| Nicht nur angesichts des wallenden Bartes, der Robert Fishers Gesicht 
        seit jüngstem ziert, bin ich versucht, von einem wunderbaren reifen 
        Album zu sprechen, einem Alterswerk (auch wenn ich denke, dass der Mann 
        noch viele Songs in sich hat), einer Rückschau, die alle Qualitäten 
        des Singer-Songwriters, Sängers und seines lockeren Kollektives bündelt 
        und aufs Feinste darbietet. Zehn relativ feste Konspiranten waren bei der Realisierung der 11 Songs 
        akustisch aktiv, sieben Gäste halfen das in herbstlich-leuchtende 
        Töne getauchte Bild vollenden. Basis aller Pracht-Beispiele des Willard-Grant-Songwriter-Folks, 
        der wie kein anderer gleichzeitig Hoffnungslosigkeit und fülle 
        auszudrücken weiss, ist die akustische Gitarre, stets Lagerfeuer-kompatibel, 
        wie überhaupt jeder Song des Albums nahtlos und 1 zu 1 auf der Back-Porch 
        in den Abendhimmel gespielt werden kann. Drumherum reihen sich zarte Mandolinen-Klänge, 
        klar-schwebende Geigen-Linien, eine einsame Trompete, zurückhaltende 
        Klavier-Akkorde, selten  aber dann machtvoll  elektrische 
        Gitarren-Felsen. Alles klingt naturbelassen, mit himmlischer Leichtigkeit 
        dahingespielt, auf einfach-genialer Moll-Harmonik fussend, wie gemeinsam 
        in einer Stunde kongenialen Leides ersonnen und eingespielt. Aber die 
        Produktion von Fisher und Simon Alpin verleiht dem Klangwerk dann den 
        vollen, glasklaren Klang, der die Filigranität des Ganzen schimmern 
        lässt. In dieses Bett aus gelassener Größe und Tristesse 
        ohne walzende Tragik sind die Geschichten gebettet, die uns die warme 
        Stimme Fishers ins Ohr schmeichelt. Wie seine Songs ist auch Fishers 
        Stimme von einer Größe, die durch Zurückhaltung noch wächst 
        und für das Erzählen von Geschichten, für das Malen von 
        Wort-Bildern geschaffen ist; die beruhigende Wirkung ihres Klanges das 
        versöhnende Element, die hoffnungsspendende Sanftheit. Ihm zur Seite 
        singt Jess Klein bei vier Songs, die mich angenehm daran erinnern, wie 
        wunderbar Fisher mit sanften Frauenstimmen harmoniert und in Fare Thee 
        Well und bei dem finalen-Abendschimmer-Stück The Suffering-Song ist 
        sie  man verzeihe mir das  weit mehr als ein blosser Carla-Ersatz. 
        Kristin Hersh gibt in ihrem Gastauftritt eine beeindruckende Impersonifikation 
        des Ghost Of The Girl In The Well. Chris Eckmans Klavierspiel ist 
        herauszuhören, aber auch hier gilt: In der Zurückhaltung liegt 
        die wahre Kraft. Das Album entwickelt sich organisch, Ruhe und leise Melancholie ausströmende 
        Stücke bewegen sich auf den ersten dramatischen Höhepunkt (The 
        Ghost Of The Girld In The Well) zu, Twistification bietet den beruhigenden 
        Moment des Innehaltens, Another Man Is Gone kommt pur und bluesnah, Soft 
        Hand ist ein rollend-optimistischer Augenblick des Lächelns. Die 
        folgenden drei Songs decken die ganze Palette der melancholischen Farbgebung 
        ab, vielschichtige Instrumental-Variationen umflirren die Stimmen in Fare 
        Thee Well und Day Is Past And Gone. Und The Suffering Song schickt uns 
        ins fliehende Licht des Herbst-Abends. Aber das leuchtet golden. Wie die Vorgänger-Alben reiht sich Regard The End wieder sanft in 
        die großen melancholischen Zusammenhänge von Tindersticks und 
        Wakabouts ein, einige Fisher-Originale würden jeder Walkabouts-Best 
        Of zum herbstlichen Schmucke gereichen, seine von übergroßer 
        Tragik freie, tiefe Ruhe würde manchem Tindersticks-Album die schwebende 
        Leichtigkeit und das Gefühl für die leisen Töne wiedergeben. 
        Aber durch sein bisheriges Schaffen und noch mehr  man verzeih mir 
        die mir sonst fremde Unbescheidenheit  durch das Glitterhouse-Album 
        bastelt dieser Mann ganz gelassen an seiner Unsterblichkeit. Bei aller 
        Bescheidenheit: Ganz, ganz groß. (Glitterhouse) | 
   
    | "With the unanimous, critic-drooling clamour afforded 2000's Everything's 
        Fine, WGC seemed to have hoisted themselves onto a rarified plateau from 
        which the only way was down. After the quasi-psychedelia of debut 3 AM 
        Sunday @ Fortune Otto's (1996), the fluid membership collective built 
        around founder members Robert Fisher (vocals) and Paul Austin (guitar) 
        had begun carving a rep as peddlers of doom-laden, redemptive balm for 
        the lost and damaged with 1998's Flying Low and the following year's Mojave. 
        Central to WGC's black pit of campfire-folk sorrow was the exorcising 
        of demons: particularly the self-loathing and emotional dislocation that 
        had driven Fisher to pills and booze from an appallingly tender age. By 
        (the only semi-ironically titled) Everything's Fine, the singer appeared 
        to have reached a place where the abandoned, but ever-tugging, allure 
        of the sauce had been drowned in music's cathartic, healing waters. That 
        record - Lambchop-paralleled in these pages as WGC's Nixon - seemed unassailable. 
