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Nir Felder: II
ByHis instrument of choice is the usually more crystalline-sounding Stratocaster but Felder somehow elicits a fatter-than-a-big-ol'-jazz-box tone from it. His style as a soloist has way more in common with

Jim Hall
guitar1930 - 2013

Jimi Hendrix
guitar, electric1942 - 1970
Why all this prologue on his personal sound, style and approach? Because in Felder's case, they've melded into much more than the sum of those parts. They've become what is the goal of all serious players (and one achieved by so few)the true voice, his voice. It's one so strong, authentic and identifiable that it can't help but dominate any impression left by his workor any of his work with others for that matter. That's certainly the enviable, uncommon thing that got Felder so heavily touted as "the next big thing" by critics a decade ago.
If nothing else, II certainly reaffirms all that and just hearing more of that voice is arguably worth the price of admission. Nevertheless, it's worthwhile noting the similarities and differences between this album and his debut to get a sense of Felder's artistic direction and progress in the interim.
As with Golden Age, II continues with Felder's penchant for adding various overdubbed background adornments and reinforcements onto the base performances. These are once more done in a way that doesn't detract from the music or morph it into something non- reproducible. One tangible difference on II is that the core unit is reduced from Golden Age's quartet to a trio with drummer

Jimmy Macbride
drumsb.1991

Matt Penman
bassInteresting but not overzealous as a writer, Felder seems to know he doesn't necessarily need overblown compositional designs to express his musicality effectively. That's not to say there isn't some pretty sophisticated music here, (see the aforementioned "Interregnum"), but the magic in, say, the laid back intimacy of "Coronation" giving way to eventual ecstatic jubilation is purely an effect of interpretation, not some grand architecture. Indeed, one of the album's most memorable pieces, "Fire in August," is essentially a two-chord vamp that transcends its own modest description completely by way of Felder's sheer creativity and spark. And even for all of Felder's subtle yet frequent-enough sonic embellishments, enhancements, cinematic leanings (and yes complexities), the music throughout II never really loses its ability to revel in a certain directness that feels like simplicity. A notion that is perhaps best characterized by the album closer, "War Theory."
All that said, there are no huge stylistic quantum leaps or directional detours on II to distance it exceedingly far from its predecessor but in that, it absolutely doesn't feel at all disappointing either. It feels like Felder found the right star to steer by out of the dockone that offers great ways to avail his talents. Continuing on that course is, as they say, a no-brainer.
In terms of Felder's growth as a player, it definitely shows here but, it feels like more of a kind of redwood-like slower growtha bit more than incremental but definitely the organic and lasting kind. It's a pleasure hearing him add even just a few sturdy rings at a time to a tree that already cast an impressive shadow.
In all these ways, II shows Felder certainly making good on the "next big thing" moniker, but proving he was less of the "flash- in-the-pan" prodigy type and more the "old-soul-in-a-younger-body" varietysurely the more desirable of the two. ">
Track Listing
The Longest Star; Interregnum; Fire In August; Coronation; Big Heat; Big Swim; War Theory.
Personnel
Additional Instrumentation
Nir Felder: guitars, mandolin, banjo, electric sitar, key bass, Fender Rhodes, Theremin, synthesizers, MPC; Matt Penman: acoustic bass; Jimmy Macbride: drums; Jeff Babko: Piano on "The Longest Star;" Doug Yowell: additional percussion on "Big Heat."
Album information
Title: II | Year Released: 2020 | Record Label: Ropeadope
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