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Honey From The Tombs

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (151 ratings)
Honey From The Tombs album cover
01
Losin You
2:26 $0.99
02
Skinny Boy
3:29 $0.99
03
Ruby II
1:46 $0.99
04
Baby I
3:28 $0.99
05
Headsfull
1:51 $0.99
06
Wayward And Parliament
3:29 $0.99
07
Hard Hearted (Ode To Thoreau)
3:58 $0.99
08
Blue In Yr Eye
2:49 $0.99
09
Come Home Loaded Roadie
3:58 $0.99
10
All The Miles
2:51 $0.99
11
He Brings Out The Whiskey In Me
3:46 $0.99
12
Pour Me Up Another
2:54 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 36:45

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Don't reject it because someone mentions "country"

justino_dea

Amy Gets too much flack for not sounding like Stars. This is not "country" music. I don't like country music- I like this because I like folk, I like bluegrass, and I like the way that amy has blended these styles with indie pop, and even some electronic to come up with something original and diverse with Amy's butter and honey voice weaved through the middle. Its a wonderful album that I'd recommend to anyone. This album is one of my most heavily rotated in the past few years.

user avatar

Been there, done. th...

cajferg61

Perhaps, and I hope Amy did this album to get it off her chest. All Millan fans will likely agree - compare this to other artists who made their career in the country/folk/bluegrass genre, and she is only ordinary here. Don't get me wrong, if this is Amy wanting to vent some feelings, and ready to clear the slate, great! Worth the download. She should definitely move on to REALLY show off the talent and range she is capable of, and just because the website looks good, the fear is she gets pegged as this genre of artist. Amy, been there, done that, keep 'exploring' it all, and show us what you're made of.

user avatar

Gets better with every listen

RssAddict

At first I was a little put off by the country-ness of some of the songs, but the more I listen to them the more the strength of Millan's songwriting becomes apparent. Definitely worth the download!

user avatar

Very nice!

Velvethope

I think this is one of those that will slowly grow to be a favourite of mine. The voice is beautiful of course, (anyone who is a fan of Stars knows that) and the music has that nice, mellow yet 'can still get under your skin' appeal to it. My favourite tracks include Baby, I & He Brings Out the Whiskey in Me. Very much worth the download.

user avatar

Solid alt folk music

lemoneyes

I discovered Amy Millan thanks to a blog listing her album as one of the best of 2006. And it's true, it's a very good album for those who liked accoustic female music. No bad tracks here, and only one average (Ruby II), all the others are good. Favorite ones: All the miles and He brings out the whiskey in me. Similar artists: Jenny Lewis, Cat Power.

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They Say All Music Guide

Amy Millan has already proven herself a talented indie pop singer with her bands Stars and Broken Social Scene, so the fact that her voice carries over so well to other genres should come as no surprise. In her debut solo album, Honey from the Tombs, Millan explores her folkier side, with songs (all of which were written long before her Stars days) that tell tales of lost love and regret, an acoustic guitar and her own layered vocals her only constant companions. Not that the album is a lonely affair: Millan enlists plenty of help to help fill out her sound. There’s guitar and vocal assistance from Dan and Jenny Whiteley (from Crazy Strings), as well as additional instrumentation from both sets of bandmates. But even though there’s a certain lushness to the record, the words, and Millan’s voice, are so forlorn that the overwhelming sentiment that comes through is loneliness, as if the players behind her are simply illusions, as if in fact she is there by herself. And it’s this particular emotion that sits so calmly within the notes that makes Honey from the Tombs more than just another folk album. The songs themselves, if taken apart structurally, are no better and no worse than any other ones: they’re musically sound but not extraordinary, and while there are some great, poetic lines, most of the actual power in Millan’s work is from the sincerity in the simplicity of it all. “Singing’s always easy when you’re drinking,” she admits, “So pour me up another before bed.” She allows herself to show a weakness that’s all too human, the weakness of old lovers who will never be forgotten, of distant memories still sharp like broken whiskey bottles. And it’s precisely that weakness that makes Honey from the Tombs such a compelling and touching record. It doesn’t have to be complicated by abstract imagery or unusual chords, because it already has everything it needs. – Marisa Brown

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