Sing Out!’s Best of 2015
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Daniel Koulack and Karnnel Sawitsky – Fiddle and Banjo: Tunes from the North, Songs from the South
label: SELF RELEASED
The title says exactly what it is, fiddle and banjo, and Koulack and Sawitsky apply them to a handful of wonderful tunes and sparkling performances. There are some voices, and lots of energy, as on a great, rousing arrangement of âLittle Birdie.â But there are lots of delicate, surprising moments too. âLullabyâ is quiet, restrained, and absolutely gorgeous. Just a fiddle and a banjo hanging out together for a while, having a conversation about this and that.
Not all the pieces are traditional, but everything feels of a piece, even despite that they come to us from a diverse range of traditions: Metis, Quebecois, old-time, and Appalachian. You may think you don’t need to hear âGroundhogâ again, but these guys prove that you do. âThe Old French Setâ marries a number of tunes and styles that you could hear in Quebec on any given night. There as elsewhere the arrangements are deceptively simple, holding out interest no matter how familiar the tunes may be. The album ends with a highlight, a wonderfully sparse presentation of Blind Alfred Reed’s âHow Can a Poor Man Stand Such Times and Live.â With music like this, apparently. — GH