Artist: Otis Taylor
Title: Pentatonic Wars And Love Songs
Year Of Release: 2009
Label: Telarc
Genre: Blues, Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks) 24bit/44.1kHz
Total Time: 01:08:48
Total Size: 745,49 MB
Tracklist:[5:56] 01. Otis Taylor - Looking For Some Heat
[4:16] 02. Otis Taylor - Sunday Morning
[3:45] 03. Otis Taylor - Silver Dollar On My Head
[4:36] 04. Otis Taylor - Lost My Guitar
[7:30] 05. Otis Taylor - I'm Not Mysterious
[6:20] 06. Otis Taylor - Young Girl Down The Street
[4:47] 07. Otis Taylor - Country Girl Boy
[4:46] 08. Otis Taylor - Talking About It Blues
[8:01] 09. Otis Taylor - Walk On Water
[5:00] 10. Otis Taylor - Mama's Best Friend
[4:08] 11. Otis Taylor - Maybe Yeah
[3:46] 12. Otis Taylor - Dagger By My Side
[5:57] 13. Otis Taylor - If You Hope
AllMusic Review by Steve LeggettOtis Taylor doesn't suffer fools lightly, and his songs are full of defiant reclamations of history and tender vignettes of people struggling to survive in hostile cultural territory. Now he wants to talk about love. Taylor began his career playing bluegrass banjo, but switched to guitar (and the blues) in the late '60s, working in various bands and as a solo artist before walking away from it all 1978. He re-emerged a couple decades later in the mid-'90s with an utterly unique and modal-driven blues style that made full use of his gritty singing voice; his quirky songwriting skills; and his raw, driving guitar and banjo playing. Taylor really hasn't been idle since, and Pentatonic Wars and Love Songs is his tenth studio album in 14 years. Following on the heels of 2008's Recapturing the Banjo (which did exactly what its title says), this set finds Taylor turning his attention to love, but these aren't love songs in the normal sense, and more often than not these songs chart the course of love in dramatically unstable and even dangerous relationships. No moon and June stuff. Not even close. Much bleaker. The album opens with "Looking for Some Heat," and yeah, it's about love, but things don't end well at all. "Lost My Guitar," which is all about the loss of love in the truest sense, uses guitars and fatal car accidents as central metaphors. Nope, love isn't all roses in Taylor's view of things. And the sound of this album is different, too, with frequent use of solo cornet, giving these tracks a kind of dark, jazzy feel, particularly on cuts like "I'm Not Mysterious" that feature jazz pianist Jason Moran and Ron Miles' cornet. Irish blues-rock guitarist Gary Moore pops up on three cuts, and Taylor's daughter and bassist Cassie Taylor handles lead vocals on a few songs, including the striking and wonderful "Maybe Yeah." Pentatonic Wars and Love Songs ends up being an urgent, stubborn, and sometimes overly dark view of love in all of its unavoidable permutations. In other words, it's exactly the kind of album of love songs you'd expect from Taylor, one that is direct and as baffling as it is challenging.
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