RECOMMENDED RECORD: Paul McLaney: As the North Attracts the Needle (AAA/digital outlets)

 |   |  1 min read

Go Well
RECOMMENDED RECORD: Paul McLaney: As the North Attracts the Needle (AAA/digital outlets)

From time to time Elsewhere will single out a recent release we recommend on vinyl, like this album originally released in October but now on record with an insert lyric sheet and a classy cover.

Check out Elsewhere's other Recommended Record picks . . .

In an understated but relevant cover of his own design, this album finds  Paul McLaney returning to his acoustic guitar for 10 intimate and typically thoughtful songs.

These pieces have a discreet spiritual quality (All It Takes is Time), a delight and wonder in Nature (Like a Diamond in the Sky), an appreciation of slowness (“pause for a moment, take a deep breath and hold it” on A Moment) and a quiet sense of optimism: “Our shared understanding it is simple, it is plain . . . we could all live in harmony” (on Harmony).

He looks back at being a younger man on I when he was impatient for the world to understand (an echo of the young Paul Simon singing “fools said I you do not know"?) but is now grateful for being granted “so long a lease”.

The Rest Will Come in Time wears its message in its title: “The world is too much and I know that you know, I tried my best”.

The title track is the most grounded in the physical world as he notes we have become “slaves to the treadmill, running to standstill”, a multiple metaphor.

The final song Go Well is like a benediction: "When you reach that distant harbour and when you set your foot ashore, follow the path beside the river as many men have done before. And when it narrows to the stream and when you reach your journey's end you will meet someone there waiting. And you will know them for a friend. Go well . . . Go well …”

These are short songs, like a collection of two minute-plus meditations which can be read as such, notably One Day After Another.

They embrace the miracle of living at a time when voices of complaint, self-interest and division are shouting loudly.

Breath in, breath out. Keep it simple, enjoy the moment.

It can be so simple.

This collection couldn't have come at a better time.

.

You can hear and buy this album at bandcamp here.

There is a considerable amount about Paul McLaney at Elsewhere including interviews and him discussing his work. Start here


Share It

Your Comments

Con Fowler - Dec 10, 2023

Another winner. Lovely songs. Looking back over my music collection over the last several years, it would not have been nearly so interesting or varied, but for all the great stuff you turn up. That I would have never come across otherwise. Thanks, and have a lovely Christmas

post a comment

More from this section   Music at Elsewhere articles index

Miriam Clancy: Black Heart (digital outlets/Southbound)

Miriam Clancy: Black Heart (digital outlets/Southbound)

In late 2019 when expat Miriam Clancy returned from her Pennsylvania home of five years to promote her third album Astronomy, she was a very different artist than the singer-songwriter of... > Read more

Villagers: Becoming a Jackal (Domino)

Villagers: Becoming a Jackal (Domino)

Engrossing though the clear, strong voice of Conor J O'Brien out of Dublin is -- the chief feature of this quietly gripping album -- it is the insistent, poetic first-person, image-carving... > Read more

Elsewhere at Elsewhere

Wailing Urei: Is It Me? (bandcamp)

Wailing Urei: Is It Me? (bandcamp)

As regular readers of Elsewhere know, we find our music where we will – deep trawl, accident, suggestions, record company emails, pals – but obviously not everything takes our... > Read more

THE NZ MUSIC HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES (2020): Here's the who's who of "who?"

THE NZ MUSIC HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES (2020): Here's the who's who of "who?"

The New Zealand Music Hall of Fame has been contentious, right from its first inductees Johnny Devlin and Jordan Luck in 2007. Many complain certain eras or important figures have not been... > Read more