| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 131417 (lower is better) |
| Price Used: | $11.99 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Release Date: | 1992-02-14 |
| Label: | Rounder Select |
| UPC: | 011661102422 |
| Binding: | Audio CD |
| Published By: | Rounder Select |
| ASIN: | B0000002QI |
| Category: | Music |
His playing is so lyrical and his touch and National tone are so fantastic that it almost makes you take him for granted. He can make you forget where American popular music was actually at, at that time. You could say he just melded string-swing and Hawaiian music together, which is to some degree true, but that would be to forget that at this time of his earliest recordings here (1926) string-swing wasn't a deeply established style. Sol was one of those at the forefront of this new music. Think about it... this is when Lonnie Johnson and Eddie Lang were recording their landmark string-swing duos... this is when the Venuti & Lang band(s) were starting to light things up. The Quintet of the Hot Club of France and Oscar Aleman weren't even a glimmer in the eye of the music scene of 1930, yet that is when the very latest side on this disc was recorded.
As for Sol's music itself, it may almost be what I'd consider "high-art kitsch". There is an inherent goofyness to some of it, but I do not mean that disparagingly. This is absolutely not the Hawaiian cowboy music that is Hawaiian slack-key guitar. This is more along the lines of what mainstream America thinks of as Hawaiian music... yet it is still so much heavier and deeper than the fluff you hear being played every time someone on tv gets off of an airplane in Hawaii. Quite a few of the tunes here are slow, drifting melodies that allow Sol's tone to just open up and float out of the speakers. His touch was amazing. At times I think of his playing like this... imagine a singer with an amazing voice, but she/he is drunk and kind of slurring their words. That's how Sol plays (I don't mean he was a drinker though, I don't know anything about him as a person). His notes just hang there and relate so well to the previous and next notes. Gorgeously articulated slurring might be how I'd describe his style of playing.
Beyond this, maybe the highest praise I can give him is that I had never really liked I Ain't Got Nobody at all until I heard his version, which I absolutely love.