Fern Knight

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Fern Knight album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 46:15

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Enter Your Own World

ProgNClassicaLover

I just heard Fern Knight at Baltimore's Orion Studio, the most fantastically intimate and immediate music venue on the planet. Most great art demands that you surrender yourself to the vision of the artist, especially at a place like Orion, but for me, Fern Knight does exactly opposite. Its gorgeously impressionistic atmospheres take me into my own world. The closest comparison I can think of is Cortney Tidwell, minus the obvious Bjork influences. And whereas an artist like Bjork is constantly saying "Look at me!!!", Fern Knight makes no such pretenses. Listen and discover where it takes you.

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They Say All Music Guide

Fern Knight’s third album will on many levels appeal to fans of the early 21st century variations of acid folk music. It has some of the same characteristics: gentle female vocals, a tentative delicacy, and an audible debt to British folk and folk-rock of the late ’60s and early ’70s (although singer/songwriter/cellist Margie Wienk is American). There are some differences, or at least unusual shadings, that set them off from the pack. There’s a pronounced chamber music feel to much of the instrumentation, particularly with the liberal use of cello and violin drones, as well as harp accents. Often it’s darker and tougher, however, than some other artists who follow similar lines. There’s a sinister grit to the playing, and melodies that belie but do not undercut the sweetness of Wienk’s vocals, and while the arrangements don’t have anything like a classic bass-drums rock rhythm section, there are some occasional blasts of ferocious electric guitar. The overall impact treads the border between the haunting and the truly spooky, though some of the material, especially “Synge’s Chair,” sounds like it could almost be traditional in origin. If the influence of vintage British acid folk is audible, it must be said that it is in the strength of the songs and the clarity of the production; this is more impressive than many obscure relics of much earlier vintage in the same style that are championed by some collectors. – Richie Unterberger

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