
In the bands Spatula and Shark Quest, North Carolina native Chuck Johnson dealt, respectively, with atavistic indie rock and stately instrumental anthems. Since leaving for college and California, Johnson has built a distinct, different reputation as a solo fingerpicker, his songs refined and meditative.
But on the new Velvet Arc, Johnson picks up an electric guitar and returns to full-band life, at least in part, for a seven-track album thatโs as fuzzy, warm, and graceful as its title claims. Velvet Arc begins with the brooding โAs I Stand Counting,โ where low-end riffs trudge through plodding percussion. He gets lush and hazy for โEverything at Onceโ but sculpts the sensation for โAnamet,โ which drifts as though suspended in a dream for seven minutes. โAnametโ previously appeared on 2015โs Blood Moon Boulder under a different name, Johnsonโs trebly guitar underscored only by the sighs of pedal steel. Here, he adds loping synthesizers and faint percussion, his past successes now reinforced by the help of new peers. The coda stretches like a permanent sunset.
Velvet Arc begins to bend with the title track, moving from mild psychedelia into pastoral realms, as if Johnsonโs scoring winterโs slip into spring. If โAnametโ gathers the final weeks of February, โVelvet Arcโ announces springtime, with pedal steel and fiddle suggesting gentler winds. โRoadside Auspiceโ patters at a moderate clip, like a sunny afternoon drive through the countryside, a feeling echoed in the back-roads cruiser of snappy closer โMiddle Water.โ
Johnson is part of a passel of excellent, relatively new solo guitaristsGlenn Jones, William Tyler, Cian Nugent, Steve Gunn, Daniel Bachman. Sometimes, all their exquisite flurries of steel-stringed notes can blur, with even distinct styles melding into one. On Velvet Arc, though, Johnson manages to merge his rock-band past with his intimate solo reflections, moving toward more dynamic material and into a moment of distinction.


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