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Simon Chrisman & Wes Corbett, ‘Jane’s Reel’

May 29, 2018

During Flatt and Scruggsā€™ iconic At Carnegie Hall! performance Lester brought Earl and fiddler Paul Warren up to the mic for their fiddle/banjo feature with this introduction: ā€œIt hadnā€™t been too many years ago since just a five-string banjo and the fiddle was kinda called a bandā€¦ā€ The banjo has always lent itself to these kinds of duo configurations. Fiddle/banjo is certainly the most familiar in American roots music, but banjo/bass is not uncommon — earlier on during At Carnegie Hall! bassist ā€œCousin Jakeā€ Turlock got his turn dueting with Earl, too. Thereā€™s also banjo and accordion (hold your jokes, please) and even double banjo. From Ireland to New Orleans to Appalachia thereā€™s no shortage of variations on the template of banjo plus fill-in-the-blank.

Banjo and hammered dulcimer is a much more infrequent combo. On their self-titled album Simon Chrisman (The Bee Eaters) and Wes Corbett (Molly Tuttle, Joy Kills Sorrow) make a compelling case for its immortalization in the old-time and bluegrass zeitgeist. Both Chrisman and Corbett effortlessly transcend their instruments, stepping well outside the stylistic and musical constraints that one might assume are nonnegotiable. ā€œJaneā€™s Reelā€ — named for Corbettā€™s alluring cat — might cause serious injury if you were to attempt to dance a reel to it, given its breakneck speed and unpredictable twists and turns. The album does have its expected chamber music-influenced moments, peppered among more meditative pieces and a couple of sweetly sentimental songs, but ā€œJaneā€™s Reelā€ demonstrates that Chrisman & Corbett arenā€™t willing to let this record be filed under ā€œinteresting acoustic background music.ā€ It demands and deserves full attention.

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