John Doyle
The Path of Stones
Compass Records
There is scarcely an Irish music project in the past 30
years in which fretted instrument wizard and vocalist John Doyle hasn’t played
an integral part. You’ll find him alongside Liz Carroll, Karan Casey, Eileen
Ivers, Kate Rusby, Mick Maloney, and Heidi Talbot; and in bands such as The
Chanting House, Solas, Usher’s Island, The Crossing, and the Joan Baez Band.
Okay, the last isn’t Celtic but you get the idea.
The Path of Stones is by my count his fourth
solo recording, though he’s been so prolific it wouldn’t surprise me to learn I
missed one. He opens The Path of Stones with a traditional song, “The Rambler from Clare” in which he showcases his mandolin skills as well as his
guitar (and even adds a touch of fiddle to supplement that of Duncan Wickle).
His treatment is in keeping with the song’s title and subject in that it
musically saunters at a lively clip and the vocals practically skip off his
tongue. Doyle sings with a light tenor reminiscent of Christy Moore when he
wasn’t rocking out. It’s the sort that has soothing qualities and folds easily
into a melody rather than seeking to overpower it, as too many virtuoso artists
are prone to do.
The remaining eight tracks–four sets of tunes and four
songs–are Doyle originals. His guitar work is an offshoot of the dropped D
(DADGAD) fingerstyle playing pioneered by Davy Graham in the early 1960s. On
the album Doyle overlays 5- and 6-string guitars and a mandolin to the tune
“Elevenes,” but check out the style on the attached live clip in which he
sticks to a 6-string guitar. Watch his hands–if you can! The tune title, by the
way, is a double wordplay. The time signature is 11/8 and elevens is a British
Isles colloquialism for an 11am tea break. Doyle showcases mandola, bouzouki,
and guitar on the “Naoise Nolan’s” jig, and builds up to a faster pace on a set
or reels that opens with the quite “Coolaney Reel.” “The Winding Stair” turns
up the gas; Michael McGoldrick’s flute and Cathy Jordan’s bodhran add to the
swell of “Rossagh’s Rambles,” the final tune. He closes off the album with an
air, jig, and slip jig in the “Knock a Chroí” set that features fiddler John McCusker, with Doyle playing
5-, 6-, and 12-string guitars plus keyboards.
In between we get some fine new songs written as if they had
elderly parents, as it were. This is particularly true of “Lady Wynde,” a paean
to an unobtainable beauty. Cathy Jordan (Dervish) adds harmonies that add to
the song’s wistful ambience. The title track is a six-minute love song, though
it’s mostly of the unrequited sort. (It’s inspired by a Yeats poem, so expect
romance tinged with mystery.) You can hear Doyle sing a live version of “Her Long Hair Flowing Down,” an immigrant’s regret song. (Doyle explains the
background in his intro to his song.) By the time he’s done, you’ll probably be
surprised this is an original, not some reworked selection drawn from the
public domain.
I’ve been listening to John Doyle for decades and it’s been
an absolute to watch him grow in skill, confidence, and stature. The Path of
Stones adds more building blocks to Doyle’s impressive career.
Rob Weir
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