SON OF MAN REVIEWS
GUITAR
HEROES REVIEW [FRENCH TRANSLATED]
Second solo disc from James
Byrd, 'Son Of Man' is even more interesting from many points of view.
First of all, the play of James has improved considerably between the
two albums [Octoglomerate - Ed], and where one could suppose a certain
technical limit, one does not note any excess but only reserve and sobriety.
I was particularly struck when listening to this disc by the particularly
emotional play of James, and his particular use of the acoustic guitars.
The first title 'In the Beginning', and the last 'In My Fathers House'
are in my view the most beautiful pieces of this album, and remain relatively
accessible by all in spite of their deep neo-classical influence.
RAINBOW
FLAMES METAL DOMAIN
There’s
something about James Byrd’s playing which is I guess ‘uplifting’! Pretentious
statement? Probably, but no less true for it. On paper, an instrumentalist’s
album from a guitarist who shreds as if the world supply of shredding
were about to disappear like the rainforests is generally unattractive
stuff, yet James Byrd is an entirely different entity. ‘Son Of
Man’ suggests that James Byrd has hidden powers that most other guitarists
lack. In the hands of this virtuoso the mundane physicality of wood
and metal is transformed into something beautiful and moving, something
capable of transmitting the deepest emotions. Only true greats posses
this ability - James Byrd has this quality. Each of the nine songs on
‘Son Of Man’ is a consummate vehicle of expression with Byrd's soul
right at the forefront. The guitars swoop, moan, cry and howl
in such a way that the vocalist is completely forgotten for the entire
44 minutes running time. Byrd obviously knows restraint and the
power that space has. That is not to say that 'Son Of Man' doesn't
have its quota of pure guitar madness, it does, only the many moments
of calm and shade do a superb job of making you take in the fast
passages and appreciate them. However, its the melodies that make
this album a complete winner in my book.
4. 'Ezekiel (Son Of Man)' Some shredding opens the piece before settling into calmer pastures with Byrd using a super clean Strat tone to the full. Again Uli Jon Roth comparisons spring to mind but their is very much supreme individuality in the piece that makes it Byrd's own. The tempo picks up a little and Byrd's tone becomes dirtier again for some glorious pyrotechnics, before the clean tone re-enters with some very attractive runs. The main chorus figure at 2.58 is pure heaven intertwined between the solo guitar and backing. Another superb track.
5. 'Yeshua - Adonai Elohim' is a gentle atmospheric classical keyboard driven piece with some truly meaningful classical guitar scattered here and there. Similar in mood to Yngwie's 'Prelude To April' and this comparison sums tells you the quality.
6. 'Out Of The Temple' has a neo-classical feel to it. Byrd plays with a delay pedal creating lush counterpoints. The track builds as layer upon layer of guitar makes this one heavy piece. James throws in suitable attired soloing that will have you reaching for the repeat button on your CD machine. Many great arpeggios intertwine with glorious vibrato and its all pulled off with such apparent ease!
7. 'The Teacher / Beatitude' starts off with dreamy chords made even more 'trance' like with inflections from the tremolo bar. A minute and a half later more Hendrix style rhythms come in ala 'Little Wing' or 'Hey Baby - New Rising Sun'. Over this is smooth distorted lead guitar which throws in all the melody you could wish for, I even detect a few Uli lines ala 'I'll Be There' - a very good thing indeed, another highlight.
8. 'Golgotha / The Right Hand Of Power' The title perfectly sums up this one. A power chord progression opens where you can really hear those tubes in the Marshall's being slammed, before some more 'flying' lead lines that make this everything you hoped it would be and more. There are several key changes throughout and again great use of the wah pedal is brought into play. Half way in the tone cleans up for some more superb arpeggios that will inspire every guitarist out there. The track goes through many different areas towards the end throwing a great slant on the track.
9. 'In My Fathers House' returns to the more melodic anthemic areas of the first few tracks and rounds up the album superbly. Here James' tone is extra glassy and quite spectacular making every one of the perfectly placed notes, licks and runs clearly audible. The track sees a few variations of earlier themes and gives a good sense of continuity. Altogether a perfect ending to this album.
'Son Of Man' is the finest instrumental album I have ever heard on a par with Yngwie's 'Rising Force' and 'Concerto'. It slams all over Vai's 'Passion & Warfare' and eats Satriani's 'Surfing With The Alien' alive. You can relate to this album in such a way that you feel every note, and take in every nuance and inflection. This is an album that you know will be with you forever and you will look forward to listening to it every time. 'Son Of Man' is the kind of album you will only discover a handful of times in your life and that perhaps is the main key. You can feel and hear Byrd's devotion to his art and craft through these 9 tracks and that is what really makes this album something special in my book - it has soul and a power that is evident from the very first spin, after that you are hooked. Buy a.s.a.p..
RATING
9.8/10