometimes not-so-subtle differences in each
guitar's timbre and tone have been thoughtfully matched to the individual
tracks, all played solo with the exception of the finale piece on which all
fifteen of the guitars were used. What could have been a cacophonous ‘guitar
army' mash-up is in fact arranged and executed, like all the other tracks, with
great taste and finesse. McManus uses an amazing alphabet soup of nine different
tunings on the CD, none of them standard - though two of them are ‘DADGAD'
equivalents, starting lower (C) or higher (F), and six pieces employ the common
‘drop-D' arrangement, DADGBE.
How he keeps all these tunings straight in his mind, I have
no idea, but it's a feat no less impressive than the artful dexterity with
which McManus puts each tuning to use. The CD is a must-have for acoustic
guitar aficionados and hearing him live the next time he's in the area is
highly recommended to all.
Leo started playing dulcimer in 1975, having been a drummer and
guitarist. His first albums, Dulcimer Fair and Pigtown Fling, have been
described as "modern classics" in the dulcimer community and have
been combined into the CD Dulcimer Fling. He abandoned the full time pursuit of
poverty through music but still does the occasional performance along with
teaching workshops here and there. He also waters his cacti and plays tunes
with The Old Grey Cats string band in Claremont. www.leokretzner.com
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