Ed Askew's reputation isn't hurt by his context -- haunted ghost of '60s folk via the legendary/notorious ESP label -- so arguably the nearly three and a half decades overdue appearance of
Little Eyes, his taped-then-unreleased follow-up to
Ask the Unicorn, simply had to formally exist to succeed. In an era of endlessly rediscovered psych/folk obscurities,
Askew was practically tailor-made to be celebrated by the likes of Arthur magazine and
Devendra Banhart's fan base, for instance, but the neat thing about
Little Eyes is that it doesn't need that receptive ground to work on its own -- it is, quite simply, an enjoyable treat and would have been upon the time of its release as well. Featuring only
Askew, a tiple (much more like an autoharp in sound instead of a guitar), and on a few songs harmonica, sequenced quite literally in the order in which it was recorded,
Little Eyes is by default a ragged affair; certainly he'd also be the first to admit the obvious debt to
Bob Dylan's example as iconic folk troubadour in the electric/space age, but his high quaver is much more suggestive of someone like
Robin Williamson while the effect of the tiple is to create a more fragile, fractured air in general. Combined with the perhaps unavoidably thin sound of the recording, the effect is to make
Little Eyes sound much older than its years, something from a Harry Smith box set rather than the era of What's Going On or
Led Zeppelin IV, say. On the flip side, the downside of
Little Eyes is its relative sameness -- no rare thing among most albums, to be sure, but arguably the songs are best heard in small bursts or even one at a time for their gentle power to best resonate. ~ Ned Raggett