Stage vet Gilles Malkine, probably best known for his comedy work with Mikhail Horowitz and his performances at the 1969 Woodstock festival and Carnegie Hall, has returned to the airwaves with his first solo record, the guitar-based TimeDog. Performing rhythm โnโ rhyme with such seasoned players as Harvey Sorgen, Bruce Berky, Martin Keith, Mike Ralff, and Dennis Washington, he bangs out 12 poetic beauties. Cheerful and swinging โJack of Heartsโ is a Django Reinhardt-style instrumental piece, recorded twice on six-string for an echo effect that sounds like 12-string. Another chipper instrumental, โThe Marionette Rag,โ was written for his folk-performing mother.
Malkine sing-talks his life advice on the amusing title track, spouting such gems as โIt donโt do no good to whine and beg, man / TimeDogโs humping your leg.โ Using the warm voice of his inner child, Malkine fingerpicks the folksy โHeart of Kindnessโ with poesy and heartbreak: โIn those [faces] of children pitiful, there Iโve seen most clearly the good Lord is not watching every day.โ Malkine waxes political on quite a few tunes: The lyrics of โFreedom Roadโ hit hard on the topics of greed and our โeon of brutishnessโ over a contrastingly cheerful, driving folk rhythm; โMartaโ tells of a war hero who assisted Muslims during a massacre in Kosovo; and, with a choral akin to an old-time spiritual, โPequena Briseniaโ recalls the assassination of a nine-year-old and her father during a raid by an immigration watchdog group. Malkine promises a second array of โmusical tarts to tickle your mental palatesโ very soon. Gillesmalkine.com.
This article appears in November 2012.










