richard-bennett

Travel through time with this master of twang.

Richard Bennett

Ballads in Otherness

A studio veteran with thousands of sessions to his credit, Richard Bennett is also an ace producer and Mark Knopflerā€™s longtime guitar foil. But to instrumental guitar fanatics, heā€™s the keeper of the flame for a style of guitar music thatā€™s been largely forgotten. It emerged in the late ā€™50s as electric guitar and stereo vinyl first gained popularity, andā€”until it was swept away by the British Invasionā€”permeated movie soundtracks and TV themes. For a refresher course, check out Tony Mottolaā€™s Mr. Big (1959) and Al Caiolaā€™s Golden Hit Instrumentals (1961). These guitarists had serious jazz chops, yet embraced twang and tremolo, and made LPs using cutting-edge studio technology of the time.

Which brings us back to Bennettā€™s Ballads in Otherness. Echoes of these greats, as well as Duane Eddy and the Shadowsā€™ Hank Marvin, resound in the albumā€™s 13 originals. The tunes evoke saguaro, chaparral, and wide-open roadsā€”the call of the West half a century ago. But for me, the most compelling aspect of Bennettā€™s music is his gift for writing memorable melodies and executing them with ringing, old-school tones and impeccable technique, whether on electric 6-string or sweet steel guitar.

Ballads in Otherness is also filled with superb chord-melody playingā€”another skill thatā€™s on the brink of extinction. ā€œAl Casey was my good friend and mentor,ā€ Bennett says of the Wrecking Crew guitarist, ā€œmy entree into the Hollywood studio world of the swinging ā€™60s. He opened my ears to people like Barney Kessel, Howard Roberts, and Johnny Smith. The chord-solo pieces are my nod to those guitarists.ā€

Bennett is a time traveler, bringing vintage instrumental guitar into the 21st century. If you lived through that earlier era, Ballads in Otherness will take you back. But if youā€™ve never absorbed these sounds, it makes a fabulous introduction.

Must-hear tracks: ā€œCome Summerā€™s Sun,ā€ ā€œEye for Hire,ā€ ā€œThis Love Rememberedā€

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