Kenneth McKellar - The Decca Years (1955-1975) [BOX SET]


Kenneth McKellar - The Decca Years (1955-1975) [BOX SET]
Customer Review: Listen and Swoon
Many think of Kenneth McKellar as only performing traditional Scottish ballads. This box set shows the amazing range of what has to be one of the foremost tenors of his generation worldwide. His tone, range and clarity mark stand him shoulder to shoulder with the best.

Listen and swoon.

Customer Review: Kenneth McKellar, the great lyric Scottish tenor at his peak
Kenneth McKellar, the great lyric Scottish tenor at his peak,
Reviewer: Ricardo Munro from San Joaquin Valley, California, USA

Kenneth McKellar, who is still pleasant to listen to for his wit, artistry and excellent diction was at his peak in his Decca years. He was best known for his Scottish songs in a classical “John Mccormack Style” but he crossed over very successfully into popular music, light classics and operatic arias. He sang in Italian, German, French and Welsh as well as Scots and English. Until recently these recordings from 1955-1975 have been unavailable(when his voice was at its peak of power and charm). Fiddler on the Roof SUNRISE SUNSET is superb and West Side Story’s MARIA is the best and most tasteful recording I have ever heard. Of course, the majority of the recordings are traditional Scottish songs of the lowlands and Highlands (with a good number of Kennedy-Fraser , Kenneth MacLeod adaptations). My only disappointment really is that some of his best Irish recordings are not here nor his foray into Welsh.

McKellar of course came from another generation when Scots tried to out English the English so his Gaelic is very small. Late in her career he sang a few Gaelic choruses but mostly he sang late 19th century and early 20th century translations of the Big Songs.

But as an interpreter of the Songs of Burns and the Scots Musical Museum (the Lowland Scots tradition) McKellar was without peer. If you can get his KISMET recording. It is just great. I don’t think he ever made a bad album although SOMETIMES his pop material is thin. His classical performances are ALWAYS first class. I just wish he had made more classical recordings in his prime.

I hope this is just the beginning of the reissuing the great recordings of one of the great tenors that 20th century Britain has produced. Any lover of the art songs or the “big songs” of the Celtic Fringe will find a movable feast in the artistry of Kenneth McKellar the man known for many years as “Scotland’s First tenor” .

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The Country Roads Collection


The Country Roads Collection
Massive and impressively comprehensive, the Country Roads Box Collection is classic John Denver. Spanning four discs, the collection not only draws upon the obvious highlights of Denver’s career, but also includes fan favourites that might not have received the same airplay as their more popular counterparts. Listening to Country Roads, the finesse with which Denver balanced his folk rock tendencies with his country leanings emerges as testament to his talent. As a box set, the collection would be remiss if it didn’t include “Leaving on a Jet Plane”, “Annie’s Song”, “Thank God I’m a Country Boy”, or “Rocky Mountain High”–and, of course, the box set’s namesake is here. Later hits like “Calypso”, with its sea-shanty yodelling, portray Denver’s ability to ease himself into the role of balladeer, regardless of the genre. Novelty duets with Placido Domingo and Emmylou Harris were intended to rekindle what seemed to be lagging popularity, but Country Roads establishes John Denver’s contributions as timeless, nonetheless. –Steve Gdula

Customer Review: Country Roads Collection
This is a superb collection of the best of John Denver, a must have for all true JD fans, in a beautifully presented 4 set album, starting at the beginning of his career and working through to the end,a total of 79 songs. It includes information and photographs of JD and is in my opinion great value for money.

Customer Review: Excellent retrospective
You have to enjoy John’s music a lot to want this box, but you don’t have to be a fanatic. This set provides a comprehensive overview of his career from his years at RCA (which are really the only ones that matter to most people).

