TEMPEST: The Tracks We Leave
TEMPEST
The Tracks We Leave
Magna Carta 9121
Tempest plays Celtic music with a rock edge, but they shade their arrangements with hits of the blues, country and Cajun two-steps, Arab rhythms and a hint of psychedelia. Bandleader Lief Sorbye was born in Oslo, Norway, and heâs a folklorist with a wide knowledge of Irish, Norwegian and related Northern European traditions. After landing in Oakland in the late 1980s, he put together the first version of the band and began touring and recording. The Tracks We Leave is their 11th album, and finds them in fine form. They tear through an energetic set of Irish, Scots and Norwegian traditional tunes as well as five originals by Sorbye, and his wife Patricia Reynolds.
They open with âRantinâ Rovinâ Robin,â a song by poet Robert Burns that was made popular more recently by the Battlefield Band. Sorbyeâs hearty tenor sings lead with a casual, devil-may-care spirit thatâs supported by Kathy Buysâ high harmonies. Buys adds to the jaunty air with lilting fiddle work that plays off of Sorbyeâs mandolin and Josh Fossgreenâs uninhibited bass guitar.
âAlle Mann Hadde Fotaâ is a well-known Norwegian childrenâs song about wives who make new body parts to replace the worn out limbs of their hard working husbands. âAll men have feet, my husband had none, I took some birch root and made feet for him,â Sorbye sings. Itâs played with a subdued, almost limping tempo, which emphasizes the somber lyric. Buys plays melancholy fills while guest keyboard player Robert Berry contributes dark organ work to intensify the songâs funereal mood. The title tune is a Sorbye/Reynolds original, with music adapted from traditional Norwegian melodies taken at a slow, despondent tempo. Buys and lead guitarist Greg Jones shower the melody with brilliant sparks on their solos as Sorbye delivers the uplifting lyric – a benediction that affirms lifeâs joys, even on the longest, hardest journey – with plenty of Celtic soul.
The rest of the album is lighter and brighter, a showcase for the bandâs sterling musicianship. âGanesh,â another Sorbye/Reynolds tune, has a hint of ska/reggae in its cadence. Itâs a salute to the elephant headed Indian God who removes all obstacles. Sorbyeâs flute and Buysâ fiddle give the melody a lively, optimistic feel.
âRattlinâ Roarinâ Willieâ is another song by Robert Burns. Its syncopated, tongue twisting lyric and the bandâs sprightly playing will have you rockinâ in your seat. The five instrumental tracks include Sorbyeâs âSeptember Jig,â which gives Buys a chance to stretch out and includes some sharp, bluesy playing by Jones; âThe Brown Coffinâ is a trio of mid-tempo Scots and Irish jigs that starts acoustically, then slowly builds up to a rocking finish with Fossgreen turning in a brief, tasty bass solo and âThe Leitrim Set,â a trio of jigs that was put together by the traditional band TĂŠada. Buys shows off her impressive chops as the tempo slowly approaches supersonic at the urging of drummer Adolfo Lazo. The album closes with âSurfing to Mecca,â an old Tempest favorite that combines Lazoâs surf propelled backbeat with Arab ornamentations supplied by Sorbyeâs flute and Buysâ fiddle.
— j poet