The following text field will produce suggestions that follow it as you type.

Goes West
Goes West

Goes West in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $15.99
Loading Inventory...
Get it at Barnes and Noble

Size: CD

Get it at Barnes and Noble
Although its title suggests a continuation of the pastoral Americana meditations from 2016's wondrous
Modern Country
, guitarist
William Tyler
's fourth solo outing is in fact a brighter, occasionally frolicsome set, rife with sublime melodies and executed with an understated confidence. Its title,
Goes West
, refers not to the dusty cross-country voyages that inspired its predecessor, but to
Tyler
's recent relocation from his native Nashville to sunny Los Angeles. As on
, the all-instrumental
again employs a full band, though its leader sticks solely to acoustic guitar with
Meg Duffy
joining him on electric guitar,
James Anthony Wallace
on piano,
Griffin Goldsmith
on drums, and co-producer
Bradley Cook
covering bass, synths, and a smattering of other instruments. In a perfectly suited match-up, guitar icon and tonal forebear
Bill Frisell
also makes a guest appearance, while
Tucker Martine
rounds out the sessions' crew as engineer and co-producer. Since he's a seasoned session guitarist and stylistically diverse collaborator,
's solo career -- which began with 2010's mostly acoustic
Behold the Spirit
-- has been remarkably consistent. Each release has simultaneously revealed some new aspect of his craftsmanship and built off of the character of its predecessor. Opening with the playful multi-sectioned suite, "Alpine Star,"
is built around some of the most articulate playing in
's career. Opting for a cleaner production aesthetic and downplaying his more melancholic and gritty textural tendencies, a relaxed West Coast attitude informs most of the tracks. The easygoing "Eventual Surrender" rings with wistful harmonic arpeggios, veering into a pseudo-new age direction, while the lively flatpicking of "Fail Safe" folds the guitarist's more Anglo-oriented folk influences into a similarly relaxed Californian vibe. The largely solo fingerstyle gem, "Rebecca," harkens back to some of his earliest material, albeit with occasional shimmers of bubbling synth and lightly treated electric guitar. "Not in Our Stars" recalls the soft country flavor of
's
Nashville
LP while rather ironically, "Our Lady in the Desert," the track on which
Frisell
guests, feels like a more typical
creation. In essence,
builds on his already sterling reputation as a player and composer, while further establishing himself as a bandleader, on this breezy but neatly sewn collection. ~ Timothy Monger
Powered by Adeptmind