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Related Reviews

Songlines
4 Stars
"It's a deeply involving, poetic, and intimate work that will repay many a late-night visit. This is one well that won't be running dry."
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Manchester Evening News
“It is a work of beautiful, unabashed romanticism, and Thompson moves through the music with a stately, measured tread, and makes the earth move with every low rumble…remarkable”
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Rock 'n' Reel Magazine
3 Stars
“Turn it up and the earth will move… exquisite”
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Guardian.co.uk
3 Stars
"soft-textured and rhapsodic...clearly a labour of love"
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altsounds.com
"most exciting"
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Beardedmagazine.com
'The coming together of two musical minds has created something quite magical'
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BBC.co.uk
“rushes of clarity and rapture”
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Press Association
"the album bursts into life"
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Music News
3 Stars
"outstanding"
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musicOHM
“by all accounts a remarkable piece of work… a thing of real beauty.”
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AAA Music
“this is a masterful, truly staggering work. There is simply no weak track to be singled out, and although artsy instrumentals will never have mass appeal, this is a breathtaking album to be held in highest regard. This isn’t so much a collection of tracks as a journey through a narrative which can withstand repeated listens.”
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The Line of Best Fit
“Watching the Well is not only a tribute to a great musician, but a love letter to an instrument.”
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Vanguard
"At the end I felt like my shoulders had been given a good kneading and unknotting...relaxing and intriguing"
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The Jazz Breakfast
"beautifully recorded"
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Subba-Cultcha
3½ Stars
"demands repeat listens...incredibly pleasant experience"
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allgigs.co.uk
4 Stars
"riveting journey made up of chilled esoteric jazz, harsh wintery ambient electronic and liquid choral sequences"
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South Sonic
5 Stars
"quite frankly nothing short of a masterpiece."
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Sandy Brown Jazz
"really enjoyable."
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Tasty Fanzine
3½ Stars
"truly amazing."
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themusiccritic.co.uk
4 Stars
"From the opening track you are transported to a sound scape of atmosphere and surrealism that is deeply relaxing and ethereal. The instrumentation is faultless throughout"
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Jazzwise Magazine
4 Stars
"It's powerful stuff that magnifies with each repeated listen and for me one of the most heartfelt and moving albums of the year."
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Uncut Magazine
4 Stars
"A shifting matrix of string and harp, punctuated by choral voices and arcing sax....A grand, enchanting creation"
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James Borland Music Reviews
3½ Stars
“It is a beautiful listen…truly amazing”
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The Music Critic
4 Stars
"Thorne's willingness to embrace both modern technology and beautiful acoustic instruments make this a fascinating musical journey."
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Jon Thorne & Danny Thompson in Contact Music


13 November 2010
contactmusic.com
Andrew Lockwood

FULL REVIEW HERE

 

'Watching The Well' is an album written by Lamb bassist Jon Thorne. It is played by Jon Thorne and Pentangle bassist Danny Thompson, a man considered by Thorne to be his long term mentor. The pieces are to all intents and purposes instrumental and are divided into three separate movements, 'The Light That Guides', 'The Generous Heart' and finally 'The Tie That Binds'. Jon has produced the album as well as jointly collaborating to arrange both the strings and the choral parts to the album.

Watching The Well has obviously been given a great deal of care and attention from all involved. The detail and love which is evident throughout bare all the hallmarks of both keys contributors striving towards perfection. At times it can get a little involved and becomes more of a musicians musician appreciation society. The two incredibly skilled artists have combined many genres into the 12 tracks. Free Form Jazz, soft Folk, near Classical arrangements and instrumentation, Operatic vocalisations and even Electronica. The final result is an album of subtlety and absorption.

The first four pieces that comprise, and are lead off by, The Light That Guides include the Manchester Jazz Festival commission 'Watching The Well'. The opening 2 tracks combine and compliment each other wonderfully, the sweeping string arrangements and operatic aria style harmonisation creating a luscious soundscape of beautiful texture and depth. What makes these pieces, and possibly the album however, is the addition of horn, brass and woodwind instruments. The Saxophone of Gilad Atzman is sublime and draws obvious comparisons with David Sylvian's Brilliant Tress album.

Watching The Well owes as much to Jon Thorne's production as to his bass playing. The classical feel to many of the parts of the album are softened by the ease with which the arrangements are allowed such flowing transitions between each movement. The soft shuffle of the cymbals or the solitary harp give further dimensions to the cinematic compositions. Where the bass is brought to the fore, as with 'Victoria', from 'The Tie That Binds', the sound produced is highly inventive and although purists may beg to differ, is reminiscent of Sylvian's one time partner from Japan, Mick Karn.

Although at times a little indulgent, and sometimes losing focus, Watching The Well, is nevertheless a hypnotic, sensitive and superbly made slice of ambient.


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