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The Great Santa Barbara Oil Slick

The Great Santa Barbara Oil Slick
The Great Santa Barbara Oil Slick.jpg
Live album by John Fahey
Released November 9, 2004
Recorded Portions recorded February 14, 1968 at The Matrix in San Francisco, CA
Genre Folk
Length 76:12
Label Water/Revenant
Producer Glenn Jones
John Fahey chronology
The Best of John Fahey, Vol. 2: 1964–1983
(2003)The Best of John Fahey, Vol. 2: 1964–19832003
The Great Santa Barbara Oil Slick
(2004)
On Air
(2005)On Air2005
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4/5 stars
Dusted Magazine (not rated)
Mojo (not rated)
Pitchfork Media (8.2 of 10)
Rolling Stone (not rated)

The Great Santa Barbara Oil Slick is a live album by American fingerstyle guitarist and composer John Fahey, released posthumously in 2004.

The Great Santa Barbara Oil Slick consists of previously unreleased live recordings from two shows in 1968 and 1969. The majority comes from a February 1968 performance at The Matrix in San Francisco, CA. The other location is unknown.

The title track, not included on any of Fahey's '60s records, contains portions of "Requiem for Russell Blaine Cooper" and "Voice of the Turtle" that appeared on Requia and America.

On its release in 2004, The Great Santa Barbara Oil Slick received positive reviews. Critic David Fricke, writing for Rolling Stone referred to Fahey's "sublime distention of traditional forms"Richie Unterberger called it "...a testament to Fahey's mastery of the tunes" and "a solid addition to the John Fahey canon". Referring to the time period of the live performance, Bill Meyer of Dusted Magazine writes "...no matter how much I admire Fahey’s determination to keep his creativity alive and appreciate some of what came out of that effort, I can’t get enough of this old stuff." and "... this is lovely music. “Requiem For Mississippi John Hurt” overflows with triumph and joy, the opening of “When The Catfish Is In Bloom” is so rich and regal you want to put your hand over your heart." Mark Richardson refers to "Catfish" as "[it] sounds about 200 years old and parts of it probably are, as references to marching spirituals slowly pile up into a ringing cluster of notes."Mojo's Andrew Male referred to it as "A strange guitarist at the top of his game."

All songs by John Fahey unless otherwise noted.

Production notes


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Wikipedia

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