Ten Stones

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (112 ratings)
Ten Stones album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 41:25

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Awe Struck!

Jack67

I finally saw them live last week, incredible! I had all their other stuff, 16hp included, and loved it. This album didn't immediatley grab me but once I saw the songs performed live I can't stop playing this album. By far the most intense show I have ever seen! To God be the glory! Don't miss the message in the songs, it was quite clear live. David and co. put the gospel out there in clear daylight with a fire and brimstone chaser, anyone who heard them had the privilege of seeing the gospel message delivered like a freight train!

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WOW

DREAUX

Just saw them last night in Albuquerque. One of the best live shows I've ever seen. Get this album now. And then get the rest!

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***

BluegrassSailor

I agree with the guy 2 reviews before me. Everything Mr. Edwards does is amazing. AMAZING. Until now. Ten Stones isn't terrible...and it even has a few standout songs (The Beautiful Axe and Cohawkin Road come to mind). But my honest opinion of this album after listening to it with a real effort...a real desire to like it...is meh. I will always get everything he does...because after ten plus years and at least as many major releases of pure awesomeness...a less cohesive, less melodic, less rapturous, colder feeling piece won't keep me away. But yeah, this album isn't doing as much for me as his older work.

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Merging Woven Hand and 16 Horsepower

tpgraham

This is the first release since the 'Self-Titled' release to incorporate more of the rock sound that was evident in 16 Horsepower's final release. this is a must have and will be contending with Shearwater for release of the year!!

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Great!

jdn

Everything David Eugene Edwards does is amazing. And this new Wovenhand album is no exception -- download it now!

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eMusic Features

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Talking In Tongues: Woven Hand

By Lenny Kaye, eMusic Contributor

To twine the spiritual and the earthly — that is the mission of the preacher, as it is the musician. David Eugene Edwards is both. Washed in the blood of celebrated "pulpit orators," with DNA spiraling back to ecclesiastical refugees that populated the rocky shores of New England; himself a product of the western frontier (the cliffs surrounding Denver, Colorado), he does not so much sing as chant, declaim, foresee, in language rich in parable… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Woven Hand serve an unceasingly darkly melodramatic, portentous platter of indie rock on Ten Stones. Much of the melodrama’s down to the vocals of singer and principal songwriter David Eugene Edwards, who has the sort of slightly operatic vibrato heard in many an ambitious, arty singer/songwriter from the days of David Bowie onward. They might not quite be goth rock or post-punk, but the melodies and arrangements do emit a glow consistently hovering between the downbeat and the grim. The stern guitar rock base is sometimes embellished by prettier synthesizer strains, which weave their most effective patterns when they dovetail with the nearly spaghetti western-like guitar of “Not One Stone.” Though it’s sung in the manner of an epic art-rock song cycle, close perusal of the lyrics doesn’t quite reveal what Edwards is on about, other than generally haunted and disturbed imagery suggesting journeys doomed and unfulfilled (with an interlude for a cover of Antonio Carlos Jobim’s “Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars”). This might in some ways be reminiscent of the kind of noirish music made by the likes of Bowie, Scott Walker, and Nick Cave. But such is the similarity of much of the mood from track to track that the net effect is to make one hungry to hear the likes of those superior aforementioned singer/songwriters instead, rather than more of Woven Hand themselves. – Richie Unterberger

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