2008, Secretly Canadian
The double-EP Richard Swift as Onasis is as creatively fortifying as it is unhinged and unpolished, a primal slab thrown into the fire for dancing and merriment during the chilly months while we await Richard Swift's second full-length. Once upon a time, the idea of a record was to capture a performance, to grab those undulating wavelengths from the air and stick them to this thing that went round and round, so later on that performance could be heard and felt and experienced again. So it's no surprise Swift, a long-in-the-tooth impresario of all not-a-computer, would jangle and stomp out this tangent of jams that tape-echo a generation of pioneers who believed Rock and Roll and the Blues a celestial calling and not a lifestyle choice. Now most listeners won't think about how Swift did this on a cheap four-track; they won't immediately see his nods to Link Wray and Howlin' Wolf; it doesn't matter. The songs stand up. The songs get in your belly and wiggle your hips and stomp your foot and bob your head. Some of them float around like organ music that slipped out the church backdoor and headed to that bar with vinyl booths and a Little Richard photo over the burbling Wurlitzer of 45's. They got vibe and atmosphere. They act like great harmony, making whatever they're accompanying richer and wider and thicker.
Tracklisting
Disc 1
| 1 | Knee-High Boogie Blues |
| 2 | SM60 |
| 3 | The German (Something Came Up) |
| 4 | Greaseball Blues |
| 5 | Opt I |
| 6 | Du(M)b I |
| 7 | Sign Language |
| 8 | Even More Sign Language |
| 9 | Opt II |
| 10 | Field Painting |
| 11 | Du(M)b II |
| 12 | Your Mom |
| 13 | Phone Coffins |
| 14 | Dutch |
| 15 | Whistle At The Bottom Of A Shoe |
| 16 | Vandervelde Blues |
| 17 | Ha Ha Suckers |
| 18 | Vandervelde Blues II |
| 19 | JLH |
| 20 | Opt III |
Customer Reviews





