Our celebration of Clean Feed records comes to a close today with a focus on Shhpuma Records, Clean Feed's sister label.
Stuart Broomer:
LuÃs Lopes - Love Song: Post Ruins (Shhpuma, 2019)
LuÃs Lopes might be the artist appearing most frequently on Clean Feed and
the sister Shhpuma label. He’s an intensely engaged guitarist who covers a
range of approaches with many collaborators. His bands can range from free
funk (Humanization 4-tet) to hard-edged composition (Lisbon Berlin Quartet)
to large ensembles, always embodying intensity, a sense of freedom and
commitment that can jolt. Even his solo music covers a remarkable range,
from the noise solos of Lisbon Paris (Stereo Noise Solo) to the subtle
nylon-string acoustic play of Love Song, Emmentes. Love Song: Post Ruins
stands out, for this writer, as one of the most original and sustained – in
every sense -- solo guitar works I’ve heard, his usual thin-line archtop
lightly amplified, adding just a certain brightness and sustain to its sonic
character. Lopes describes it as a nocturne: “To listen alone. somewhere
between after 1 o’clock in the morning and 1 hour before sunrise."
It's quietly involving from start to finish, a wonder of psychological
states and relations: always considered, yet spontaneous; always continuous,
yet surprising, essaying a changing mood at once reflective and tinged with
revelation. It’s sufficiently intimate to suggest a man talking to a guitar,
or perhaps, more accurately, a guitar talking—reflecting, consoling,
exploring moods, shifting positions, always constructing a space as alive to
revelation as consolation or reconciliation. There are moments when
semi-tones will gather in tense conclave; others when a bright single tone
will repeatedly ring out until it eventually gathers a reaction, whether
supportive or questioning, the guitar echoing the sustained concord or
close-knit caution. Harmonics can ring out like a choir.
It's a sustained work (37:28) of late-night, contemplative, wondrous guitar
music, sui generis, but with a certain quality of elemental kinship –
nothing you could pin down to harmony or methodology, country of origin or
astrology chart – to certain performances of the highest order, Grant
Green’s Idle Moments or Derek Bailey’s Ballads.
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