Woven Hand
http://www.wovenhand.net
styles: alt-country, bluegrass, Appalachian gothic, Americana
others: Sixteen Horsepower, Dock
Boggs, Lilium, Tom Waits, Nick Cave
Mosaic
Sounds Familyre, 2006
rating: 3/5
reviewer: filmore mescalito holmes
This is by far the darkest Christian album I've ever heard. David Eugene
Edwards (Sixteen Horsepower) may say "hallelujah," but his music speaks of
the conviction of a man who knows hell. After you hear the ominous
Mediterranean tongues epic "Slota Prow-Full Armour," you will know it too.
Mosaic ain't no Sunday school picnic. There is more to be had than
a theology lesson. With hints of strings, banjo, and piano, this is a
shining exploration of post-folk power. I'm not a big God fan, so the
lyrics can go a little over-the-top for me, like on the Eternal Creator Of
The World-written "Twig," but the dense, motivated, moody music produced
by Edwards is more than enjoyable in its own right. Any karmic deity would
be done proud by this album.
1. Breathing Bull
2. Winter Shaker
3. Swedish Purse
4. Twig
5. Whistling Girl
6. Elktooth
7. Bible And Bird
8. Dirty Blue
9. Slota Prow-Full Armour
10. Truly Golden
11. Deerskin Doll
12. Little Raven
Consider
the Birds
Sounds Familyre, 2004
rating: 1/5
reviewer: cockle
David Eugene Edwards, Woven Hand, should have titled this album
Consider the Christ, because, minus the first track, he speaks nothing
of anything else, including birds and I think he was even talking about
Jesus on that track too. It's rather hard to talk about Consider the
Birds, moreover, to think of anything to say about it, but a 1 out of
5 most likely deserves an explanation. The music itself is a rather
interesting take on what could be considered somewhat of an
Americana-Irish Folk feel for many of the tracks. On the whole, it's a
rather slow paced album, which adds instrumentation rather than speeding
things up to compound the intensity of the lyrics and vocals. The
instrumentation is an excellent starting point and Edwards and crew should
be commended for their work. Edwards voice is unique and his delivery is
emotional and expressive. However, with the Christ hugging lyrics and
message, listening to this album is somewhat like being beaten over the
head with Jesus' bat. You are either going to try and do something to stop
it or you are going to plain pass out. It may be rough to give the music
and the vocals fairly good marks while giving the album on the whole a bad
review merely based on the message, but that's just how she goes.
Consider the Birds may be David Eugene Edwards ticket into heaven, if
you believe in that sort of thing; however, listeners will only be given a
ticket to a creepy show that is just way too intense to be taken seriously
by those who care nothing of other worldly adventures. Even for the devout
Xtian, the lyrics may be too intense and abstract for enjoyment.
1. Sparrow Falls
2. Bleary Eyed Duty
3. To Make a Ring
4. Off the Cuff
5. Chest of Drawers
6. Oil on Panel
7. The Speaking Hands
8. Down in Yon Forest
9. Tin Finger
10. Into the Piano
Blush
Music
Glitterhouse, 2003
rating: 4.5/5
reviewer: olskooly
If one band in the "alt-country" genre has its own distinct sound and presence,
it's Sixteen Horsepower. David Eugene Edwards' vocals have a uniquely haunted
and tortured quality all their own—as if at any moment he'll begin spewing a
diatribe about Hellfire and Damnation (which is frequently the case). Woven Hand
is the side project of David Eugene Edwards, and while Sixteen Horsepower are a
more band-oriented affair, the Woven Hand project focuses on Edwards' unique
insight and contributions to the band as a whole. Sixteen Horsepower have a
strong Appalachian country influence, but their music still maintains a certain
accessibility. Woven Hand, however, are much, much less accessible than Sixteen
Horsepower; tending to sound almost anachronistically dated. And that's not
necessarily a bad thing.
Blush Music, Woven Hand's second record, contains re-workings of many of the
tracks on their self-titled debut album. This music, however, is
considerably more dark and stripped-down than the tracks on the debut. "Animalitos (Ain't No
Sunshine)" is a haunting, banjo-driven track, accompanied by peals of tremoloed
feedback and samples of crows in the background of the music. It occurred to me,
while listening to this track, that this is what Fields of the Nephilim, the
seminal Eighties gothic rock band, strove to sound like: epic, haunting Western
dirges evoking the images of the Old West exaggerated in Sergio Leone's eerie
spaghetti westerns; where buzzards circled overhead, and rusted weathercocks
squealed as they spun in the dust-strewn wind. This music is the real deal.
Heavy on the atmosphere, and utilizing traditional instruments (banjo, bandoneon,
harmonium, etc.), the album is perhaps a tad overwrought and pretentious,
but it is effective in transporting the listener to the dark underbelly of early
Twentieth Century rural America.
The record takes a rocking turn on "White Bird," the third track on Blush
Music. I was reminded of Secret South, Sixteen Horsepower's third
studio LP, and their most mainstream one. While still maintaining their
distinctive sound, Sixteen Horsepower's sound was as much "Goth" as it was
alt-country on that record. This Woven Hand track seems to hark back to
Secret South: it's got clean electric guitar chords, complete with reverb
and stereo chorus, combined with some straightforward electric guitar strumming,
although never deviating into anything as mainstream-sounding as pure Goth. The
track, along with its sister track, "Another White Bird," is the closest
Blush Music comes to achieving anything close to a mainstream sound.
If there is the slightest concern about this record becoming merely a typical
alt-country album, it's extinguished by the fourth track, "Snake Bite," which is
an ambient, 7 ½ minute instrumental featuring what sounds like stringed
instruments being treated in a most indelicate manner. Cello and contrabass
strings groan as if they have been bowed, stretched, plucked, and scraped to the
point of torture. This track, in particular, is similar in sound to the
wonderful and hard-to-find album Transmission of All the Good-Byes by
Lilium, the side project of Sixteen Horsepower's bassist Pascal Humbert. At any
rate, it is the most inaccessible and haunting piece on Blush Music.
"My Russia" is another lengthy and mostly instrumental piece; a primarily
downbeat track featuring a haunting piano melody, brushed drums, and what is
either an organ or electric piano providing some added atmospherics. The next
track, "The Way," is a short instrumental showcasing Edwards' slide guitar
playing. Track eight, "Your Russia (Without Hands)" is probably the heaviest
track on the album; featuring a deep, leaden bass line, slide guitar, and fuzzy,
creeping electric guitar, along with Edwards' tortured and dramatic vocals.
Blush Music concludes with the acoustic guitar and piano-driven "Story and
Pictures," which is an appropriate title, considering the visual imagery of the
Old West which is conjured by both the lyrics and ghostly, Ry Cooder-esque
guitar feedback. As the album's slowest and most traditionally melodic
piece, it seems the most suitable way to end the record.
While Woven Hand's second album is more instrumental-oriented than both Sixteen
Horsepower and their own first LP, Blush Music is a brilliant record
that, personally, seems reduced simply to the components of Sixteen Horsepower's
music that I find the most appealing. I have always felt an affinity toward
Sixteen Horsepower, because they seemed the most "authentic" and oddly dated of
all the alt-country bands. Woven Hand's Blush Music will appeal to
all lovers of Americana who can appreciate old-fashioned instrumentation
with instruments of a bygone era.
1. Cripplegate (Standing on Glass)
2. Animalitos (Ain't No Sunshine)
3. White Bird
4. Snake Bite
5. My Russia (Standing on Hands)
6. The Way
7. Aeolian Harp (Under the World)
8. Your Russia (Without Hands)
9. Another White Bird
10. Story and Pictures

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