Log in to add to your wishlist
The fruit of a long friendship, a collaboration between two very different musical talents and a collection of beautiful, eerie songs. Painfully confessional, the overwhelming sense is of beauty in a stark place; a desolate Antarctic wilderness.
Genre:
Electronic: Folktronic
Release Date:
2007
Albums you will love
Calamateur
The Old Fox of '45
Rock: Experimental Rock
Calamateur
Son of Everyone EP
Electronic: Folktronic
The Trufflehunters
Signs of Life
Folk: Alternative Folk
Calamateur vs. Steve Lawson
© Copyright-Calamateur and Steve Lawson
(634479603518)
Record Label: Autoclave Records & Pillow Mountain Records
No items available in your wishlist
This album is the fruit of a long friendship, a collaboration between two very different musical talents and a collection of beautiful, eerie songs.
The underground aesthetic promotes passion and integrity over craftsmanship and musical chops. Calamateur vs. Steve Lawson offers no such dilemma. The playing is immaculate, the production gorgeous and the arrangements are achingly close to perfection. These are Calamateur songs though, which means they’re loaded with yearning, loss, ascetic sensuality and a commitment to revealing personal and universal truths. And tunes, it’s more packed with tunes that a Topic is with hazelnuts.
Calamateur vs. Steve Lawson finds Calamateur (Andrew Howie, reclusive solo artist and sage) in a rare collaboration with another musician, the much demanded session musician, tour sideman and solo bass player, Steve Lawson.
Despite their studio polish, and the understated musical chops on display, the nine songs that have emerged from the Howie-Lawson collaboration are emotionally raw and spiritually bereft. There’s far more pain and sense of loss and inadequacy on this album than on, say, The Old Fox of ’45, or the Son of Everyone double EP. At times deeply unsettling, and often painfully confessional (even the instrumental tracks) the overwhelming sense is of beauty in a stark place; a desolate Antarctic wilderness of songs.
Read more...
Please
log in to review the album.