Showing posts with label Reed Turchi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reed Turchi. Show all posts

07 January 2025

REED TURCHi & REGiNALD DWAYNE BETTS - House of Unending - 2023

I forgot I had sent this to myself to check out later when I had the time and with all cool things I send to myself that's where it goes to die until a few months later after I've forgotten about it, I find it again and kick myself.

My Review: As usual, anything Reed Turchi does is cool AF.

Here's the spiel from the Bandcamp page:

HOUSE OF UNENDING is a collaboration between Reginald Dwayne Betts and Reed Turchi, a combination of spoken word poetry and slide-guitar improvisation that showcases their shared sensibilities and underlying rhythms.

The album begins, fittingly, with an interruption—a collect call from prison. The mechanical voice comes through clear in the booth and Betts answers Fats, explaining to him that not only is he about to begin a recording session, but that the first track, "Essay on Reentry," is a poem centered on Fats, and on what it means to leave, and yet forever be shaped by prison…
This swirl and vortex of layered meaning gives HOUSE OF UNENDING its power: carefully crafted poems and melodies blended with improvisations that allow voice and music to reach new, unprecedented layers and levels of meaning.

In some ways, HOUSE OF UNENDING began over a decade ago, when Betts and Turchi first met in perhaps an even more unlikely scenario: as two-on-two teammates on a basketball court, facing off against poets Alan Shapiro and Rob Cohen at the Warren Wilson College MFA Program for Writers. Betts was only recently home, pursuing the MFA in poetry that would prove to be a lineage of degrees, and Turchi was a bare-footed teenager developing unbelievable blisters on the hardwood.
An unlikely pair, but simpatico: Betts and Turchi traded mix CDs and poems, and for years discussed a potential project, aiming to bring together the blues-guitar influence Turchi picked up in North Mississippi and Betts' poetic subject material.

In HOUSE OF UNENDING what emerges is a shared inner ear, shaped by poetic and musical influences. As Betts begins each poem—part recitation, part improvisation—Turchi finds moods, notes, and rhythms that pair with the underlying cadence and subject. Betts delivers his words line by line, breath by breath, and Turchi, through guitar, finds ways to match this breathing. What results is not Turchi following Betts, or Betts flattened into a monotone due to the direction of the guitar, but a symbiotic relationship that allows both music and word to develop, explore, and intertwine.

HOUSE OF UNENDING reflects the particular personalities of Betts and Turchi while enacting ancient art forms—call it a true-blues for the year 2023, or go back further, to poetic forms as old as the Ghazal, which Betts makes his own, and for which Turchi fashions new ideas of musical accompaniment."

creditsreleased September 8, 2023

Released September 8, 2023
Reginald Dwayne Betts - Spoken Word
Reed Turchi - Guitar
Pete Wilhoit - Drums, Percussion
Marcus McFerren - Trumpet

#AltLitPulpBlues #SpokenWordBlues                                                                                                             




08 March 2012

TURCHi - Road Ends In Water


Turchi is Reed Turchi, boss of North Carolina's Devil Down Records who brought you the new Kenny Brown double-disc set, the Bill Ferris recordings of Mississippi Fred McDowell, a new release by long-time Junior Kimbrough sideman Little Joe Ayers, and a couple other very worthy works.


On his first solo album Turchi, who is based in Chapel Hill and plays guitar and sings,Chris Reali (a musicology student at UNC-Chapel Hill) on bass, and Cameron Weeks (Blackskies) on drums, and the group is joined by the great Luther Dickinson on three tracks.  The Lutherized songs, in particular Dr. Recommended (Satisfaction Guaranteed) has a wealth of swagger. Luther brings it, and it's hangin'. 


Turchi brings a Dylanesque-tone to Road Ends In Water akin to Bob's more recent work (I'd bet money a very discerning Dylan would dig this album) filtered thru Junior Kimbrough and R.L. Burnside alumnus Kenny Brown. Reed Turchi could almost be, as Brown was to Burnside, Kenny's adopted son. That's not to say Turchi is aping. That's not it. But Kenny is a predominant and fine flavor.
Turchi is a tight band and I'd be very interested to see/hear them live. Reed and his friends have made a fine first album that reps them well. I look forward to hearing the next album after they've had a chance to get some serious roadwork under their collective trotters. This is original and very solid North Mississippi hill country (and delta blues reworks) that should satisfy any fan. You can get it HERE.

26 November 2011

LiTTLE JOE AYERS Brings that Mississippi Hill-Country Sound BACKATCHYA!


 A conglomerate (kəŋˈɡlɒmərɨt/
is a rock consisting of individual clasts within a finer-grained matrix that have become cemented together.

Earl "Little Joe Ayers is a conglomeration of Junior Kimbrough, R.L. Burnside, T-Model Ford, Son House, and Little Joe Ayers.
 .44 (I Wore My .44 So Long) by DevilDownRecords

     Backatchya was recorded on
the front porch of the home of former R.L. Burnside guitarist Kenny Brown. It was recorded by Reed Turchi (Devil Down Records boss) and mixed in Memphis at the famed Ardent Studios. Ayers sounds like he's in the room with you as you listen. 



    Ayers brings a firm and strong, yet almost pretty, touch to the guitar. Where Junior Kimbrough got weird with one chord, R.L. Burnside was groovin' and dirty, and T-Model is slashin' and rubbing, Ayers' picking is tough and lovely. Ayers played bass for Kimbrough for years so covers of Junior abound on Backatchya, but played in Ayers' deft,  well-picked style. Little Joe Ayers sounds best to me sitting at my desk, the volume not too high, so I can really hear him. Vinyl would be even better.  It makes me listen to what he's playing and really hear just how good he is.  But you have to be able to slow down, come sit and listen to him.  I think you'll be moved.

Don't Leave Me Baby by DevilDownRecords 

PS- Kudos to Devil Down Records
Each of their releases are worthy of your money.