Tag Archives: Malakai’s Rainbow

Review : Kenn Fox “Malakai’s Rainbow” CD (Spiritone Records, 2010)

Ken_FoxxKenn Fox is a fingerstyle guitar veteran from Wisconsin, and his new CD Malakai’s Rainbow finds him working in an easy going, contemporary style.  The tracks are all original instrumentals, alternately melancholy and breezy, and the sound of the disc has a modern acoustic sheen, with occasional reverbs and delays, and blended acoustic and pickup signals throughout.

This record is named for Fox’s grandson, who was born last June with a congenital heart condition.  The opening title track is Fox’s tribute to the boy, who has already fought his way through multiple open heart surgeries.  The song is bittersweet, mostly loping arpeggios with a few nice melodic turns.   Second track “The Return” begins like an inverted “Layla”, and I mean that in a good way…  Fox patiently lays down a sparse melody over a mix of picked and strummed chords, with a memorable melodic transition to the “B” section, and some nice descending notes in the bass.  The middle of the song finds the guitarist digging into some down-tuned strumming, resulting in a less interesting, sort of Alice In Chains vibe, before returning to the initial themes.

As the album goes on, Fox mostly repeats the approach of the first two tracks, with only a little variation in tempo and feel.  Songs like “Marion”, “Across The Sea”, “The Wisdom of Trees” and closer “Eyes of a Child” all mine the same emotional terrain, with slow, clean picking, and some skeletal melodies buried in the pretty arpeggios.

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