Ida Con Snock

Ida Con Snock

As loopy and sly as ever, Michael Hurley fills Ida Con Snock with the sort of skewed insight that has been his trademark for nearly a half-century. This freak-folk godfather’s music feels as comfortable as an easy chair with a few sharp springs jutting out of its cushions. Hurley’s thin but evocative voice — redolent of the Mississippi Delta, Appalachia and hippie backyard jams — lends his tunes the air of time-honored balladry. Songs like “It Must Be Gelatine” and “Hog of the Foresaken” take roots-music modes and gives them an oddball bent. Backed by the folk-pop combo Ida, Hurley delivers his own whimsical versions of early rock (“Going Steady”), Celtic chestnuts (“Loch Lomond/Molly Malone”) and ‘40s jazz (“Ragg Mopp”) with easy-going panache. At times — especially in “I Stole the Right to Live” — his musings reveal an unexpected profundity. “Wildegeeses” stands out for its haunting melody and invocation of the primal hunger for freedom. Ida Con Snock is a beguiling addition to this perennial cult figure’s quirky canon.

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