The Braille Night

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The Braille Night album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 48:24

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Beat the Heat

gregrmurphy

"Blizzard of 78" is gorgeous - one of the few 7 minute songs that feels too short.

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B-Sides, You've got to be kidding!

Sumset

Ida is my absolute favorite band in the world. I have almost everything they've done collectively and independently. This collection is actually supposed to be the extras or "throw aways" from their album "Will You Find Me?". The first two tracks are fine if you're a fan. Just start with Arrowheads and download the rest of the album. You'll be amazed.

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They Say All Music Guide

On its second Tiger Style Records release, New York folk-pop band Ida are once again able to re-create the intimacy and magic of its live shows. The record is one of the band’s cleanest to date, with Dan Littleton, Elizabeth Mitchell, and Karla Schickele leading the attack. By this point, the band’s music had been invigorated by the haunting violin of Ida Pearle and the steadily strained upright bass of Zach Wallace. Littleton and Mitchell’s melancholy harmonies show up on the first track, “Let’s Go Walking.” The band’s signature sound continues throughout, including the mesmerizing mix of piano and acoustic guitar on “Ignatia Amara” and the intricately slow and earnest vocals on “So Long.” “Blizzard of ’78″ is one of the more energetic songs on the otherwise downbeat disc. It’s followed by another relaxed song from Littleton, “So Worn Out,” a song that retains the immediacy of four-track recordings without the fuzz. The title track is a brief instrumental collaboration between Littleton and Pearle. The disc ends with the enchanting and tender “Moves Through the Air,” led by Mitchell’s sophisticated lead vocal. Most of the songs on The Braille Night were recorded during various recording sessions for the band’s first Tiger Style release, Will You Find Me. The band’s radiant and cathartic tones continued to turn heads with this release. – Stephen Cramer

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