OAKLEY HALL
GYPSUM STRINGS (BRAH RECORDS)
Springing from 60's west coast legends like the Byrds, the Flying Burrito Bros., the Charlatans and Moby Grape, adding elements of X, Neu, the Feelies, Mercury Rev and Fairport Convention, Gypsum Strings finds Oakley Hall refusing the dictates of stale No-Depression-era norms.
Guitarists Fred Wallace and Pat Sullivan and amplified fiddler Claudia Mogel trade leads with abandon on "Confidence Man" and "Lazy Susan" and shred together like the illest of string bands on "If I Was In El Dorado" and "House Carpenter".
Cutting through the dense arrangements are powerhouse harmonies. Rachel Cox emerges as the Blue Ridge amalgam of Sandy Denny and Linda Ronstadt while Pat Sullivan's gravelly baritone anchors it all in Johnny Cash and John Doe territory.
The sextet's trademark killer songwriting chops are in evidence as Gypsum Strings boasts some beautiful ballads that temper the heaviness like "Living in Sin in the USA", "Nite Lights, Dark Days" and "Bury Your Burden".
Yeah Yeah Yeah Brian Chase makes his recording tabla debut on the latter. All told Gypsum Strings cements Oakley Hall's rep as luminaries of the new psych-roots movement.
They look to the past to make modern music striking in its originality.