Gordon Duthie – A Thran backwoods poet
I've ranted on about this man's music many a time and in the course of ploughing through some glossy copies of Leopard Magazine dating from early 2015 I came across this review of his quite splendid album Thran.
As I recall, we met up in Kintore to have tea and scones before heading off to the local graveyard to do a photo-shoot alongside the Pictish stones in the churchyard.
As I recall, we met up in Kintore to have tea and scones before heading off to the local graveyard to do a photo-shoot alongside the Pictish stones in the churchyard.
As for the bill - I think he paid it, but I cant quite recall to be honest.
The review went along the following lines:
The review went along the following lines:
"With the release of his third album Thran, NE singer/songwriter/musician Gordon Duthie reflects on the
74 year old event in which his great grandfather’s fishing vessel, Fraserburgh registered
Steam Drifter SS Duthies was sunk in Montrose Harbour by the young men of the
Luftwaffe.
Alongside titles such as Whisky
Disco and Feel Loon did a Wildpoepen,
Gordon’s tribute to Sandhaven built FR106 Duthies
is just one of ten provocative numbers in this new offering.
A year in the making, Thran
represents a significant shift from the themes of sadness and isolation
expressed in previous albums.
Westhill based and with roots in both Fraserburgh and
Kintore, Gordon is well placed to comment on all things North East. With
previous albums Shire and City and Multimedia Monster under his belt, this
new album uncovers a different side of the man.
“My granny always accused me of being thran” says Gordon
“but how else can I be and what else can I write about? I can’t see any point
in writing about the likes of San Francisco - what do I know about the city? – surely it must be better to write about
where you know and belong.”
The explicit theme in this album is a politically charged nostalgia
for simpler times. Moral values, the global culture of consumerism and the
letting go of things come under scrutiny.
In Invisible Lines
Gordon tackles the theme of poverty; Feel
Loon refers to a place where “The only reality in this world is a place
where no phone signal exists” and concludes with the hopeful note that one day
“You will open your mouth instead of your thumb”.
Mixed and Mastered by Thaddeus Moore of Sprout City Studios
and combining voice, drum and pounding bass lines in an up tempo mix of styles,
this is an album not to be missed.
For a man who started off his musical career as a four year
old drummer on a temperance march Gordon Duthie has indeed come a long way. "
Thran is available
from most digital music stores and also direct from Gordon @: https://gordonduthie.bandcamp.com/
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