Guitar Noise and Other Realities
Continuing the folk skew from previous review of Natalie
Royal, Missouri born and San Francisco based Jessica Pratt’s eponymous debut
album is more ostensibly rooted to a 60s folk lineage, and with the singular
use of acoustic guitar and singular overt production in the multi-tracked vocal,
this is a rawer folk offering. In continuing the ‘purity’ theme, this adheres
more closely to a basic folk ethos in its overall simplicity, including the
unpolished string twangs, screeches and fret-flattenings of Pratt’s finger
plucking; the vocal, however, is not as beautifully pure as Royal’s, and it is
a cross of many from the female folk line, including the occasional warble of
Buffy St Marie as well as a light touch but never full grip of Joanna Newsom’s
piercings. The raw recording ethic is exemplified in the hiss and click-starts
between tracks – which can seem fresh and obviously live – but this is
overstated, for example, in the plain guitar work on sixth track Casper where the instrument is surely
slightly out of tune. I’m not convinced by this as being unadorned – it is more
unacceptably naff. To counter this, next track Midnight Wheels gets its genuine strength from that same simplicity
[but the guitar is in tune] and Pratt’s vocal is absolutely clear and
confidently in control, reminding me very much of Beverly Martyn. Similar can
be said of ninth track Mother Big River
and this illustrates both the increasing appeal as the album progresses as well
as how exercising care does not compromise authenticity. Indeed, these three
and next two tracks Streets of Mine
and Titles Under Pressure, form an
impressive core to the ideal of keeping it real, especially with the ceasing of
multi-tracked vocals, and emulating folk roots from the past. Final track Dreams is a live offering, so not that
different from much else on the album, apart from an accompanying male vocal.
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