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Eric McFadden's Dimentia

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Eric McFadden Trio
http://www.emtmusic.com


Like protagonists from some epic western novel, the Eric McFadden Trio arrives on the jaded contemporary music scene preceded by anxious rumors and curious anticipation. A veteran of celebrated underground bands including Liar, the Eric McFadden Experience, Alien Lovestock and IZM, Eric McFadden's sinister songs, vampiric vocals and flamenco-rock guitar improvisations have made him an icon along America's western seaboard. Lest you dismiss the preceding as absurd hyperbole, consider the fact that McFadden has performed and recorded with the lordly likes of Bo Diddley, the late Joe Strummer, Widespread Panic, psychobilly rockers The Reverend Horton Heat, blues troubadour Keb Mo', Rolling Stone Ron Wood, Primus kahuna Les Claypool and others. He was voted "Best Guitarist" by the New Mexico Weekly and "Guitarist of the Year" by San Francisco's Zero magazine. And in 2000, McFadden was recruited as a touring member of George Clinton's P-Funk All Stars, a distinction that thrusts McFadden into the pantheon of funk-rock guitar idols.
 
Now, McFadden has teamed with acoustic bassist James Whiton and drummer Jeff Cohen to form a trio whose electro-acoustic sound, impressionistic songs and virtuoso antics suggest an obscenely voluptuous hybrid of the Clash, the Jimi Hendrix Experience, Black Sabbath, Tom Waits, Django Reinhardt and spaghetti western composer Sergio Leone.
 
Indeed, EMT recalls a now hard-to-imagine time when songwriting involved the realization of some well-conceived personal vision, and when musical mastery and experimentation were the order of the day. In James Whiton, McFadden has found an ideal musical foil. Performing on amplified acoustic double bass, Whiton employs techniques thoroughly unique to the instrument -- percussive slaps, bowed flourishes reminiscent of a string orchestra, and electronic effects like wah, distortion and synth pedals.  Drummer Jeff Cohen reconciles blistering rock rhythms with a sensitivity and feel honed on stages with some of the country’s finest musicians. At the center of this elegant musical equation is McFadden himself. A guitar hero in an anti-heroic time, the guitarist combines rapid-fire rock improvisations with luxuriant gypsy jazz runs, quicksilver bluegrass fills, romantic neo-classical chords, hardcore R&B rhythms and heartrending mandolin trills.
 
Given the band's all-things-considered approach, it's not surprising that McFadden finds it difficult to describe the Trio's sound. "It has elements of other things I've done," McFadden says. "It's got the rock energy of past projects like Liar and Angry Babies. It's got the carnivalesque gypsy Latin thing of Eric McFadden Experience and Alien Lovestock. There's a little of the dark Americana vibe. But I think for the most part, it's a rock band."
 

   The Eric McFadden Trio saga begins in the mysterious environs of McFadden's native New Mexico, where mother Victoria (an original member of the Fuggs), and stepfather George fueled the guitarist's musical passions. By his teens, the budding guitarist and songwriter was absorbing everything from The Beatles, Beethoven, Led Zeppelin and Miles Davis, to the Mahavishnu Orchestra, Hank Williams, Bad Brains and the Clash. "I went through this time where I listened to so much music, it was just overwhelming," McFadden recalls.

Unbeknownst to McFadden, James Whiton was also cutting his musical teeth in the Albuquerque area. The son of a concert bassist, Whiton was following in his mother's classically-trained footsteps when he was blindsided by Charles Mingus, Miles Davis’ Live Evil, and prog-rock bands like King Crimson and Primus. But while jazz and virtuosic rock remain an influence, classical still comprises the foundation of Whiton's disciplined style. "I grew up playing classical music exclusively for the first 18 years of my life," the bassist explains, "it’s ingrained in me to hear the bass fulfilling certain roles harmonically and rhythmically, much as it would in a symphony." A recent review compared James’ playing to “an amplified ‘cello from hell,” a characterization based on his inventive and unique approach to a traditional instrument.

The paths of these three musicians began converging in the early Nineties, when McFadden and Whiton formed a mutual admiration society in New Mexico. Though their budding friendship was cut short after they both moved from the Albuquerque area, the pair reunited in 2001 for some impromptu Seattle, WA and Portland, OR gigs. Now, in 2004, McFadden, along with Whiton, are reunited with long time friend and musical counterpart, Jeff Cohen, whom Eric began performing and recording with in 1993 in Albuquerque, NM.

Now, as they cultivate their bastard brew of hard rock using American, European, Pan-African and Latin influences, the Eric McFadden Trio seems destined to thrive collectively as they have individually -- i.e. on their own exacting terms.
 

 
choices
Eric McFadden Trio

IZM

Eric Solo

Alien Lovestock

Eric McFadden
Stanton Hirsch


Eric McFadden
Experience


Faraway Bros.

Holy Smokes

LIAR

Angry Babies
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