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| Guitarist's best instrumentals from 1970-75. Ice Miner, June Bug, Poor Boy, A Child Should Be A Fish, Bean Time, Mona Ray, more. |
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| 1 June Bug |
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| 2 Ice Miner |
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| 3 Poor Boy |
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| 4 Machine #2 |
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| 5 Bean Time |
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| 6 In Christ There Is No East or West |
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| 7 Owls |
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| 8 Lost John |
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| 9 Blue Dot |
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| 10 Eggtooth |
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| 11 Medley: Crow River Waltz/Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring/Jack Fig |
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| 12 Mona Ray |
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| 13 Twilight Property |
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| 14 Taking a Sandwich to a Feast |
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| 15 A Good Egg |
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| 16 A Child Should Be a Fish |
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| 17 The Scarlatti Rip-Off |
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| 18 Grim to the Brim |
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Album Review
The first of two discs (released simultaneously and sporting nearly identical covers) recaps Kottke's early years from 1970-'75 when he recorded for the Capitol label. As is indicated by the title, this features only Kottke's amazing fretwork, bypassing the vocals that much of his audience dealt with in a grin-and-bear-it fashion. There is no previously unreleased material (as there is on the companion disc "Instrumentals-Best of the Chrysalis Years"), but many of these tracks are difficult to come by on CD and having a compilation of Kottke's instrumental music--much of it totally solo--makes for a cohesive, some might say definitive portrait of the guitarist's jaw-dropping skills. Incorporating strains of country, blues, folk, bluegrass, gospel and even classical (his version of Bach's “Jesu, Joy Of Man'S Desiring" is astonishing) Kottke's style is immediately recognizable and totally distinctive. Sure, he's fast and technically proficient, but the emotion and soul communicated through his acoustic guitar is mind-blowing. Even on “June Bug" from "Mudlark", his 1970 debut Capitol release, the guitarist's intricate finger-picking/hard strumming sound is established. Although his approach would ultimately lead others to new age, there is nothing here that is atmospheric or merely background music. Beautiful, difficult, quirky but never flashy for the sake of show, Kottke's singular style remains vital and influential to everyone who picks up an acoustic guitar. With all six of the albums recorded for Capitol more or less equally represented, this is as good a place as any to start a Kottke collection. Considering his 30-plus year career though, there is lots more to explore. ~ Hal Horowitz, All Music Guide
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Biography


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Other albums by: Leo Kottke |
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