The first CD is interesting. It is made up entirely of tracks from Rhymes and reasons, Take me to tomorrow, Poems prayers and promises and Aerie. These were his first, second, fourth and fifth albums. The third album (Who’s garden was this?) is mentioned in the accompanying booklet, but is not represented here at all. The collection starts with Leaving on a jet plane, which John wrote before he was famous. It became a huge international hit for Peter Paul and Mary. The most famous track is Take me home country roads, but there are many other great songs here. I would like to have seen his cover of Buddy Holly’s Everyday and something from that third album included, but I have no complaints about what has been included.

The second CD is compiled from the next four original albums - Rocky mountain high, Farewell Andromeda, Back home again and Windsong. This was the period when John’s popularity was at its peak. Many of his famous songs are on this CD, including Annie’s song, Back home again, Sweet surrender, I’m sorry and Rocky mountain high. Thank God I’m a country boy, originally a track on Back home again, was later recorded live and that recording became another huge hit. It is that version which is included here, not the original studio recording.

The third CD begins with one last track from Windsong - Calypso, a tribute to Jacques Cousteau. During the period covered by this CD, John recorded two Christmas albums including one with the Muppets. Neither of these are represented here. So, the remainder of this CD contains tracks from Spirit, I want to live, John Denver (no other title) and Autograph. Although less successful than his earlier music, this was mainly due to changing public taste. The songs are brilliant.

There are some great moments on the final CD, although lacking consistency. It was a decade of experimentation and change, but it yielded two superb duets - Perhaps love (with Placido Domingo) and Wild Montana skies (with Emmylou Harris). The albums represented on this CD are Some days are diamonds, Seasons of the heart, It’s about time, Dreamland express and One world.

This comprehensive collection contains many tracks not otherwise available on CD and is fitting tribute to a unique singer.

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Scottish Country Dancing


Scottish Country Dancing
Customer Review: Bargain of the week! A real treat.
Scottish and Irish dance music gets to me maybe because my Father was Irish and my Mother was part Scottish. I danced at school from an early age and was formally taught and I continued well into my twenties and I danced to some good live bands. I am a hi fi enthusiast and a musician and I have a decent collection of Scottish and Irish music on tape and CD but this CD which I only received this morning and am listening through for the second time is my favourite Scottish dance band recording now.

The recording quality is good with plenty of depth and correct tonal balance with the amp bass and treble controls set at flat and stereo is excellent. Equipment used Denon PMA355UK amp with Marantz CD5400 player and Technics RP-F350 phones. Believe me, my set up soons shows up poor recordings. Sounds good in the car too.

I was feeling really depressed earlier(lost my husband just before Christmas)this music has cheered me up and I even tried to dance but at 66 years young I soon got tired.

As usual free super saver was despatched before estimated date so CD and DVDs ordered with it arrived early and at under ?3 a real bargain and I must admit I was a bit worried about the price and whether the recording would be poor but it is first class.

Thank you Amazon and can I have this dance please :-)
Customer Review: Bouncy & Brilliant Bobby Does Again
Bobby Crowe and his SCD are one of the best bands to dance to, but unfortunately do not issue many CDs. This one is better than the recent issues by any other band. The dances are well timed, well played(with excellent lift where required) and the tunes are well selected to suit each dance. My favourite versions of the Eightsome Reel and ‘Holin Bus’ for sure. However the “piece de resistance” is the faultless recording of Highland Cathedral, immense chords, plus the harmony, weel dun Bob.

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Country Life


Country Life
Customer Review: Why are people labelling it??
Steve and Phil (Show of Hands) have never labelled their music as ‘folk’, and have infact discouraged it. How can people say this album is bad purely on the basis that it isn’t ‘folk’ (as some people have).

The music is from the heart and packed with emotion. Strong political and personal lyrics mixed with haunting yet comforting melodies and harmonies make the record very special. So many different genres are introduced, and so many real life issues are sung about.

This CD is well worth buying, I seriously recommend it.

