Sunday, February 09, 2020

 52 Weeks, 26 Letters
Letter A, Part 2, Week 2
William Ackerman
"The Bricklayer's Beautiful Daughter"


Change usually occurs in small steps, a little tweak here, a little tweak there and a minor improvement is made. This type of change is common: autos, iPhones and influenza all evolve this way. There's little difference between any two sequential versions. Those small changes add up eventually, however, and there is a big difference between the 1980 and the 2020 Accord, between the first iPhone and the iPhone 11, and between the 1918 influenza and the 2018 influenza.

In contrast, the difference between the car and the horse-drawn carriage is greater than the difference between any two cars in history.  Sometimes change is not a small step down the street where we all live, but a giant leap into the great wide open.

Like many American acoustic finger-pickers, William Ackerman started off a small step from John Fahey and the American Primitive style. Eventually that folk foundation gave way to more minimal and meditative music. He released his first album at one book store in the Bay Area. After finding others making the same type of modern compositions, he sold millions worldwide. His label, Windham Hill became a brand, with recognizable covers and a common atmospheric production that introduced a new genre of music to the world.

The lesson here is that both types of change are powerful. Little things add up to big things over time. Big changes are more rare, but the impact can be colossal. The important thing is to never stop trying to improve whatever you do. It's a lesson direct from evolution: adapt or die.

I've always been guitar-oriented and Will's music was such a revelation in so many way. It was really hard to pick just one song from his catalog, but I settled on "The Bricklayer's Beautiful Daughter". I think you can hear the folk roots where he started, but the steps towards what would later be called New Age are evident as well. Will must like it too, he's recorded it three times. I acknowledge the decay that happened to New Age, it happens with anything new and exciting when the trolls latch on. It's how you go from William Ackerman to Kenny G, but that's a discussion for another day.