The Handsome Family's unique take on traditionalist
country finds another fine platform on 2003's SINGING BONES. Husband and
wife team Brett and Rennie Sparks explore dusty, melancholic
territory--both musically and lyrically--by combining a taste for
rootsy, old-school country (for which Brett's resonant baritone is
perfectly suited) with literate, evocative, image-rich lyrics.
SINGING BONES finds all these qualities in place. Scenes and characters float through vividly drawn settings ("24-Hour Store;" "Whitehaven"), while the instrumentation, arrangements, and ambience conjure dark forests and backwoods ghosts. As old-world as the Handsome Family might seem, there is an incisive contemporary sensibility to everything from the gleaming production to the perfectly chosen words. SINGING BONES proves again how the group can stitch the gap between present and past seamlessly.
aCá
SINGING BONES finds all these qualities in place. Scenes and characters float through vividly drawn settings ("24-Hour Store;" "Whitehaven"), while the instrumentation, arrangements, and ambience conjure dark forests and backwoods ghosts. As old-world as the Handsome Family might seem, there is an incisive contemporary sensibility to everything from the gleaming production to the perfectly chosen words. SINGING BONES proves again how the group can stitch the gap between present and past seamlessly.
aCá
2 comments:
Thanks for the album!
Thanks for the album!
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