Search - Harry Taussig :: Fate Is Only Once

Fate Is Only Once
Harry Taussig
Fate Is Only Once
Genres: Blues, Folk, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (12) - Disc #1

Released as a short-run private press LP in 1965, Fate Is Only Once has long been a coveted collectible among American Primitive guitar enthusiasts. The only other recorded work by Taussig surfaced on the out-of-print Tako...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Harry Taussig
Title: Fate Is Only Once
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Tompkins Square
Original Release Date: 1/1/2006
Re-Release Date: 6/6/2006
Genres: Blues, Folk, Pop, Rock
Style: Traditional Folk
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 856075001523

Synopsis

Album Description
Released as a short-run private press LP in 1965, Fate Is Only Once has long been a coveted collectible among American Primitive guitar enthusiasts. The only other recorded work by Taussig surfaced on the out-of-print Takoma LP Contemporary Guitar 1967 alongside John Fahey, Robbie Basho, Max Ochs and Bukka White. "Dorian Sonata" was recently featured on the acclaimed acoustic guitar compilation Imaginational Anthem Vol 1, and now the album is here, remastered, with original liner notes and photos.

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CD Reviews

Not exactly a review...but....
Kjell Karlsson | sweden | 08/29/2009
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Some things in this world are lucky enough to age with dignity....

"Fate Is Only Once" belongs to that cathegory....One of these legendary

albums that I only dreamt of ever getting the possibility to hear...

the same as with some Rosmini and Suni McGrath things...

And here it is again....an enchanting little time-capsule that takes you

back to those days when Fahey had just recorded "Tranfiguration..." and

this type of guitar music was the least to say "obscure"...

(It is just impossible not to mention Fahey when talking about these things)

And to me this album is a reminder that I somewhere down in the seventies

had come to the conclusion that acoustic steel string playing could be easily

divided into two groups**....with Fahey as main exponent of one of groups, that

became known as "Takoma School"...and Stefan Grossman as exponent for the

other group..."Ragtime Pickers"...this perhaps being an unnecessary strict

generalisation from me....but I still hold on to that "theory" today,thirtyfive

years later!

And this album to me represents something of a "missing link" in that evoluton

of guitar music!

To try to explain what I mean: I did a little experiment and set my cd-player

in sequence track 1-3-5-7-9-11 and then I did the same for tracks 2-4-6-8-10-12.

And an amazing thing happened!

The record divided into two records!

The first being a pre-Grossman record of "ragtime-picking" music, of course very

much influenced by Rev Gary Davis....very much the same as would one decade later

appear on the "Kicking Mule" label. Perhaps a little more primitive than those

wizards that would emerge later in the "ragtime style", but considering it was

1965 it is pleasant enough...and by the way National Ragtime Stomp seems performed

on a National Steel Guitar!

The other one then appearing to be an early "Takoma"...Seemingly heavily influenced

by Fahey's approach to composition and performing.

Noteworthy are Sugar Babe, performed on 12-string and based upon Elisabeth Cotten.

Also worth mentioning are Rondo To Death and Dorian Sonata...very much in the Fahey

vein.



Taussig was included with two compositions in the "impossible to find" Takoma Guitar

Sampler from 1966 and Dorian Sonata was included in a recent guitar anthology,

Imaginational Anthem.

Otherwise nothing seems to be known of his further musical career...if he had any!



This album is a good representative from those early years when acoustic steel-string

guitar got established as an art form in itself...other than accompanying more or less

phony "folk-songs"...and as stated above I find it as an early "missing link" between

"Takoma" and "Kicking Mule"....

And considered 1965 and all that stuff; the remastering is well done so the sound

quality is surpisingly good.

Recommended for anybody who wants to dig deeper into acoustic steel-string guitar!



**Note. In fact there is also a group which can be defined as "American Raga", with

exponents such as Robbie Basho and Peter Walker...but that is another disussion to which

I maybe can come back some other day"