The second volume of The Best of John Fahey was assembled by American guitarist and composer Henry Kaiser. The album included three unreleased tracks from 1991; “Twilight on Prince George’s Avenue,” “Sligo Mud”, and “Tuff” which were assumed to be from an album Fahey recorded for Shanachie Records titled Azalea City Memories that was never released.[1] However, it was later uncovered that the three songs were not Fahey recordings, but recordings of guitarist "Charlie Schmidt, a 42-year-old high school teacher who lives in Skokie... as part of a prank Fahey hoped to play on Shanachie, his label at the time."[2][3]
The liner notes include a reprint of a letter that Fahey wrote to Fantasy Records regarding his thoughts on how they should handle his catalogue of recordings.[4]
Music critic Thom Jurek of Allmusic praised the album, "This is, in some ways, better than the original best-of, because it comes from the heart of a fan as well as the vision of a master musician."[1] From his review for All About Jazz, critic Charlie B. Dahan called it "...nothing more than a guitarist and his instrument communicating stories of love, passion, humor and despair with flesh and blood; wood and wire. It is music at its most basic, yet most complicated."[4] Both praised the song selection and liner notes by producer Henry Kaiser.
Track listing
All songs by John Fahey unless otherwise noted.
"Twilight on Prince George's Avenue" – 5:46
"Frisco Leaving Birmingham" – 3:30
"Sligo Mud" – 6:02
"Orinda-Moraga" – 3:57
"On the Beach at Waikiki" – 2:42
"Oneonta" – 2:34
"Dance of Death" – 7:39
"The Assassination of Stephan Grossman" – 2:15
"Tuff" – 5:07
"Ann Arbor/Death by Reputation" (Fahey, Leo Kottke) – 8:10
"Medley: Hark, The Herald Angels Sing/O Come All Ye Faithful" (Traditional) – 3:12