THE INDEPENDENT (British press) True Blue to the Core If
he never does anything else as profound as the album that first brought
him to British critical acclaim - 1997's starkly beautiful Roll Away
the Stone - the Kelly Joe Phelps story is already down in the annals:
a 37-year-old from Washington State who spent most of his teens and
twenties playing jazz and teaching guitar before he had a road-to-Damascus
experience with the blues. He completely relearnt his instrument,
now playing, most unusually, with an open-tuned acoustic horizontal
on his lap, learnt a load of pre-war stuff and set off on a worldwide
mission. For the next couple of weeks he's in Britain. Opening the
tour in Belfast, his performance is highly courteous to the crowd
on one hand and simply enraptured with the music on the other. "Hi,
I'm Kelly Joe, this is what I do," he says, lurching into a scorching
10-minute take on the traditional Appalachian song "House Carpenter".
Embodying a level of musical brinkmanship rarely seen on stages this
side of Jimi Hendrix and The Who in their heyday, Phelps's performance
showed the kind of benchmark he was setting for the next two hours. |
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