THE JOHN LANGAN BAND: Bones of Contention
THE JOHN LANGAN BAND
Bones of Contention
The John Langan Band
For an acoustic three-piece, the John Langan Band manage to make a rock groupās worth of noise. Thereās guitar/percussion, fiddle and double bass (and flute thrown in somewhere), with plenty of fleet, fluent playing ranging from the roaring to the quite sublime. They can filter in plenty of madness (listen to the end of āCharlieās Rant,ā for instance, or parts of the wonderfully-titled āMidgets On Acid,ā an imaginative reworking on John Kirkpatrickās āJumping At The Sun, which well have been interpreted on drugs, or even the first half of āD-mented,ā which grunts and groans like a monster in pain before resolving into a finger-busting exercise that wouldnāt have been out of place in an old prog band). Yes, they can do wild, but they can also do delicate. Witness the beauty in āWinter Song,ā or the aching way the instruments come together at times. For all that, as a project this is a set of pieces that shift through mood and tempo with very little connection. That might be fine for live performances, but itās far less effective on disc where itās harder to simply carry the audience along. Considering that only two of the tracks clock in at less than five minutes, and there are periods where the words āself indulgenceā are writ large, I think that more tracks of shorter duration would have been a better idea. (To put it another way, they needed a stern producer.) That said, itās impossible to fault the musicianship, which swings with ease from the Balkans to Scotland and places only accessible via psychedelics. What they probably need is to look at themselves and differentiate between what works for the performance vs. recording. God knows, thereās potential aplenty here, and no shortage of enthusiasm. Next time out, and Iām sure there will be a second disc for them, they just need more focus and maybe some objective ears. Could well go places.
— Chris Nickson