Date: Fri 07-May-1999
Date: Fri 07-May-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Quick Words:
Adrian-Legg-Towne-Crier
Full Text:
A Very Welcome Return For Adrian Legg
(with cuts)
BY SHANNON HICKS
PAWLING, N.Y. -- It is next to impossible to have a boring conversation with
the musician Adrian Legg.
One minute the discussion concerns his new album, another masterpiece, this
one called fingers and thumbs . Within minutes, the conversation can cover
everything from Legg's passion for photography and a troublesome broken nail
to the problems of wearing a short shirt during a performance (it rides up in
the back, he confided recently), and even the continuing problem Legg has of
getting electric shocks every time he gets out of his American rental car.
Conversations with Adrian Legg are never dull. They are animated,
far-reaching, extremely enjoyable and intelligent. So are his albums, which
fans have been playing endlessly for the past decade.
Adrian Legg is, as anyone can tell you even after the most brief of
introductions to his music, a genius on the guitar. "The guitar is the most
versatile instrument in the world, and nobody demonstrates this better than
Adrian Legg," Acoustic Guitar magazine once wrote about him. Legg performs
things on his guitar, entire compositions that are beyond belief, that have
only been imagined before being captured in his recordings.
fingers and thumbs is a collection of ten songs and one very macabre poem
called "Tiddles." The poem is Legg's acknowledgement that his fans enjoy his
tales and anecdotes nearly as much as the music he performs, which seems
pretty seamless to most listeners.
"I quite like it, actually," Legg said of the new album last week. It was the
morning after a pair of shows in upstate New York, and he was beginning to
deal with what would turn into a week-long ordeal with a nail that had split
in the middle of one of the shows.
"I normally hate my records. It takes years before I forget the wrong notes."
This release, his second on the Red House label, he is enjoying right out of
the gate.
Watching Legg perform is as magical as hearing his work on CD. He doesn't just
play the guitar, he converses with it. His songs tell stories with characters
that come alive each time he plays them.
His fingers move up and down the neck of his guitar, sometimes effortlessly
and other times with careful concentration. Legg performs on an odd-looking
little thing that is a prototype he developed with the guitar makers at
Ovation. According to some information in a recent concert handout, it is a
shallow-bodied guitar with an acoustic chamber, its style reminiscent of the
old Ovation Breadwinner.
However odd-looking the instrument may be, the sounds that come out of it are
pure joy. Legg actually tunes and re-tunes his strings as he plays, which in
part explains some of the unique music he produces. The talent hidden within
his ten fingers helps explain the rest of the magic.
The guitarist returned on May 1 to Towne Crier Cafe, a club just over the
Connecticut-New York state line, performing for a crowd that didn't mind
waiting until nearly 10 pm for his appearance. Judging by the anticipation
rippling through the crowd prior to Legg's appearance on the small stage, and
even from the reaction to every note he created and all the stories he told
once he began performing, Legg's audience would have happily waited another
hour or two just to be in the room with him.
Legg's return to Towne Crier was punctuated with anecdote after anecdote. He
spent nearly as much time weaving his spell verbally as he did actually
playing the guitar, and the audience ate up every bit of it. He was still
talking about his broken nail minutes before taking the stage, and mentioned
he had been playing with a Crazy Glue and powder formulation all week to try
to get it straightened out.
On stage, there was a new story about his just-acquired bifocals, and there
was the story many had heard before about Legg and his wife and the first time
they held what he calls "a private party for two." The song "The Irish Girl"
was a result of that party, he said, not because of his wife's heritage but
because it happened in Dublin.
Raconteur that he is, Legg took the audience of about 100 people and made each
of them feel as if he was telling every one of his stories to them personally,
and for the first time. His stories weren't always direct. The songs weren't
all from the new album.
In his captivating and roundabout way, though, Legg delivered a concert of
songs and stories that lived up to all expectations, broken nail and all.