Customer Review: Sublime mix of Instrumental Virtuosity and Well Crafted Lyrics
Some of other reviewers have dismissed Show of Hands as what is bad in Folk. I would hazard a guess that their musical tastes are rather narrow as otherwise they would appreciate the brilliant musicianship inherent in all tracks in this but the standout for me is Phil Beer’s Spanish Guitar in Suntrap. But this is a personal choice only as both Phil Beer and Steve Knightley both play a multitude of instruments brilliantly on this album and as always.

My favourite tracks;

Country Life- angst and passion (bettered on Oysterband’s Big Session Vol 1)

Suntrap - moves you to Spain

Seven Days- beautiful longing Jenna Witts sings wonderfully.

Red Diesel - lovable rogue brought to life

That said all the tracks are enjoyable buy this if you do not have pre conceived ideas about folk music but instead favour performers who perform and do not need session musicians to paper over their inadequacies

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Ear-Bleeding Country: The Best of Dinosaur Jr


Ear-Bleeding Country: The Best of Dinosaur Jr
Customer Review: Patience will pay!
If you haven’t heard a lot by Dinosaur Jr but think you might like them, then this is an excellent place to start: and I speak through experience.

A 10″ copy of “Start Choppin’” (which jumps like hell at the end) is all that had kept me going for the ten years prior to buying this album. To be able to listen to “Start Choppin’” in the car without the guitar riff at the end jumping over and over would have been good enough in itself, but over twelve months on, here I am, still listening to it on a regular basis (not to mention other albums of theirs).

“Start Choppin’” aside, the only other song I’d ever heard, “Feel the Pain”, was one of the songs I initially listened to, and also “Take a Run at the Sun”, “I Don’t Think So” and their cover of The Cure’s “Just Like Heaven”. Now call me a pansy, but there must be other people Out There (forgive me!) who think that this song would be even better without the god-awful “NOOOOO!!!” and abrupt ending? No?

I now think some of these songs are relatively poor compared to other stuff on the album: “I Don’t Think So” is pretty mediocre, and I would agree with other reviewers who think that “Take a Run…” doesn’t belong here. Even “Feel the Pain”, which another reviewer thinks is their second best song ever, I rarely listen to now, but perhaps that owes more to what comes after it…

After the initial phase then, I found myself listening to the early songs, particularly the first four (”Budge” has never really done anything for me).P>”Wagon”, “Thumb”, “Whatever’s Cool With Me” and “Not You Again” are all good songs from the middle of the band’s life, but it’s the songs from “Where You Been” that ultimately made me want to go out and buy more of their rather hard-to-come-by albums (I had to get “Where You Been” on here).

Sandwiched between the only two songs I’d heard of, “Get Me” had been one of the songs that I initially found myself listening to, and I liked it a lot. But it took me the best part of a year to realise that, with “Out There” (which also took a bit of time, and is also from “Where You Been”) it is the best song on here. I never thought that I’d ever get so excited by guitars again: after crooning to the first three minutes of “Get Me” (”You’re not going to get me through this are youuuuu ooh-oooooooooohhh?”), you expect the song to play out, but J comes in with another quick verse and a two minute guitar riff, which is one of the most beautiful things I’ve ever heard.

This album may be a little patchy (with the emphasis on the word “little”), and existing fans of the band will no doubt quibble over the track-listing and wonder “what’s the point?”, but this album changed my life for the better.

Five stars it is then.

Customer Review: Ear bleedin’ Brilliant!
While i agree with most of the points raised by Alan in the above review,you have to accept that everybody’s version of a “best of” will be very different.I think this is an excellent introduction to a Dinosaur Jr novice and although,as Alan pointed out,the early years are
skimmed over in favour of inclusions such as “Take A Run At The Sun” and “Where’d you Go”,
these are minor gripes.The sheer quality of the
bands output guarantees that any compilation will
be stunning.And where i disagree strongly with
Alan is in his dismissal of “Without A Sound” which is one of my favourite Dinosaur Jr albums
by far.I feel their last effort “Hand It Over” was terribly weak by comparison.But hey,never mind all that…if you are vaguely familiar with
this band and want to expand your knowledge,this is a great place to start.And you will eventually
get around to the rest of the albums.

