Swift Feet for Troubling Times

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (32 ratings)
Swift Feet for Troubling Times album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 45:09

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lullaby

aweinberg

go listen to that song off the Acorn - Glory Hope Mountain

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Angelic

topothamornin

This album infuses beautiful string arrangments, angelic-female harmonies, and a myriad of other complimenting instruments from the glockenspiel, banjo to horns. This rates as one of my favorite female folk albums, absolutely captivating.

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Very Nice

Hopipriest

I've been listening to this album over and over. It's solid all the way through, but I have an affinity for Lampost and St. Francis. The best thing from Canada since...

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dreamy

oleen23

ethereal vocals with textured string arrangements and brush-stroke percussion, this album flows from track to track effortlessly, yet with enough variety to distinguish each as its own statement within a remarkably cohesive project. fans of Cat Power should definitely give a listen. worth an album dowload without question.

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They Say All Music Guide

Casey Mecija, lead singer, songwriter, and guitarist for the folk-pop septet Ohbijou, comes off as a passionate and conflicted person in the lyrics to the songs on the group’s album Swift Feet for Troubling Times, searching for love in a wooded landscape frequently populated by wolves, among other animals. Whether those beasts are real or metaphorical is hard to tell in Mecija’s sometimes flowery poetry, but they don’t seem so threatening in the way she presents them musically. The group employs both acoustic folk and country instruments — banjo and mandolin in addition to guitar — plus chamber instruments like violin and cello, and lots of keyboards to create atmospheric arrangements played in swirling, circular patterns. Mecija’s vocals are much calmer than the emotions she evokes in her words, and they are somewhat buried in the mix, no more prominent than many of the instruments. This gives the music a mysterious air, but it also robs the songs of the force they might otherwise have, which is particularly notable in the much improved remix of “The Otherside” that constitutes the hidden 14th track on the disc. – William Ruhlmann

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