Stan Hirsch Reviews
Frank Matheis-thecountryblues.com
and then there is this guy in the desert down in New Mexico! They got good blues on each side of the Mississippi, but New Mexico is not exactly known as a Mecca for our favorite genre. It’s a place more famous for Polka based Mexican Norteno and Cojunto accordion music than the blues. Hirsch embodies the universalism of this music and proves that you can find amazing blues no matter where you go.
Even though he is an acoustic bluesman, Stan Hirsch is strongly influenced by Jimi Hendrix. He often features Hendrix in his repertoire—a sensational mix of deep roots, real true blues with Hendrix-drenched acoustic guitar mastery. How can that be wrong? Rock god Hendrix was a bluesman just the same. Yet, Hirsch will satisfy Country blues purists with his covers of the traditional blues master, which he performs with his own unique style drenched in guitar artistry.
No matter what he plays he gets attention for his soulful virtuosity and mastery of a wide range of acoustic blues styles. Hirsch plays his blues with a funky, energetic essence and a harrowing sense of tension.
Local IQ
Most notable among Hirsch’s students is Eric McFadden, who, along with longtime Los Angeles-based session pro Tim Pierce, is Albuquerque’s preeminent guitar legend. And none of it would have been possible without Stan Hirsch, who’s been content to play and sing a form of acoustic blues that dates back to a time when Robert Johnson was recording music to tinfoil.
Hirsch isn’t so much playing the blues here as he is channeling them. It’s a rare musician who can echo and approximate the original intent of a song while making it unmistakably his or her own. Hirsch is one such artist. He growls, howls and whispers his way through Compelled’s dozen tunes with brazen determination and, on first listen, an almost disquieting sense of soul baring. Hirsch sounds like he’s singing in your head; you can almost see him seated, guitar balanced on his left leg, hunched over the microphone. It’s intimacy to the nth degree.
With the vocals in the driver’s seat here, it takes a little time to begin to absorb the subtlety and nuance that informs Hirsch’s left-of-center guitar work. Working percussive thumb picking into feverish crescendos and then cascading out into careful, sinfully beautiful arpeggios is just part of the recipe: Hirsch fleshes out the songs with minor key inversions and chord figures that, for most players, never get past glimmers of what’s possible with five fingers manipulating six strings. In that regard, Hirsch’s guitar prowess is simply on a higher plane. But he’s also supremely gifted with the ability to make virtuosity palatable to even the most casual listener.
Compelled to Play is the latest chapter in the Stan Hirsch saga, and one that begs your full attention. No slick production, no outside accompaniment except a brushed snare and finger snaps on one of his originals, and, most assuredly, no bullshit. It’s Stan Hirsch at his finest — compelling enough that anyone who hears it will leave the couch for the club.
BLUES BYTES–Terry Clear Stan HIRSCH - Compelled To Play 2009
At last, a long awaited new album, Compelled To Play (Blue Falcon Music), from Albuquerque’s guitar master Stan Hirsch. Unusually, Stan Hirsch includes some good cover versions of blues standards, done in his own inimitable style, whereas most of his earlier albums were all original work. He still includes some songs of his own, but he covers “Got My Mojo Working,” Walking Blues,” Baby Please Don’t Go,” Mystery Train” and “On The Road Again.”
I have to admit that I had to play this CD a few times to get a handle on what it is that Stan Hirsch is doing here – his previous CDs have been pure enjoyment based on their simplicity of good blues. I’m pleased to say that I didn’t give up, and after a few plays it came through to me – this is a musician who is his own man – he can take an old standard and completely change it to his own style, without losing the flavour of the original – a bit akin to what Eric Clapton did with Robert Johnson’s “Crossroads.” It might take a while to get a the idea of what Stan Hirsch is trying to do, but persistence is worthwhile and you’ll get a lot of pleasure from listening to this album.
I’ve never heard “Got My Mojo Working” done as slow as this before, and the first time I played it, I thought, “What is this?” After a couple of plays I found that the song had a whole new slant on it, and that is the same for the other covers, too – not one of them is a direct copy of the original – refreshing!
Of the original numbers, I would buy this CD for “Guilty Of Boogie” alone – I’m fearful that I might wear out this portion of the CD.
If you haven’t heard this man before, then you’ll probably get the point a lot quicker – I had preconceptions from listening to earlier albums and from seeing him play live. But if you haven’t heard him, then take this opportunity because here is a guitar master at work!
Sonic Reducer
Stan Hirsch Compelled To Play (Blue Falcon Music)
Stan Hirsch doesn’t need anything fancy. He can take a beat-up guitar and an amp on its last legs and produce the best blues music in Albuquerque. The recording process for Compelled To Play consisted of Hirsch sitting down, picking up his guitar and playing. He didn’t attempt multiple takes or add backing tracks—nothing that would compromise the live feel of his record. Hirsch is a beast on the guitar, acoustic or electric, and his respect for honest, unfiltered craftsmanship runs deep. Whether reinterpreting Robert Johnson or fingerpicking through one of his moody originals, Hirsch’s intimate understanding of his six-stringed companion is on full display. (SM)
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author: richard beck northern ireland
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