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The Day The Country Died [2007]


The Day The Country Died [2007]
Customer Review: A DIY account of the DIY era
For a brief period during the early to mid 1980s, an underground movement rose from the ashes of 70s punk. When its first wave imploded thanks to its own nihilism and its cynical exploitation by commercial interests, a new breed of ‘hardcore’ punks emerged, united by a healthy disregard for authority that necessitated a DIY ethic and put bands in charge of their own gigs, labels and distibution networks.

Along with the music came a commitment to radical politics, freedom of expression and non-violence. The fold-out sleeves that accompanied many releases informed and mobilised the dole generation into a serious political force, powerful enough to breathe new life into the moribund CND movement and be considered a threat by the paranoid and authoritarian Thatcher government.

This DVD provides a snapshot of that era that captures its vital energy and reflects the attempt of a generation to turn its back on a government that sold them out and forge a better world for themselves. This DIY ethic was embodied by bands such as Crass who lived and breathed its values and proved a formative influence on later movements such as the Exodus collective and the DIY sound system. The DVD’s content reflects the messiness, the struggle and the internal rivalries inevitable in a movement which celebrates personal freedom and carries within a hidden warning against being too overzealous. Witness the bafflement of Boff from Chumbawamba as he recounts some cheeky crusty turning up on his doorstep with a sleeping bag, then criticising him for drinking instant coffee!

Kids - turn off Kerrang! and put this in your DVD player instead. It will teach you everything the music industry doesn’t wnat you to know, namely that they need you far more than you need them, and even if it doesn’t inspire you to form your own band/zine/label, it will provide a valuable history lesson. If you’re an old punk you will find the nostalgia trip interesting and feel relieved that your old heroes look just as tired and fat as you do with increasing age.

One small quibble - The Stop the City footage is great, right movement right era, but why is there also loads of footage of the Poll Tax riot in Trafalgar Square, which took place much later (1990 IIRC)?

Customer Review: Noble but disappointing
The film starts off with a title declaring that it isn’t the definitive story but more a personal account of what was/is an important chapter of punk/protest music. Despite Dick Subhuman’s superbly candid intro, it bears little resemblance to the excellent book and disappoints. The story structure is very jumbled. The interviews don’t include enough of the

main movers and shakers but do include many minor fish (deliberately anarcho? surely not) The archive live footage was bound to be poor old vhs quality but this also applied to the makers of the recent AMERICAN HARDCORE film. Tons of fast cut interview clips made it an excellent film. Footage of some of the bands still performing like Subhumans, Conflict etc. could have also helped. Nevertheless, it is a unique on screen account and full marks for having a go with presumably limited resources. The definitive story that the subject muchly deserves, remains to be seen.

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Ultimate Christmas Country


Ultimate Christmas Country

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The Essential Marty Robbins 1951-1982: Columbia Country Classics


The Essential Marty Robbins 1951-1982: Columbia Country Classics
Country’s jack-of-all-trades, Marty Robbins handled so many musical styles so well. The common threads were his shivering, fragile tenor; an ability to tastefully emote; and of course, an uncanny knack for appealing to popular tastes. From his earliest heart-rending ballads to his Western sagas, rockabilly romps, country-politan crooning, standards, and even his kitschy pop, Robbins lent them all a grace and civility that was simply hard to resist because he never (well, rarely) confused accessibility with shallowness. Though best known for bringing the cowboy uptown, Robbins helped expand the parameters of what a “country” artist could do, his choices defined by quality of material and performance, not genre. –Marc Greilsamer

Customer Review: An extremely versatile performer
Marty Robbins was a major country singer over three decades, beginning his recording career and establishing himself quickly. He maintained a high level of consistent success throughout the fifties and sixties and also had some notable successes in the seventies. This set covers his entire recording career. Originally released in America in a long box format with two separate CD jewel boxes and a large booklet inside, it was released in Europe in a two-door jewel case and later in a slimline double-CD case. I imported the original boxed set many years ago. I don’t know which packaging is current in America, but the music remains the same.

