Wooden Wand - Blood Oaths of the new Blues

  by Andrew Carver

published: 3 / 2 / 2013




Wooden Wand - Blood Oaths of the new Blues


Label: Fire Records
Format: CD
Brooding latest album from Wooden Wand, the moniker for American singer-songwriter James Toth, which moves away from the country rock of his recent work, back to the dark sound of his earlier albums



Review

Prolific performer James Toth - the man behind Wooden Wand and its several variations - has had a busy couple of years, letting his country rock urges how with full throat on ‘Briarwood’. A year later and Toth is sounding like a man who’s questioned the directions he’s taken in life, looking at the casualties along the way, but determined at the end to carry on. On ‘Blood Oaths of the New Blues’, he steps back to the more haunted tones of his earlier work, starting the album off with an extended instrumental intro to ‘No Bed for Beatle Wand’, strumming and picking on acoustic guitar before his plaintive drawl takes over, singling oblique lyrics of luckless fortune, lost ladies and waning determination. It fades directly into ‘Day This Long’ (the two songs share a track on CD), where he is joined on vocals by keyboardist Janet Elizabeth Simpson. The sombre mood continues as he ponders what or who will keep him sane as he heads past middle age. Mysterious contemplation gives way to jangling travelogue on ‘Outsider Blues’, where Toth and a companion head off to the Toronto Bluesfest, with a few hopeful notes flecked in the tale of the down-and-out and over-medicated. The heavy thump and strident strum of the brief ‘Dome Community People (Are Good People)’ gives way to meditation on the death penalty in ‘Dungeon of Irons’. It is followed by ‘‘Supermoon (The Sounding Line)’, a bitter rumination on the price of lies and the urge to escape, or even disappear completely. ‘Southern Colorado Song’ and the character portrait ‘Jhonn Balance’ cover similar ground, but as he draws things to a close with the brief, laconic ‘No Debts’, it sounds like Toth is free and clear of the urge to look back in sorrow. ‘Blood Oaths of the New Blues’ is one for the fans of the downbeat, and should find its way into the collection of fans of Bill Callahan and Vic Chesnutt.



Track Listing:-

1 No Bed for Beatle Wand / Days This Long
2 Outsider Blues
3 Dome Community People (Are Good People)
4 Dungeon of Irons
5 Supermoon (The Sounding Line)
6 Southern Colorado Song
7 Jhonn Balance
8 No Debts


Band Links:-

https://twitter.com/woodenwand
http://www.woodenwand.org/
https://www.facebook.com/woodenwand


Label Links:-

https://twitter.com/firerecordings
https://www.facebook.com/Firerecords
http://www.firerecords.com/
https://firerecords.bandcamp.com/
https://instagram.com/fire_records/
https://www.youtube.com/user/Firerecor



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Reviews


Farmer's Corner (2014)
Dreamy mix of folk, blues and stripped-back psychedelia on latest album from Wooden Wand, the moniker for American musician James Jackson Toth
Briarwood (2011)
Death Seat (2010)
James and the Quiet (2007)


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