Jake Walton - Silver Muse

£12.00

Product may vary slightly from image representation.
I’d been wondering why I’d not heard much of Jake of late. Readers will most likely know him as a hurdy gurdy player par excellence, who collaborated with Jez Lowe on the 1986 album, Two A Roue. I recall interviewing him around the turn of the millennium and was enchanted to discover his other work, original songs and tunes composed over a career which even by then had already chalked up over two decades of music-making.

Given that virtually all of Jake’s previous albums are long ‘discontinued’, the arrival of this CD will be judged very good news. Silver Muse is a representative collection of Jake’s songwriting spanning four decades. By my reckoning (and I stand to be corrected here), of the disc’s 15 tracks, two-thirds are re-recordings of old favourites. Interspersed among these we find five compositions of more recent provenance, which fit snugly here and prove the consistency of Jake’s vision and his writing over the years, the latter heavily inspired by the Celtic lands – their myths and legends – and informed by the cycles of nature and man’s place within the scheme of things. Several of the songs take their cue from literature, including a setting of Yeats’ Lake Isle Of Innisfree and creative adaptations of O’Shaughnessy’s Ode (The Music Makers), Elizabeth J. Coatsworth’s St. Eval (After The Plough) and an old Irish prayer (White Wave Sea).

Jake’s is a style that doesn’t date, although it might be considered ‘old school’ in that his music is both mellifluous and melodic, flowing and genial and commendably easy on the ear even when tackling less than comfortable topics (Trees, Tom O’Bedlam’s Dream). Jake also benefits greatly from the contributions of long-time collaborator Eric Liorzou and other musical friends including Jez Lowe, Bryony Holden, Alex West, Kathryn Wheeler, Athene Roberts and David De La Haye. You can take it as a recommendation that within a short time of placing this disc in the player, you’re bound to fall under Jake’s spell. The accompanying booklet and contents are most attractively presented too.

David Kidman

  • Model:CM0001
Manufacturers
Manufacturer Info
1 x The Living Tradition magazine - Issue 691 x The Living Tradition magazine - Issue 711 x Roy Clinging - An Honest Working Man1 x Sisters Unlimited - No Change Of Heart1 x Phoebe Smith - The Yellow Handkerchief1 x Dick Gaughan - Sail On1 x Nick Dow - Old England's Ground1 x The Living Tradition Magazine - Issue 641 x Jock Duncan - Tae the Green Woods Gaen1 x The Living Tradition magazine - Issue 701 x The Living Tradition magazine - Issue 731 x The Living Tradition Magazine - Issue 1401 x The Living Tradition magazine - Issue 741 x The Living Tradition Magazine - Issue 1431 x Norman Kennedy - Live in Scotland1 x Fiona Ross with Tony McManus - Clyde's Water1 x The Living Tradition Magazine - Issue 1071 x Walt Michael & Co - Legacy1 x The Living Tradition Magazine - Issue 891 x Kieron Means - Run Mountain1 x Heather Heywood - Lassies Fair & Laddies Braw1 x Lorna Campbell - Adam's Rib1 x Claire Hastings - Between River And Railway1 x The Living Tradition magazine - Issue 761 x Chris Foster - Jewels1 x Tom Spiers - Allan Water1 x Pur - The Lassies' Reply1 x Geordie McIntyre & Alison McMorland - Where Ravens Reel1 x The Living Tradition Magazine - Issue 861 x Chris Foster - Traces1 x Geraldine Bradley - From The Rising Spring1 x Steve Turner - Late Cut1 x Bob Blair - Reachin' for the High, High Lands1 x The New Scorpion Band - The Carnal and the Crane1 x Ellen Mitchell - On Yonder Lea1 x Geordie Murison - The Term Time Is Comin Roon1 x Steeleye Span - They Called Her Babylon1 x Eamonn Coyne & Kris Drever - Honk Toot Suite1 x Jack Beck - Half Ower, Half Ower tae Aberdour1 x Alison McMorland - Cloudberry Day1 x Martins 41 x David Kosky & Damien O'Kane - The Mystery Inch1 x Steve Tilston - The Greening Wind1 x Danny Diamond - Fiddle Music1 x Roy Clinging - Cheshire Born