Marty’s early recordings often became successful in both the country and pop charts in America. He only had limited success in the UK pop charts but he was the first to record Singing the blues, Knee deep in the blues and Story of my life, all of which became massive UK hits for other singers. On this set, you can hear further evidence of his ability to rock’n'roll via That’s all right, Maybelline and A white sport coat and a pink carnation.

I love Marty’s rock’n'roll music but he was even better singing western songs. His biggest success came with El Paso, one of the best western songs ever recorded. This collection also features a couple of sequels - Feleena from El Paso and El Paso city. Plenty of other examples of Marty’s western songs are included here, though if you are really keen there are plenty of compilations devoted exclusively to Marty’s western music including a Bear family boxed set including all of them.

Marty was also capable of doing excellent versions of pop standards, as shown here by his versions of September in the rain, All the way and Unchained melody. He also recorded Hawaiian music and that is also represented here. Listen to his interpretations of Beyond the reef and Hawaiian wedding song. Marty also did his share of conventional country songs, including Devil woman, Ruby Ann, Tonight Carmen, You gave me a mountain and My woman my woman my wife.

This set (in whatever packaging) shows that Marty was a man of many talents, able to sing any type of song. If you only want one Marty Robbins collection, this is the one to go far, but be warned - you may end up buying more of his music to explore some aspects of his career in greater depth.

Customer Review: It`s outstanding,essential says it all.
This set has Marty`s big hits and also has some I had not heard before.Whether, you like Marty Robbins,or you like country, you can`t go wrong.

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Vaughan Williams - Complete Symphonies etc


Vaughan Williams - Complete Symphonies etc
Needless to report, Adrian Boult’s credentials in this repertoire are unassailable, and to have nearly all of his stereo Vaughan Williams recordings for EMI so elegantly packaged and enticingly priced will be incentive enough for many a prospective purchaser. There is much to treasure here, not least those gently perceptive accounts of the first three symphonies, as well as the fifth and the ninth. All the same, the fires burned more brightly on Boult’s earlier mono cycle for Decca (Symphonies 1-8 are still available within an unmissable super-budget Belart box) and there is some oddly listless orchestral playing to contend with in both the Sinfonia Antartica and the eighth especially. The fourth and sixth, too, find the New Philharmonia on less than ideally tidy form. The disc of shorter orchestral items and the gorgeous Serenade to Music offers mostly unbridled pleasure (with Hugh Bean a memorably serene soloist in The Lark Ascending), as does Boult’s fourth and final recording of Job, though here, too, tension levels are markedly lower than on either of his mono versions (try hearing Boult’s 1954 LPO version). No matter, for all its ups and downs, the present anthology undoubtedly offers fine value for money. ––Andrew Achenbach

Customer Review: PROBABLY THE BEST ALL-ROUND SET OF VW SYMPHONIES
The VW symphonies have done remarkably well on disc. Complete cycles by Previn, Haitink and Tod Handley all make substantial claims. Individual symphonies from Richard Hickox, Andrew Davis, Vaughan Williams himself and, of course, ‘Glorious John’ Barbirolli (as VW christened him) also demand attention. But, if you’re looking for a complete overview of the Vaughan Williams symphonic canon (plus quite a lot of substantial extras) then this Boult set is probably still the best all-round recommendation.

Even he has a substantial rival in his earlier self on Decca, conducted under the gaze of the composer who delivers a touching speech of thanks to the players at the end of the pianissimo finale of the Sixth Symphony. This earlier Decca version probably has the edge for urgency and thrust in the quicker movements, but the sound on these later discs benefits enormously from the full warm stereo production typical of EMI in the 70’s and also benefits from Sir Adrian’s lifetime experience of these works.

