Dodson and Fogg: After the Fall (Wisdom Twins)

 |   |  <1 min read

Dodson and Fogg: Here in the Night
Dodson and Fogg: After the Fall (Wisdom Twins)

Some weeks ago Elsewhere invited its readers/listeners and the curious to be interested in a wonderful compilation album of the quietly excellent Dodson and Fogg.

It was presented by The Active Listener website out of Wellington, New Zealand (an unprofitable labour love by Nathan Ford, interviewed here, much like Elsewhere)

As a result Chris Wade from Leeds who is the one-man Dodson and Fogg got in touch to pass on this new album.

Again his slightly dreamy folk-rock (with violin, sitar, two women singers, flute and so on) charms by its subtle melodies and his poetically evocative lyrics.

Because it is so understated and belongs to no particular fashion or trend, there is a timelessness about songs like the lovely In Your Own Way (with Indo-electric guitar) and Bring Me Back (a happier Nick Drake might have ended up here).

There is some lesser material (the unaffecting Life's Life) but whether he's in low-folk mode or even letting the guitars arc up behind him (Lord Above), Wade/Dodson and Fogg confirms again he's one to be checking out.

And an interesting footnote here, the violinist is Scarlet Rivera, perhaps last heard by most people on Dylan's Desire album almost 40 years ago. 

For this album and more from Dodson and Fogg/Chris Wade go here. Welcome to his trip. And you can listen to the whole album free here.

Share It

Your Comments

post a comment

More from this section   Music at Elsewhere articles index

Modern Studies: We Are There (Fire/Southbound/digital outlets)

Modern Studies: We Are There (Fire/Southbound/digital outlets)

Elsewhere has frequently championed this British quartet who have roots in folk-rock but extend themselves into more expansive lightlydelic folk-pop, atmospheric rock and downbeat introspection.... > Read more

Ayo: Joyful (Polydor)

Ayo: Joyful (Polydor)

The background to this itinerant singer-songwriter would make a good if slightly grim novel: she was born in Germany to a Nigerian father and a Romany mother; grew up in a gypsy community; spent... > Read more

Elsewhere at Elsewhere

WE NEED TO TALK ABOUT . . . JANDEK: Stranger in an even stranger land

WE NEED TO TALK ABOUT . . . JANDEK: Stranger in an even stranger land

In his very interesting 2001 book about cult figures and outsider musicians Songs in the Key of Z, Irwin Chusid had chapters on some figures (Wild Man Fischer, Syd Barrett, Florence Foster Jenkins,... > Read more

BEST OF ELSEWHERE 2007: Watermelon Slim and the Workers; The Wheel Man (Southbound)

BEST OF ELSEWHERE 2007: Watermelon Slim and the Workers; The Wheel Man (Southbound)

To be honest I didn't quite "get" the last, self-titled, album by this rough'n'ready bluesman, but I was clearly in the minority: the album won the Mojo magazine and the Independent Music... > Read more