Womblife Explained

Womblife
Type:Album
Artist:John Fahey
Cover:Womblife.jpg
Released:August 12, 1997
Recorded:1996
Genre:Experimental, avant-garde
Length:45:29
Label:Table of the Elements
Producer:Jim O'Rourke, John Fahey
Prev Title:The Mill Pond
Prev Year:1997
Next Title:The Epiphany of Glenn Jones
Next Year:1997

Womblife is an album by American fingerstyle guitarist and composer John Fahey, released in 1997. It was one of three releases by Fahey that year.

History

Womblife continues John Fahey's career resurgence, again bearing minimal resemblance to his earliest work. It incorporates sound collages and experimental music.

Working with Jim O’Rourke, Fahey taped Womblife in the younger musician’s bedroom. O'Rourke has been long associated with the experimental and improv scene, frequently citing Fahey as an influence on his work. Echo, loops and samples along with guitar are used in musique concrète, a style Fahey used as far back as 1968's Requia.[1] O'Rourke plays guitar on "Juana".[2]

Reception

Womblife was one of three releases by John Fahey in 1997. All three (including the album City of Refuge and the EP The Mill Pond) were experimental and avant-garde and were unexpected by his long-time fan base.Music critic Brian Olewnick of Allmusic highly recommended the release, started his review with "This is not your father's John Fahey.", calling it "...one of the more overtly experimental albums in the Fahey catalog and also one of the most fascinatingly beautiful." Steve Taylor of Hollow Ear said of it, "This is one of the most dangerous sounding acoustic guitar recordings you are likely to encounter" and "the sound of it is cold, dark and hellish.", "raw and unpleasantly intoxicating".[3] Both critics cite "Juana" as a more conventional track.

Richard Gehr referred to it as "echoing", an ".. innovative electric album...".[4] Stewart Voegtlin of Stylus Magazine called it "... a complex record that marries musique concrete to bottleneck blues. It doesn’t always work: one often strains to hear the guitar over the invasive din."[5]

Reissues

Track listing

All songs by John Fahey.

  1. "Sharks" – 9:20
  2. "Planaria" – 9:54
  3. "Eels" – 6:13
  4. "Coelacanths" – 7:28
  5. "Juana" – 12:34

Personnel

Production notes:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Derek . Taylor . Review: Sea Changes & Coelacanths: A Young Person's Guide to John Fahey . Dusted Magazine . December 2006 . April 5, 2010.
  2. Book: Lowenthal, Steve . Dance of Death: The Life of John Fahey, American Guitarist. 2014. 978-1-6137452-2-9.
  3. Web site: Steve . Taylor . Review: Womblife . Hollow Ear . April 6, 2010.
  4. Web site: Richard . Gehr . Tormented Genius John Fahey had Rekindled Creative Fire . https://web.archive.org/web/20100511214104/http://www.vh1.com/artists/news/1440912/20010223/fahey_john.jhtml . dead . May 11, 2010 . . March 29, 2009.
  5. Voegtlin . Stewart . Review: Sea Changes & Coelacanths: A Young Person's Guide to John Fahey . . February 2002 .