The Waking Hour

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (23 ratings)
The Waking Hour album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 38:19

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Highly Recommended

SteveFord

I knew little of the likeable David Francey before seeing him live, just that he had recorded with Kane, Welch and Kaplan - enough to get me to his show. Good move. As much a raconteur as a singer, he exudes relaxed warmth and humour. Live, his direct and intensely personal songs are sandwiched between poignant, hilarious anecdotes. The songs sound like old favourites on first hearing. In Kieran Kane, Kevin Welch and Fats Kaplan, Francey found the perfect musical partners. Their all-acoustic playing is rich and warm, never overwhelming, always deferring to the song. Each song on The Waking Hour seems like a vision realised - like Francey had something he wanted say, and found just the right words to say it.

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wonderful

JoninCalgary

You must hear this. Francey is the type of artist that I wish more people would hear. A true poet and story-teller, he is able to take the seemingly everyday and make it into something extraordinary.

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Terrific

Plautus

Welch, Kane and Kaplan provide a tight spare backup to these excellent songs. "The Waking Hour" and "Tonight In My Dreams" are standouts.

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gem...

t.pot

Check out "Over You". Great tune.

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They Say All Music Guide

David Francey is one of Canada’s best-kept secrets, but he’s one who deserves to be globally recognized on a level similar to Joni Mitchell or Neil Young. His songs are deceptively simple, tinged by his accent, a Scots-Canuck mix, the images direct, as on “Ashtabula,” but put together they create a complex, multidimensional picture — not unlike a younger version of Gordon Lightfoot, in his own way. Accompanied here by friends Kieran Kane, Kevin Welch, and Fats Kaplin, there’s nothing fancy about this acoustic disc, but it remains affecting. Francey looks at the world with a poet’s eye, as on the religious parable “Morning Train.” This was recorded in Nashville, and he looks at America with affection, but also an outsider’s skepticism, such as on “Fourth of July,” a meditation on the run up to the 2003 Iraq War. He can turn bluesy (with a touch of bluegrass in the harmony vocal) on “Wanna Be Loved” and keep a driving rhythm on “Sunday Morning.” Every piece here is a loving little gem. Francey makes them seem effortless, which is the mark of a true craftsman. Brilliance. – Chris Nickson

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