BEN HUNTER and JOE SEAMONS: Take Yo Time
BEN HUNTER and JOE SEAMONS
Take Yo Time
Self-Released
For anyone who has learned to play an instrument in the usual way – lessons, scales, exercises, practice, recitals – Joe Seamons can make you feel like youâve missed something. He grew up in a rural setting in the Pacific Northwest in a log cabin that his parents built. There he learned music in a way that most of us these days simply canât: through active transmission, sitting and listening to the neighbors and, then, having a go himself.
Itâs a (sadly) unique approach in our day and age when skill development, whether itâs math or hockey or music, tends to be prized more than having a bit of fun together. Because of that disparity, Seamons and Ben Hunter founded the Rhapsody project, an organization based in Seattle that intends to bring children to music. The goal, Seamons said recently, is âletting kids know that they donât have to play music off a page ⌠they can play music just by making noise with their instruments.â The project then shines a light on the kind of songs that allow children to do that, ones that are comfortable, familiar, and approachable. The point isnât to keep perfect time, or to impress an audience with solos, but to exercise the spirit of the songs, and to encourage participation within a distinctly American musical tradition.
While Take Yo Time isnât entirely derivative of the Rhapsody project, in that it can and will stand on its own, itâs nevertheless emblematic of it. Here Hunter and Seamons present the kinds of songs that invite participation, and they give lots of indications of the various forms participation might take. A hand slapping a knee on âSome of these Days,â a gloriously goofy kazoo on âJungle Nights in Harlemâ a pair of bones on âMississippi Heavy Water Blues,â the solo callouts on âJazz Fiddlerâ – whether you actually do grab something and play along, the point is made that this is not music for the stage, itâs music for the living room, specifically your living room, not just theirs. The very sympathetic production across the album underscores that idea. For those of us who arenât able to be in the room with them, this disc is so inviting, so intimate, that youâll feel like you were.
While the album neednât be anything more than that, scratch the surface a bit and youâll see that Hunter and Seamons are quite cunningly surveying the length and breath of American music in the pre-war years, that time when most music was still largely being made at home. Theyâve beautifully chosen songs that might easily seem a bit like strange bedfellows. Duke Ellingtonâs âJungle Nights in Harlem,â is placed with a Child ballad, Blind Willie McTellâs âBroke Down Engine Blues,â the Mississippi Sheiksâ âJazz Fiddler.â The musical styles that Hunter and Seamons adopt beautifully reflect the genres that these pieces represent – the Appalachian fiddle drones on âTom Dooley,â for example, contrasts the jazz phrasing on âBeaumont Ragâ – though, despite those kinds of differences, they bring all of these various musical ideas together and demonstrate not the contrasts, but rather what they have in common. Which is America, after all. Itâs not jazz or jug band, itâs not blues or old-time, itâs just songs to learn, to play, to play with, to clap along to. These are our songs to teach, to learn, and to share, if for no other reason that this: because itâs fun.
— Glen Herbert