In many ways, it is the earlier symphonies that come off best in this series. A wonderfully full-blooded Sea Symphony with a finely disciplined chorus, excellent soloists in John Carol Case and Sheila Armstrong (though she can’t eclipse the magical Isobel Baillie in the older Boult set), and a rich Kingsway Hall acoustic get the set off to a fine start. The London Symphony was always special with Boult: he managed to achieve an ideal balance of symphonic thought with the touches of Edwardian period colour. The jingles of the hansom cab in the London fog and the cries of the street vendors come off particularly well here. But don’t ignore Hickox’s magnificent recording of the substantially longer original version. The Pastoral, too, is beautifully sustained in Boult’s hands: the succession of slow, mostly quiet movements always glows with Pastoral intensity for him. Maybe his disciple, Vernon Handley, penetrates deeper into the dark echoes of the composer’s experiences as an ambulance driver in the Great War.

The Fourth - “I don’t know if I like it, but it’s what I meant,” in VW’s famous quote - is full of barely restrained power, but perhaps would benefit from a bit more urgency at times. The Fifth, arguably the most symphonic of all the symphonies despite the Pilgrim’s Progress origins of much of its material, gets an authentically profound performance with the LPO. Maybe we are closer to its Pilgrim origins here than to the symphonic arguments behind their transformations. And there is serious competition in this symphony from Barbirolli (his 1st recording), from Haitink and from Handley. Haitink is the most ’symphonic’, Barbirolli the most impassioned, Handley probably the most balanced.

The Sixth is fine, suitably violent and desolate by turns, but doesn’t quite match Boult’s blistering earlier recording. The Antarctica is curiously lack-lustre here - Haitink’s is the revelatory performance of this symphony. TAnd the Eighth has always seemed to be the special domain of its dedicatee, Barbirolli, who had the key to unlocking its mixture of wild and wonderful orchestration (including “all the ‘phones and ’spiels known to the composer”) with its cryptic symphonic argument (exemplified by the Variations without a Theme of the opening movement). The enigmatic Ninth seems to elude most conductors, including Boult here. Handley comes closest to revealing its dark Hardyesque mysteries.

There are two additional discs of extra stuff in this slimline box, all beautifully played. Specially noteworthy are a Serenade to Music that comes close to matching Henry Wood’s original line-up of soloists, Hugh Bean as a magically carolling Lark Ascending, a real rarity in the Double Piano Concerto and a great Job, perhaps the VW work closest to Boult’s heart.

This set is excellent value for money and, for a complete collection of the symphonies, probably the best all-round recommendation - though Tod Handley runs it pretty close. Maybe the bonus items tip the balance Boult’s way.

Customer Review: Boult’s final tributes to Vaughan Williams
“You got the score right into you and through you into the orchestra.”

So wrote Vaughan Williams to the thirty year old conductor Adrian Boult in 1918 after a performance of A London Symphony. Subsequently Boult conducted and championed Vaughan Williams’ works constantly. Many times he recorded and premiered them. This slim-line box, containing all the symphonies and many other items, all recorded in stereo and mostly in the warm Kingsway Hall acoustic between 1967 and 1975, ought therefore to be self-recommending.

It must be said that Vaughan Williams as a composer has tended to polarize listeners. Detractors say that he had neither the architectural vision nor the construction skills necessary for a symphonist. They point to the fact that he himself hesitated to name and number many of his works as symphonies, and that one of them is merely a re-cycled film score. They contain, moreover, many awkward and ungainly rhythmic figures that tend to cheapen them. Champions argue that the music is wonderfully evocative of its time, that many beauties are to be found therein, and that at least three of the works deserve to remain in the international repertoire forever.

Internet browsers, wondering which Vaughan Williams purchases to make, need to balance several factors before selecting this box. The octogenarian conductor, Sir Adrian Boult, directs with authority and knowledge, but nevertheless does not always elicit the very best performances (as in No 7) available or the very best performances of his own recorded versions (as in No 2 and No 6). Against this must be balanced the benefits of relatively modern recording and reprocessing, together with the benefits of low cost and compactness.

