Modern Studies - Swell to Great (2016)
BAND/ARTIST: Modern Studies
- Title: Swell to Great
- Year Of Release: 2016
- Label: Song, by Toad Records
- Genre: Folk, Indie
- Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks)
- Total Time: 41:55 min
- Total Size: 101 / 207 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Supercool
02. Black Street
03. Father Is A Craftsman
04. Bottle Green
05. The Bold Fisherman
06. Today's Regrets
07. Dive-bombing
08. The Sea Horizon
09. Sleep
10. Everybody's Saying
11. Ten White Horses
12. Swimming
01. Supercool
02. Black Street
03. Father Is A Craftsman
04. Bottle Green
05. The Bold Fisherman
06. Today's Regrets
07. Dive-bombing
08. The Sea Horizon
09. Sleep
10. Everybody's Saying
11. Ten White Horses
12. Swimming
The sea surges and froths throughout these songs. They have all of the delicate beauty of an early morning coastal mist, they drift and coalesce or coalesce then drift. Like tidal surges, the asthmatic wheeze of the bellows haunts them like a ghost ship at sea. Above the drones as the mist burns away it reveals beautiful music that leaks out, morsels of chamber pop lovingly orchestrated, swelling like a Sufjan Stevens song on ‘Dive-Bombing’ which is typical of Emily Scott’s vocals, drifting above marshy strings and woodwinds. Then ‘Bold Fisherman’ with male vocals and repeating patterns is more akin to the avant-folk of David Thomas Broughton; with minimal backing its prow barely breaks the waves.
‘The Sea Horizon’ has the feel of the creaking post-rock soundtracks of The Boxhead Ensemble. There’s something different at each turn linked by the maritime theme, either lyrically or with the sea shanty wheeze of the harmonium. There’s the hypnotic repetition of ‘Everybody’s Saying’ which thicken with each cycle, there’s the gentle lagoon of ‘Black Street’ which in a very good way is the exact opposite of ‘The Girl from Ipanema’. ‘Father is a Craftsman’ is a swaying melodic flow. Like Rachels with vocals, it’s a gentle delight, as is the whole record.
‘The Sea Horizon’ has the feel of the creaking post-rock soundtracks of The Boxhead Ensemble. There’s something different at each turn linked by the maritime theme, either lyrically or with the sea shanty wheeze of the harmonium. There’s the hypnotic repetition of ‘Everybody’s Saying’ which thicken with each cycle, there’s the gentle lagoon of ‘Black Street’ which in a very good way is the exact opposite of ‘The Girl from Ipanema’. ‘Father is a Craftsman’ is a swaying melodic flow. Like Rachels with vocals, it’s a gentle delight, as is the whole record.
Year 2016 | Folk | Indie | FLAC / APE
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