        Until now, that is. The most immediate thing about Regard The End is the sheer, bloodied 
        power of Fisher's voice. Like a colossal centrifugal force, everything 
        else spins around it. In its untethered shift stage centre, it both defines 
        an entire mood and ushers in depths of feeling rendering much of their 
        back catalogue almost anaemic in comparison. On Flying Low, for instance, 
        he was forever vying for space with tough acoustic guitars, drums and 
        studio trickery, so that for every unadorned "Evening Mass" 
        there was the distorted vocal mix of "August List". Even Everything's 
        Fine now appears like Fisher was holding back, its more conventional band 
        format denying the space around the vocal which sharpens Regard The End 
        in such dramatic relief. Compared to Fisher's deep-swamp baritone here, 
        only the former's "Wicked" and "Ballad Of John Parker" 
        tap the same wellspring. The second point of major departure is Fisher's delving into traditional 
        folk forms, informed as much by Celtic/European folk as the turn-of-the-century 
        rusticity of Greil Marcus's "old, weird America". Partly recorded 
        in Slovenia (where Fisher hooked up with long-term ally and, tellingly 
        perhaps, Europe-championing musical flame-keeper, The Walkabouts' Chris 
        Eckman), Boston and London, Regard The End stitches four traditional songs 
        into seven originals without exposing the seams. This time around, Paul 
        Austin opts for the 'occassional member' card, making way for multi-instrumentalist 
        Simon Alpin (most recently seen pumping keyboards on the Teenage Fanclub 
        tour), who co-produces. With Fisher leading from the front - amongst his 
        peers, only The Hansdome Family's Brett Sparks shares the same page - 
        various guests' contributions, bleeding in and around the narrative, are 
        never less than consummate. Take Dennis Cronin, for example, likened by 
        Fisher to Chet Baker, adding beautiful trumpet blush to "Fare Thee 
        Well", or the doleful Celtic fiddle that both saddens and stirs "The 
        Trials Of Harrison Hayes" and "Rosalee", or Alpin's gorgeous 
        mandolin intro to "Beyond The Shore". Lyrically, as evinced by the title, death is never far, though this never 
        sounds like a maudlin record. Trad. opener "River In The Pines" 
        turns the tragic demise of two young lovers into an affirmation of unbreakable 
        devotion, whilst "Beyond The Shore" finds Fisher tenderly intoning 
        over softly ebbing strings "I've struggled long with Shame's great 
        load/And shouldered my share of pain/To feel the caress of the long black 
        veil/I've worked, but not in vain". On one level, it's about fleeing 
        the mortal realm, on another it's a hymn to the transfiguring cycle of 
        the human spirit ("I'm bound to go beyond this shore/In Glory I will 
        be placed"). Elsewhere, as on the spare "Ghost Of The Girl In 
        The Well", allowed to breathe over creaky guitar and saw, he's joined 
        by Kristin Hersh to recount the tale of a 14-year-old falling to her death 
        whilst escaping the clutches of an evil landowner. Pure, classic Southern 
        Gothic. Ultimately, Regard The End is a quest for truth, an attempt to uncover 
        life's harshest lessons however tough, however unpalatable. Often armed 
        only with personal faith as the difference between salvation and the abyss. 
        The stunning "The Trials Of Harrison Hayes", in dissecting human 
        failings, admits: "Misery doesn't come from the earth/Trouble doesn't 
        sprout from the ground/People are born to trouble/Just as sparks fly upwards 
        into the clouds", whilst break-up ballad "Fare Thee Well" 
        (brightened by WGC touring partner Jess Klein's warm, breathy warble) 
        intones "Faith can heal a lot of wounds/Here at night in this rented 
        room/I look to the ceiling and find a reason/To carry on". Of the traditionals, "Twistifaction" (a simpler, denuded version 
        to the one released on WGC's 2001 collaborative album with Dutch band 
        Telefunk, In The Fishtank) employs softly-caressing violins and the hypnotic 
        pipe of a lonely melodica to enact the tale of a mysterious siren skulking 
        in the deep and muddy waters of a maple swamp. "Day Is Past And Gone" 
        finds Fisher at his most soothing, evoking all the weary contentment of 
        a tired, fulfilled life drawing down the shade in fading light. Conversely, 
        "Another Man Is Gone" updates the old slave song, "Another 
        Man Done Gone" (as covered by Odetta and others), into a rumble of 
        whining slide guitar, shivering strings and dobs of piano. Smouldering for the most part like crackling firewood, Fisher's voice 
        suddenly erupts at 2:22, bellowing one huge, suspended note that slowly 
        dissolves into soft, lonely piano notes to the song's end. It's a nape-tingling, 
        sublime moment, leaving a charged silence that still knocks me backwards 
        after living with this record for weeks. Of Fisher's originals, closer 
        "The Suffering Song" may come cloaked in apocalyptic doom, but 
        is the most magnificent endpiece imaginable, Fisher coming over like some 
        great gospel hybrid of Paul Robeson's earth-shaking tenor and Johnny Cash's 
        brimstone holler. All done, Regard The End is the first Willard Grant album to truly immerse 
        yourself in. In ditching most of their traditional band ethic, they've 
        tapped into the finest folk gothic traditions of death, suffering, misery 
        and hardship and fashioned a paradoxically uplifting, transformative record 
        of extraordinary power. If this is the end of the world as we know it, 
        I feel just fine."  (Uncut) |