It’s like his connection to the heart and soul of what he is singing intensifies the further up the scale he goes. With Rudd, the higher he goes the more he seems to be opening himself up emotionally and spiritually for his audience. Most people have enough difficulty obtaining the high notes they are satisfied merely with reaching them and usually end up sacrificing expression in the attempt. In fact, it seems to have the opposite effect. Yet, unlike others, when he forges up into the higher altitudes of his scale the quality of his vocal expression doesn’t change. His vocal range is equally impressive as he ranges from a forceful alto right up to almost falsetto on occasion. Pictures of him on stage show him sitting in the centre of a construct literally bristling with instruments: a row of yidakis in the front, top hat snares off to each side, stomp box and bass drum pedals at his feet, and assorted percussion scattered around within easy reach. Not only does he play all these instruments, but when he appears in concert he is set up so he can be playing as many as possible as once. I could tell you that Rudd is an extraordinary multi-instrumentalist who plays slide guitar, regular guitar, percussion, drums, and the indigenous Australian instrument the yidakis (referred to as didgeridoo by Europeans). I’ve been listening to a downloaded copy of his latest release, Spirit Bird, coming out on Side One Dummy records June 5 2012, for about a week now and I still haven’t been able to figure out how to put into words the effect the CD has on me. The problem is Rudd is one of the few musical artists around these days who I react to on a purely emotional level. While that’s a lot shorter than my reviews tend to run (and according to some that’s a positive) it doesn’t really tell you much about him, his music, or why I think he’s so great. However, for some reason when it comes to Xavier Rudd, all I can ever come up with is “holy shit, this guy is fucking awesome”. Normally I find a way to list the reasons I like someone’s work without crossing over the line so the review becomes a fan letter. Ask me how I feel about the music industry in general or some of the so called celebrities/singers who somehow are referred to as artists and watch me go. Well, I can be as nasty as the next person. It’s cool to think critics hate music and only exist to run down your favourites or to say nasty things about people you like. I know that sounds like a stretch to some of you. You start gushing all over the page about how damn amazing somebody is and nobody is going take your review seriously, it will dismissed as the ravings of some fan. However the difficulty comes when you come across somebody who won’t let you be objective. After a few years of doing this you get so it becomes almost rote. You look at a group or person’s work within the context of the genre they work in and ask yourself how they stack up against others like them. He donated a specially commissioned, signed Tjukurtjarra Didgeridoo on which he has written, “One love / One mob / For country / Arms up / Thank you, Kaarakin!” Rudd’s world music sound mixes elements of folk, pop, dance, and reggae with African and aboriginal rhythms that often border on New Age before picking up speed, especially on the epic, mostly instrumental ten-minute “Full Circle.” The album ends with Rudd pleading, “Please patience please patience please / I’m creating a dream.” You can join Rudd’s ever-growing movement on December 3, when he plays Irving Plaza in a show rescheduled from October 28, which was postponed because of Hurricane Sandy Chris Berry opens up.As a reviewer or critic you’re supposed to provide some sort of objective opinion on whatever it is you’re writing about. Rudd recently participated in an online auction sponsored by the Kaarakin Black Cockatoo Rehabilitation Centre, where he’s visited. In addition, several songs feature bird and whale samples one of Rudd’s current causes, and whose call can be heard on Spirit Bird, is the endangered black cockatoo. A one-man band who fights for the environment, indigenous cultures, animal rights, and other causes, Rudd again plays a multitude of instruments on the new record, including numerous guitars, keyboards, harmonica, drums, a stomp box, and the yidaki, (didgeridoo). “Do you feel like any of this is wrong? Do any of you feel like any of this is wrong? Coz I feel like some of this is wrong,” Australian musician and activist Xavier Rudd declares on “Comfortable in My Skin,” one of thirteen eco-friendly tracks on his seventh studio album, Spirit Bird (SideOneDummy, June 2012).
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