Snippits from 'Penny
Black' reviews

'A priceless rarity and something to treasure' (*****5
stars)
The Ticket, The Irish Times

'As delicate, detailed and purposeful as a Japanese garden.'
Sunday Tribune

'A defiant, deliberate and complete collection of beautiful songs.
Lambert has produced a work of real importance.'
Totally Dublin

'A meticulously wrought piece of instrumental wizardry' (4/5)
Hot press ( View full review here )

Penny Black press release

Reviews

The Ticket (IRISH TIMES) CD of the
week (View
image)
PENNY BLACK : CHEQUERBOARD (5 stars
*****)
Reviewed by Sinead Gleeson
If ever a record made you want to talk about it in block capital
superlatives, Chequerboard's second album is it. John Lambert fits
hazy electronic skirmishes around classically tinged acoustic guitar,
and the result is stunning. It opens with a blink-and-you'll miss
it sample of Lambert's grandfather and mother that hints at a musical
inheritance (his mother was a folk singer).
After Lambert's EP, Dictaphone Showreels, Penny Black is a lean
nine tracks, but it bursts with melody, and his compositional nous
has really come into its own. This is probably due, in part, to the
fact that it was recorded over the course of a year in Sligo's Niland
Gallery as part of a fellowship programme. The isolation and space
afforded to its recording have seeped into the tracks.
Even when a song is stacked up in layers, there is always breathing
space and room for the various components to manoeuvre. Typical of
this is Konichiwa, which greets us with mechanical shuffles before
moving through a melodic midpoint, backed by muted glitches.
The over-riding sound here is Lambert's trademark guitar, skilfully
plucked with more than a nod to Spanish metre. Live, his performance
is pared down to guitar and looped pedals, but the breadth of an
album allows him to experiment and roll out a fuller, orchestral
sound. Ornithopter is all lush synth spools, while Skating Couple
ebbs and flows in percussive waves.
Entirely instrumental, the pieces on Penny Black capture shifting
moods - the heartbreak minimalism of The Winter Arcade, the subtle
optimism of Toy Winds - in a way most songs don't manage with lyrics.
Unlike many albums in this musical vein, it's accessible and eschews
pretentiousness on any level.
As the title suggests, this is a priceless rarity and something
to treasure. Is it too early to start talking about next year´s
Choice Music Prize nominees? www.chequerboard.com
Download Track: Konichiwa, Toy Winds, Ornithopter

Totally Dublin review
Chequerboard – Penny Black
Reviewed by Cillian McDonell
Time can be a precious commodity. Everything else, John Lambert
has in abundance. Already a gifted guitarist, exceptional producer,
and talented graphic artist, Lambert found that time in the guise
of a music fellowship, awarded courtesy of the Model Arts & Niland
Gallery. A year spent in Sligo has yielded Penny Black – a
momentous album of arresting beauty and depth. Lambert signalled
his intent last year with the re-release of his colourfully textured
Dictaphone Showreels EP, and Penny Black elaborates on this template,
exploring and challenging Lambert's ability as an accomplished musician,
composer, and producer.

From the opening track – also entitled Penny Black – the
sheer extent of this exploration becomes apparent. Layers of undulating
guitar lines shift and reverse, amidst a backdrop of rich electronic
instrumentation and sparse, distant percussion. The latter half of
the song is transformed by a sudden downpour of rain and an oblique
vocal sample – found sounds and field recordings that echo
Lambert's solitary location during the making of this record. Within
one song – and on several occasions throughout the album -
Chequerboard invokes the spirit of Bola, The Books, Boards of Canada,
and countless other electroacoustic innovators, but arguably with
a superior display of technical ability and musicianship. There can
be a tendency for music of this nature to drift anonymously into
the background, but Penny Black never succumbs to such pitfalls.

The nine tracks contained - in particular Skating Couple, Konichiwa,
20th Century Artillery, and Prince August - are simply too captivating,
making it virtually impossible to resist further engagement or closer
examination. Chequerboard's music avoids the familiar, unnecessary
or incidental, making this a defiant, deliberate and complete collection
of beautiful songs. Penny Black is definitive proof that the time
and effort invested by Lambert in his craft has produced a work of
real importance. Invest some of your own time in this masterpiece.

Sunday Tribune
Chequerboard : Penny Black (34m 05s)
John Lambert's second album defies genre and could probably well
be the most intricate and sonically complex and diverse Irish record
since Super Extra Bonus Party's debut last year. The nine tracks
form an incredible sonic montage with everything from classical guitar
to modern synths, post-rock, lo-fi electronica and other sounds that
are utterly mysterious. Staccato rhythms on 'Penny Black' give way
to serenity on the Japanese-influenced 'Konichiwa'. In fact, the
entire record is as delicate, detailed and purposeful as a Japanese
garden.
Download: 'Penny Black', 'Konichiwa', 'Prince August'
Review by Una Mullally
Online reviews
Reviewed by Nialler9 on State.ie
Reviewed by Lauren Murphy on entertainment.ie

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