If the revival of interest in "old-sounding" folk in the 21st century has been gratifying on the one hand, on the other -- as with any trend -- there's an explosion of releases that range from the exquisite to the uninspired.
C Joynes' 2009 album falls into the middle range for the most part -- it's enjoyable but a bit lost in a sea of releases exploring similar veins. Its best moments rely less on striking new developments in the form than on elegant restatements of mood and approach by
Joynes and a number of collaborators throughout -- thus the opening "Pretty Little Divorcee," a traditional song based on an arrangement by the Late Risers that's simple enough as a melody but given a soft, melancholic undertow. Moments like the softly spooked-out "Joynes, NC," with the addition of theremin adding a still-futuristic edge, and the lovely simplicity of "Skip James on ‘The Triumph of Death'" -- despite the title, not a
James remake -- also exhibit
Joynes' skill as well as his relative formalism. Inevitable echoes of earlier figures such as
John Fahey (especially on "Nyambai Sawmill," which feels like a track of his not just in the title) and
Robbie Basho crop up, not to mention newer performers --
Alasdair Roberts is thanked in the liner notes, as is
Will Oldham -- but there's less emphasis on experimentation and more on playing things reasonably straight, but always reasonably well. A notable exception can be heard on the clattering start of "Bones for Dogs," where what sounds like a roughly tuned autoharp provides backing stomp for the calmer lead performance. ~ Ned Raggett