Harem of the Sundrum and the Witness Fig is a solo album from neo-folkie
Wooden Wand (James Toth) which forgoes the experimentalism and free range sonic weirdness of his collaborations with ensemble
the Vanishing Voice. It's nice to get to the core of his songs here, which fall somewhere between
Woody Guthrie and
Leonard Cohen. The bare-bones approach creates a simple ambience that makes his creations seem more like interpretations of folk standards rather than the originals they are. Subtle treatments such as the phased vocal on "Leave Your Perch...," calling to mind a stripped-down
Spacemen 3, lend atmosphere, but most pieces are just his voice and guitar with the occasional light accompaniment of second guitar or harmony vocals, apparently from his usual cast of cohorts. Other modern touches embellish the recordings and keep them firmly in the 21st century warehouse freak-folk scene from which they derive. "Vengeance" could be
Robert Pollard channeling
Bob Dylan (channeling
Pete Seeger). The wah-wah guitar on "Sundrum Ladies" and "(Ask A) Sufist Chef" drops a hit of mescaline into what was once a run-of-the-mill campfire song. Only the odd drone that begins "Warn Winch Pts 2-3" hints at what
Wooden Wand does with his expanded group. But lovers of the psychedelic avant-mayhem of
the Vanishing Voice (or
Akron/Family or
Animal Collective) will find less to expand their minds here, and fans of modern folk (
Devendra Banhart or
Will Oldham) will appreciate the traditionalism and straightforwardness of this material, which is captivating in its simplicity. ~ Brian Way