TONY McMANUS: Mysterious Boundaries
TONY McMANUS
Mysterious Boundaries
Compass 7-4612
If youâve ever heard Tony McManus add a delicate bridge to a fiery Scottish reel, lay it down double time with Quebeçois musicians, or jam with jazz musicians on Charles Mingus compositions, you already know that thereâs not much he canât do on the guitar. If you need further proof, check out the artistry on Mysterious Boundaries. This time he puts his stamp on longhair stuff â the classics, not the hippies â on a project that began when Mike Marshall challenged McManus to learn Bachâs E major âPrelude.â That oneâs on the new album, along with two others by Bach for good measure (âAllemandeâ and âChaconneâ). Among other things, youâll also hear two from Baroque composer François Couperine, Claudio Monteverdiâs âNigra Sum,â and âGnossienne #1â from avant-garde classical composer Erik Satie. As you can probably anticipate, McManus is technically flawless â his precise fingering of crisp melody notes in perfect resonance with resonating bass. Iâd rank Mysterious Boundaries among the yearâs top classical releases.
Call it preference. I appreciate the complexity of classical music, but I donât like it much. I missed the passion and fire I associate with McManus. Or, to be more precise, the way we define passion and fire in our age rather than in the past. John Renbourn once called Tony McManus the âgreatest Celtic guitarist in the world.â I agree, and Iâd rather hear him raking barred chords up and down the neck, or adding crystalline contrast to pipes, fiddles, and accordions. McManus has more than earned the right to play whatever pleases him and if youâre a fan of classical music, Mysterious Boundaries will no doubt startle you. But Iâll trade it for a future McManus release with more spit and less polish.
— Rob Weir