Anders Nilsson | Night Guitar

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Avant Garde: Modern Composition Blues: Guitar Blues Moods: Mood: Dreamy
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Night Guitar

by Anders Nilsson

Sound at One is proud to present what is truly destined to be a landmark album for solo electric guitar aptly titled, “Night Guitar,” following in the footsteps of John McLaughlin's "My Goals Beyond" and Sonny Sharrock's "Guitar.”
Genre: Avant Garde: Modern Composition
Release Date: 

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Tracks

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1. Meet Me in the Back Alley
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7:51 $0.99
2. Ax to Grind
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5:56 $0.99
3. Nocturne
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13:48 $0.99
4. Breakfast Boogie / Nightmare Ballad
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7:20 $0.99
5. Nordic Blues
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8:40 album only
6. The Journey Beyond
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9:02 album only
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ABOUT THIS ALBUM


Album Notes
In the pieces I’ve heard from Night Guitar, Anders Nilsson has managed to find something truly original left in the much pillaged vaults of country blues guitar- something of the ghosts that have haunted it since the beginning. Think Blind Willie Johnson meets Bernard Hermann. Excellent stuff.” - Marc Ribot

“Anders Nilsson has fashioned a set of beautifully mysterious guitar music that seamlessly blends a wide range of influences into a unique sound: brooding, dramatic, and filled with surprises.” - Elliot Sharp

Swedish-born and New York-based experimental guitarist Anders Nilsson produces music that is at once bracingly direct and utterly unclassifiable. My review of his wonderful new album “Night Guitar” appeared in the January 2012 edition of The New York City Jazz Record.
Listening to this deeply focused and atmospheric solo performance again and again, it’s hard to escape the notion that Night Guitar is more than a little biographical in nature.
Guitarist Anders Nilsson isn’t shy about sharing the details of his musical journey. On his website, the young guitarist recounts his upbringing in Sweden, his love of — and subsequent disillusionment with — Swedish shred guitarist Yngwie Malmsteen, his move to New York a decade ago, and achieving musical liberation while busking in Manhattan subway stations. These experiences permeate the vignette-like movements of Night Guitar, often in surprisingly direct ways.

On “Meet Me In The Back Alley,” Nilsson opens with a moody bass drone that he quickly adorns with plucked scale tones and micro-tonal string bends. Transitioning to a second mini-movement, he introduces a rhythmic chordal pattern that is quickly overtaken by overdubbed, and overdrive-laden distorted guitar chords. The effect is shocking, and even comical, but it’s clear that schtick is not Nilsson’s game. He’s simply integrating the sounds of his life without the filter that limits most artist’s sonic choices.
The distortion effect — a clean, highly condensed tone that nods toward guitarists like Malmsteen and sonic experimenters like Sonny Sharrock — reappears throughout the album, almost always without warning — a reminder not to get complacent on this shape shifting and emotionally resonant music.

On “Breakfast Boogie/Nightmare Ballad,” — which can be heard above in a music video by Arrien Zinghini – Nilsson’s considerable skills as a cinematic composer are apparent from the first ostinato bass notes, which establish the foundation of a structure that remains throughout the tracks careful edits and overdubs. You can almost imagine a shadowy figure flickering across a screen as the crosshatched patterns and effects Nilsson conjures make way for pulsing, bent high note punctuations, just as the piece grows from a tangle of interconnected phrases into a sprawling and diffuse panorama that somehow never loses its tense, claustrophobic feel.

Equally foreboding is the album’s episodic closer, “The Journey Beyond,” which manages — more than any other track on Night Guitar — to blend Nilsson’s vast sonic influences into single composition. The result is an epic, and often melodramatic, performance that tests the bounds of genre bending without losing its laser-like compositional focus. _ Matthew Miller/tuneOUToptIN


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