Perhaps there are no other internet browsers who, like me, heard Vaughan Williams conduct. At an orchestral concert in London in the early 1950s, devoted to his works, he conducted his own Fourth Symphony. As a young audience member I reckoned that he obviously was not the world’s best conductor. A tall, big-framed figure, he kept his eye on his own score and beat time with the baton. Nowadays, I am happy to recommend and own this box of his works, while ensuring however that other versions of them are in my collection.

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Country Falls


Country Falls
Customer Review: I am the shadow on your skin and I’ll be gone very soon
Think of cold, smooth ice. And imagine a warm, shimmering light appearing just under it.

That’s what comes to mind with Husky Rescue’s exquisite debut album, “Country Falls.” The Finnish group reflects their chilly Helsinki winters with equally chilly pop, but filled with sunny warmth, as if on the first day of spring. Basically imagine Sigur Ros playing folk-pop.

It opens with a gentle stretch of shimmering synth, and a mellow little folkpop tune. “Sweet little kitten on the porch sleeps in the sun/The sunbeams climb up on the wall,” Reeta-Leehna Korhola sings in a slightly breathless, wispy voice. “Small girls with sun warm hands cuddle bring him milk/then run after make castles in the snow/Jokers juggle in the air rainbow colored fountains of sugar waters flow…”

They dip into psychedelic pop in the kitschy, colorful “Summertime Cowboy,” with all those whipcracks and jangling bells. But then they’re back to the icy, sparkling sound of the first song — ambient balladry, glitchy experimental tunes melting into creepy ballads, and little mellow guitar tunes that are smothered in shimmering, sparkling synth.

This edition also comes with an extra DVD, which contains three music videos. “New Light of Tomorrow” is a spare, eerie video, with a young man having a vision of a spacesuited angel, while “Summertime Cowboy” is a kooky, neon playground. And “City Lights” is a shifting video of a young woman carried away by a love song on the car radio (come on, we’ve all done it), who has a dream of herself dancing in green fire.

Husky Rescue is the brainchild of Marko Nyberg, who apparently wanted to make expansive, warm music to counter the cold up in Helsinki. So he collected around twenty musicians to make the right sound for “Country Falls” — and the result is so cohesive in sound, it almost sounds like a concept album.

Almost every song is based on a little guitar melody. Sometimes Husky Rescue dip into catchy electric riffs and solid drums (like in the poppy “Summertime Cowboy”), but usually they stick to gentler, folkier material with the odd droning riff here and there, and the occasional burst of murky drumming..

And they’re all wrapped in delicate layers of shimmering synth, which sound like a soundtrack for the Northern Lights. Sometimes they’re glitchy, gurgly or tinkly, and sometimes they’re epic sweeps of sound. And they’re interspersed with devilish little laughs, robot voices and ambient sweeps of exquisite sound.

Really, that would be enough to recommend this album in itself. But it’s topped with vocals from two artists: Korhola’s pretty, slightly breathless voice, and Nyberg’s slightly stilted, distant voice. Both of them sing songs of warmth, hope, “cotton clouds,” lullabies to a “tiger,” and the sweet plea, “Would you treat me right if I am kind/Would you like me more if I can smile/Would you set on tears if I start to cry/Would you take me there last one more time?”

“Country Falls” is an exquisite mixture of folk-pop and electronica, and it sounds like the end of winter when the spring sun starts to shine. Absolutely astounding.

Customer Review: It doesn’t get any better than this!!!
Probably the most perfect, most breathtaking album you will ever hear. Period. I’ve no idea why these guys aren’t getting more acknowledgment. Just do yourself a favour - buy it, turn the lights down low, hit play, and then enjoy feeling smug at how clever you’ve been, …..luxury!

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