
Primrose Green may take notes from shaggy-haired ’70s dudes - hell, just look at the cover art - and root itself firmly in Walker’s dexterous acoustic guitar skills. Save for its 2010s recording date Primrose Green comes across as a forgotten gem from the 1970s.Ryley Walkers intricate folk music at times feels stuck in that period.Subtle influences range from progressive rock as exhibited in the jazzy drums to psychedelia with Ray Manzarek-like organs on for instance Love Can be Cruel, reminiscent of Riders on the Storm.
RYLEY WALKER PRIMROSE GREEN SOUNDCLOUD FULL
He can also coo a country rocker like “On the Banks of the Old Kishwaukee” or the quiet “The High Road,” backed by cellist Lonberg-Holm.īut it’s when Walker slowly whispers his way to a soul-clearing yawp that we hear the full range of not only his vocal abilities but also what they inspire in his band, most satisfyingly experienced with the chooglin’ “Sweet Satisfaction.” It gives Sulpizio a chance to burn the mind fuzz with Rosaly’s aerobic power-drumming, channeling the soulful avant-shred of Sonny Sharrock leading the ’00s psych-wizards Comets on Fire in an ecstatic worship service. But what pushes “Summer Dress” over the edge is Walker’s voice, clawing out of his chest to spread rose petals. The same playful wandering can be heard in the busy, electric Miles-inspired “Love Can Be Cruel” and “Summer Dress,” a full-band exercise led by Hatwich’s funky upright bass and Adasiewicz’s whirling vibes that imagines Tortoise backing a cosmic Van Morrison. That’s due in no small part to the Primrose Green band, a stellar mix of the Chicago jazz (drummer Frank Rosaly, cellist Fred Lonberg-Holm, bassist Anton Hatwich and vibraphonist Jason Adasiewicz) and experimental/rock scenes (keyboardist Ben Boye, electric guitarist Brian Sulpizio, violist Whitney Johnson). Walker’s springy picking pattern bounces off a sparsely sparkling piano, a bass line skips instead of walks, and the drums are so jaunty that the whole scene evokes a guy with a straw dangling from his grinning mouth and a cheap beer in hand. The opening title track of Primrose Green doesn’t even wait 10 seconds to spiral. With Primrose Green, Walker has developed into a thoughtful singer-songwriter following a tangled thread, one picked at by the likes of Tim Buckley, John Martyn, Van Morrison and in 1969’s Streetnoise, a folky progressive-rock record by Julie Driscoll, Brian Auger & The Trinity. But where Rose looked to fingerstyle masters like John Fahey and Robbie Basho, Walker evokes the ’70s, when unplugged music could pick the body electric.

Like Rose, the Chicago-based Walker also comes from a noisier past that led to exploration in acoustic music. In both cases, Walker and Rose politely declined the quiet coffeehouse attitude toward the unplugged and demanded something unruly. It recalls a moment nearly nine years prior, at a venue just around the corner, when another acoustic guitarist, Jack Rose, asked a seated audience to stand up: “This is rock ‘n’ roll,” he said.

A friend, singer-songwriter Marian McLaughlin, offers help but Walker flashes a smile and says, “Nah, thanks, this is punk rock,” then somehow extends a hand to shake and hustles upstairs. bar where his band is set to play, carrying two acoustic guitar cases and an amp. As the album cover suggests, the first impulse may be to throw on a suit jacket (or cocktail dress, ladies!) and get those hips in motion.Ryley Walker walks into the D.C.

The dynamic-disco duo created 12 songs with a near equal panty-dropping:party-starting ratio for all to enjoy. They traded mixtapes called AR MUSIC and SHOOT THE DUCKand soon found a collaborative effort inevitable. Legend will tell you the two met several years back through their shared love of boogie tracks. Their mission is to bring funk & disco back to the funkfront. Legendary Seattle slap-beat extraordinaire, Jake One lays the perfect funkdation for Mayer Hawthorne to croon disco tunes over.

A full-length album is out now on Stones Throw Records. 2 Years ago, Mayer Hawthorne and Jake One teamed up to put out a 3-track EP called, Tuxedo. It appears that those jams weren’t the only jams to have been conceived by the funk fathers.
