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Michael Hedges, Torched CD cover artwork

Michael Hedges, Torched

Audio CD

Disk ID: 427894

Disk length: 1h 2m 39s (15 Tracks)

Original Release Date: 1999

Label: Unknown

View all albums by Michael Hedges...

Tracks & Durations

1. Torched 4:53
2. Spring Buds 4:20
3. Fusion Of The Five Elements 3:59
4. Promised Land 3:52
5. Phoenix Fire 3:41
6. Dream Beach 3:53
7. Arrowhead 2:17
8. Shell Shock Venus 4:15
9. Ursa Major 3:45
10. Free Swinging Soul 4:20
11. Rough Wind In Oklahoma 4:18
12. Sapphire 3:48
13. Holy Flame 5:35
14. Java Man 4:04
15. Coda: Free Swinging Soul (1994 Concert) 5:29

Note: The information about this album is acquired from the publicly available resources and we are not responsible for their accuracy.

Review

Torched is the album Michael Hedges was reputedly working on when he was tragically taken from us in a car wreck in November 1997. It reveals Hedges exploring his fervent desire to be a singer/songwriter, rather than the virtuoso guitarist who influenced a generation of string-pickers. Hedges played the whole guitar, not just the strings, turning it into a tribal orchestra that rendered his gorgeous and often quirky melodies. That Hedges is rarely heard on Torched. Instead Hedges's vocal side prevails. Torched is a scattered collection of nearly completed songs and rough tracks, all highlighting his spiritual search and romantic yearnings. As a singer/songwriter, Hedges was influenced by the 1960s and '70s Jackson Browne-James Taylor axis of earnest proclamations. He's even joined by '60s veterans David Crosby and Graham Nash, who added their harmonies to "Spring Buds" after Hedges passed. On the title track, he sings of spiritual transformation by fire, adding some distorted fuzz guitar to scorched effect. On "Promised Land" he waxes biblical. There are a few instrumentals as well, including "Fusion of the Five Elements," an early, triple-speed demo for the song that wound up as the title track to Oracle, Hedges's last official album. Other pieces like "Dream Beach," "Arrowhead," and "Ursa Major" would have fit comfortably on Oracle with their wistful melodies and arrangements that have Hedges playing flutes, percussion, and keyboards in addition to guitar. Posthumous albums are always problematic. We'll never know if Hedges actually wanted these tracks to be released, and over all the vocal songs don't match his more carefully articulated Road to Return vocal album from a few years back. With Torched we're left with embers from a musician who usually gave us bonfires of brilliance. --John Diliberto

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