Create account Log in

My Garden State

[Edit]

Download links and information about My Garden State by Glenn Jones. This album was released in 2013 and it belongs to New Age, Jazz, Rock, Folk Rock, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Acoustic, Instrumental genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 41:31 minutes.

Artist: Glenn Jones
Release date: 2013
Genre: New Age, Jazz, Rock, Folk Rock, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Acoustic, Instrumental
Tracks: 10
Duration: 41:31
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $8.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Chimes 0:36
2. Across the Tappan Zee 3:26
3. Going Back to East Montgomery 8:04
4. Blues for Tom Carter 4:43
5. The Vernal Pool 5:36
6. Alcouer Gardens 4:36
7. My Garden State 2:32
8. Like a Sick Eagle Looking at the Sky 7:56
9. Bergen County Farewell 3:34
10. Chimes II 0:28

Details

[Edit]

Guitarist and seasoned improviser Glenn Jones is a self-professed disciple of John Fahey and the types of rural-leaning guitar styles often dubbed "American Primitive." With My Garden State, Jones spins ten instrumentals with alternately tuned and experimentally capoed acoustic guitars, banjo, and occasional field recordings. Following the banjo-heavy Barbecue Bob in Fishtown and 2011's more stylistically varied The Wanting, My Garden State seems more of a single-minded vision, with its meandering compositions interlocking to cultivate a peaceful, sometimes somber mood. The woozy, subtly echoed dirge of "Blues for Tom Carter" and the lonesome shut-in banjo of the title track tend more toward the heavy-hearted side of the album, but fit as nice counterpoints to more hopeful moments like the patient open-tuned strums of "Alcouer Gardens." Standout track "Across the Tappan Zee" slowly grows from a traditionally influenced banjo figure, eventually opening up with accompaniment from a second banjo spreading generously across the stereo field, conjuring up soft memories of imagined childhoods in New Jersey summers. Conversely, "Like a Sick Eagle Looking at the Sky" stretches across its almost eight minutes with a lurching, improvised feel, sturdy and rooted with the same presence as old men observing a frantic world from their stoops. My Garden State, much like many of Jones' efforts, is a thoughtful and evocative exploration of the limitations of traditional guitar and banjo and his own unique lens on the work begun by Fahey, et al. More cohesive and profound at times than the records that preceded it, the album sets a tone masterfully, and lingers contentedly and without rush, allowing the listener to drop in and sit for a spell with Jones as he ruminates on his various lush instrumental moods.