Showing posts with label Oliver Schroer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oliver Schroer. Show all posts

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Sing Out! Magazine – November/December ‘10/January ‘11

My copy of the latest issue of Sing Out! Magazine – November/December ‘10/January ’11 – arrived this week. The cover story is about South African singer-songwriter Johnny Clegg.

As usual, this issue of Sing Out! has a bunch of my CD reviews including:

Trevor Alguire- Now Before Us
Asleep at the Wheel & Leon Rausch- It’s a Good Day!
Jay Aymar- Halfway Home
Allison Brown- Viper at the Virgin’s Feet
Andy Cohen- Built Right Here on the Ground
Les Copeland- Don’t Let the Devil In
Ramblin’ Jack Elliott- At Lansdowne Studios, London
Finest Kind- For Honour and for Gain
Frazey Ford- Obadiah
Michael Hurwitz- Chrome on the Range
Chris Kokesh- October Valentine
Jimmy LaFave- Favorites 1992-2001
Terence Martin- The Last Black and White TV
Rain Perry- Internal Combustion
Oliver Schroer & the Stewed Tomatoes- Freedom Row
Bow Thayer- Shooting Arrows at the Moon
Craig Werth- The Spokes Man.

I’m now at work on a bunch of CD and book reviews for the next issue of Sing Out! and will resume posting more reviews here in early-February when those are done.

--Mike Regenstreif

Friday, June 25, 2010

Oliver Schroer -- Freedom Row

OLIVER SCHROER & THE STEWED TOMATOES
Freedom Row
Borealis
oliverschroer.com

The late Oliver Schroer (1956-2008) was a great Canadian violinist/fiddler, composer, record producer, accompanist, and music teacher whose music – rooted in classical, folk, jazz and many strains of world music – seemed to know no boundaries. He remained vital and creative even through the final year and days of his life as he battled and finally succumbed, with great dignity, to a particularly virulent form of leukemia.

Oli recorded some of the basic tracks for Freedom Row about 10 years before he died and, for whatever reasons, set the album aside working on it sporadically over the years and then intensively, even from his hospital bed, in his final months as he battled leukemia. While Hymns and Hers, another album that Oli worked on during the battle was quiet and spiritual, Freedom Row is an album of joyous, lively tunes that reflect his positive, optimistic outlook on life.

There is a wonderful blending of musical genres, styles and feelings in some of these tunes. “Paddy in Timbuktu” mixes Irish and West African influences, “Jora Dance” reflects the joy found in many of the world’s folk dancing traditions, while “Don Victor’s Parade,” reminds me of New Orleans Mardi Gras music (despite being inspired by a musician Oli met on a Mexican island).

Other favourites here include “All the Little Children in the World,” a fiddle tune with a sing-along chorus, “Dancing on the Waves,” which has the feel of a Cajun waltz, and the funky, percussive “Barking Spiders.”

The core musicians of the Stewed Tomatoes who appear on most tracks include bassist David Woodhead, drummer Rich Greenspoon, percussionist Ben Grossman and guitarist Rich Pell. All kinds of other great players (and singers) make cameo appearances on various tunes.

In his liner notes to the tune, “Fiddle with a Broken Wing,” Oli said “this tune had a limping quality that reminded me of a bird with a broken wing, still trying to take flight somehow.” Although the tune may have been composed many years before his illness, to me, it’s a metaphor for the determination he showed to always remain a vital and creative force. Oliver Schroer lives on in the music he left for us.

--Mike Regenstreif