The Last Town Chorus

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The Last Town Chorus album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 37:11

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A rare beauty to stir the soul

paintedsoul

Megan Hickey weaves such a complex ocean of sound with her profound use of the lap steel, yet it feels like a gentle breeze.She is an orchestra and her accompaniment is like the leaves blowing in the currents of her sound.......Absolutly Beautiful

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...also Richard Thompson-esque...

Grooveseeker

...as in the "Grizzley Man" sountrack, with female vocals. This is an astonishingly good album.

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For the brave and strong of heart

Coelacanth

Ethereal, atmospheric, moody – these words could easily describe this record but those words and the people who use them are too dismissive for these truly amazing songs. The music escapes the speakers as desperate as a runaway slave in search of water. There is an elegance in the delicacy of these tracks. The music burrows deep into your subconscious and finds a home in your loneliest moment to transform it into the most beautiful room in your brain. This is a collection for the brave and strong of heart.

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Cowboy Junkie-esque

ElectricGypsy

I don't know that I would call it new wave, but it is good. Nice female voice over stark and minimal backing. I don't know anything about the band, but this is a nice effort from start to finish.

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They Say All Music Guide

The Last Town Chorus, aka singer, songwriter, and lap steel guitarist Megan Hickey and guitarist Matt Guy, self-released their first album in 2003; the estimable British indie Blast First reissued the set in 2005, just before the duo split up. (Hickey has since maintained the band name with various guest musicians.) The Last Town Chorus is a bare-bones slice of dream pop that owes equal amounts to the 4AD Records ethos of atmosphere above all and the downcast ache of the mid-’90s slowcore bands like Low and Bedhead. Barring a few minimal bass, organ, and percussion overdubs, these nine songs consist entirely of Hickey’s mournful vocals and idiosyncratic lap steel playing, with Guy’s effects-heavy guitar lines in a decidedly secondary accompanist role. Hickey, originally a bassist, had never played the lap steel guitar until the duo started, and her lack of training means that her playing style is well outside the usual blues and country tradition; on songs like “The Ground,” a closer comparison is Mary Timony’s detuned slide guitar in the mid-’90s indie band Helium, Hickey offering up near-atonal swells and waves of sound. The sound of The Last Town Chorus is decidedly narcotic, with none of the tunes venturing beyond a somnambulant tempo and with few emotional settings beyond “mopey.” As a result, The Last Town Chorus at least sets and maintains a mood for attractive ambient listening, but closer attention isn’t repaid. – Stewart Mason

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