Woven Hand

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Woven Hand album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 40:40

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Waited so long

Spikeysongs

I've had this little gem hidden in my Save it for Later for almost two years. At last in February 2009 I downloaded the album. Wow isn't it brilliant. I'm surprised there aren't more raving reviews on it. The Nick Cave comparison is fairly lazy - but I suppose somehow apt. His music is stark yet beautiful. His gothic type voice broods elegantly over each song. Stand out tracks include 'The Good Hand', 'Pale Blue Fever' and the excellent cover of 'Ain't No Sunshine'. The album definately doesn't outstay it's welcome. When it finishes it leaves you wanting more. Which is exactly what we want out of a record. Go ahead ... download

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personal

spookypube

creeps into your inner most dark corner of yourself and stays there to haunt you.

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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 is former 16 Horsepower man David Eugene Edwards, who plays almost everything on a disc that could sometimes be called bluegrass gothic. Dark and portentous, Edwards broods over his songs, ensuring that the shadows are dark and long. The mood isn’t a million miles from a lot of Nick Cave’s work, although the acoustic textures (electric guitar occurs sparingly on a few tracks) tend to diminish the impact a little. What’s certainly outstanding is his feel throughout, especially on a cover of “Ain’t No Sunshine” where the golden orb rarely gets a peek in. “Arrow Head” starts with an Appalachian nod to a Celtic past before heading through as white gospel church, then down the holler to the graveyard, and the striking opener, “The Good Hand,” lays out Edwards’ musical manifesto with an almost funereal grace. It’s good, often very good, but it could have been better if Edwards had been willing to let a few more chinks of light into the hermetic world — and also a greater variety of instruments. He’s a strong mandolin player, but it often doesn’t suit the mood he’s trying to convey. Still, it’s worth repeated hearings – Chris Nickson

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