The Trinity Session

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 53:05

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wore out the cassette when it was first released

butterflies

beautiful powerful emotional music. When this first came out I was in grad school I was feeling sad about loosing young love and this music played perfectly to me mood at the time. I wore out the cassette, then a CD. It still sounds beautiful today, as I replace it with yet a 3rd format.

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Minimalism at its finest

pundragon

The band's name might lead you to think this is a country album or perhaps you need heroin to enjoy it. But that would be a mistake. I listen to this most late at night when I can feel Margo Timmins remind me that heartache and loss are as vital to living as joy and love. The music is devoid of extra "noise" that would only detract from the beauty that is minimalism at its finest.

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No other album like this one...

DrR

This is an incredible record. So beautiful and subtle. Timmons does not have the greatest voice but she knows how to use her assets very well. A great concept album.

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Time for a eMu ReDo

elizabeth

eMu needs to re-do its 100 best list so this album can be in the Top 10 where it belongs. When it came out, it didn't leave the turntable or the car stereo for months. Note: "Postcard Blues" is a prelude to "Walking After Midnight," so technically, the two track names are switched. (I've noticed this on other download sites too, probably b/c the original liner notes showed the two as a medley.)

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one of the best

beddbugzz

records of the late 80's. I was thrilled to find this on emusic as I had not listened to it in years. I forgot how stunning this record is. Margo Timmins voice is lovely. I had the joy of seeing the Cowboy Junkies live twice in the late 80's and they were amazing. If you are not familiar with them you must download this record. It is simply perfect.

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1988 GEM

EMUSIC-1967

I remember getting this on vinyl when it came out in 1988 or so. Loved it. All songs are great reinterpretaion of great songs. In those day you had to get up and flip the record over. That's the side I really like. Sweet Jane is a classic here. Love this collection.

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Great minimalist folk covers

jhedrick0521

Beautiful record, one of the best covers of 'Sweet Jane' I've ever heard, plus some old folk standards. The singer's voice is amazing.

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Less is more, more, more, MORE!

Smokeorange

It's tempting to say this album is a perfect antidote to today's pervasive sampling and auto-tune-driven vocals. But that would make The Trinity Session seem too anti-something. The glacial pacing, the whisper-quiet lyrics, the echoey atmospheric sound all work to create a unique mood. The Trinity Session is a woman in jeans leaning against the back wall of a dance hall smoking a cigarette. Beguling and timeless.

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They Say All Media Guide

Who says you can’t make a great record in one day — or night, as the case may be? The Trinity Session was recorded in one night using one microphone, a DAT recorder, and the wonderful acoustics of the Holy Trinity in Toronto. Interestingly, it’s the album that broke the Cowboy Junkies in the United States for their version of “Sweet Jane,” which included the lost verse. It’s far from the best cut here, though. There are other covers, such as Margo Timmins’ a cappella read of the traditional “Mining for Gold,” a heroin-slow version of Hank Williams’ classic “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry,” “Dreaming My Dreams With You” (canonized by Waylon Jennings), and a radical take of the Patsy Cline classic “Walkin’ After Midnight” that closes the disc. Those few who had heard the band’s previous album, Whites Off Earth Now!!, were aware that, along with Low, the Cowboy Junkies were the only band at the time capable of playing slower than Neil Young and Crazy Horse — and without the ear-threatening volume. The Timmins family — Margo, guitarist and songwriter Michael, drummer Peter, and backing vocalist and guitarist John — along with bassist Alan Anton and a few pals playing pedal steel, accordion, and harmonica, paced everything to crawl.
That said, it works in that every song has its own texture, slowly and deliberately unfolding from blues and country and drones. An example is the Michael and Margo song “I Don’t Get It,” ushered in with a few drawling guitar lines, a spooky harmonica, and brushed drums. Margo Timmins doesn’t have a large range and doesn’t need it as she scratches each song’s surface like an itch until it bleeds its truth. This is also true on “Misguided Angel,” another original where the verses become nearly a round alternating between her voice and Michael’s snaky spare guitar lines to fill an almost unimaginable space. The Williams tune becomes a dirge in the Cowboys’ hands. It’s a funeral song, or an elegy for one who has dragged herself so far into the oblivion of isolation that there is no place left to go but home. Michael’s guitar moves around the changes as bassist Anton plays them; he colors the space allowing for Margo to fill the melodic space spot-on, yet stretching each syllable out to the breaking point. For most, this was the Cowboy Junkies’ debut — Whites Off Earth Now!! was re-released in the States a few years later — and it established them firmly in the forefront of the “alternative” scene with radio and MTV. As an album, it’s still remarkable at how timeless it sounds, and its beauty is — in stark contrast to its presentation — voluminous and rich, perhaps even eternal. – Thom Jurek

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