Showing posts with label Kate Rusby. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kate Rusby. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 2, 2020

Kate Rusby - Angels and Men

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:31
Size: 122,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:47) 1. Hark Hark
(3:31) 2. Let It Snow
(4:56) 3. Paradise
(3:46) 4. The Ivy and the Holly
(4:19) 5. Sweet Chiming Bells
(5:20) 6. See Amid the Winter Snow
(4:49) 7. Rolling Downward
(3:20) 8. Deck the Halls
(4:13) 9. We'll Sing Hallelujah
(0:08) 10. Banjo Banjo
(4:46) 11. Santa Never Brings Me a Banjo
(5:40) 12. Let the Bells Ring
(3:50) 13. Big Brave Bill Saves Christmas

There’s a style that’s become synonymous with the 21st-century Christmas: the sound of a grown adult singing like a child, their breath misting on a window like a spray of fake snow, old classics being turned into virtuous, fragile facsimiles. Kate Rusby has one of these voices pretty to many, mawkish to others and it has little variety or power on her fourth collection of festive songs. Let It Snow and Deck the Halls are delivered in the same disengaged, delicate way; each lyric falls and then melts, leaving no mark behind. Modern songs such as Santa Never Brings Me a Banjo feel slushily tailored to tug the heart (“maybe it’s too tricky for the elves”, Rusby sings); heavenly gleam is only offered on the traditional ballad Paradise, which recalls the ambient atmospheres of Clannad. Overall, though, this feels like a John Lewis Christmas advert extended to 52 minutes, its mannered naivety never knowingly undersold. https://www.theguardian.com/music/2017/nov/23/kate-rusby-angels-men-review-pure-records-christmas

Angels and Men

Tuesday, November 13, 2018

Kate Rusby - 20 Disc 1 And Disc 2

Album: 20   Disc 1

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:24
Size: 104,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:36)  1. Awkward Annie
(4:34)  2. Unquiet Grave
(3:45)  3. Sun Grazers
(5:50)  4. The Lark
(3:30)  5. Planets
(4:39)  6. Wandering Soul
(4:19)  7. Who Will Sing Me Lullabies
(5:36)  8. Jolly Plough Boys
(4:19)  9. Sho Heen
(5:10) 10. Bitter Boy

Album: 20   Disc 2

Time: 45:16
Size: 104,0 MB

(4:42)  1. I Courted A Sailor
(3:25)  2. Mocking Bird
(4:09)  3. The Good Man
(5:36)  4. Annan Waters
(5:14)  5. All God's Angels
(3:48)  6. Elfin Knight
(5:12)  7. Wild Goose
(3:50)  8. Home
(3:43)  9. Underneath The Stars
(5:31) 10. Bring Me A Boat

It’s hard to believe that ’Barnsley nightingale’ Kate Rusby has been making music for 20 years now. As with Spiers & Boden’s The Works, this appropriately titled record sees the singer revisiting some classic songs from her canon, and rerecording them with a highly impressive line-up of guest musicians. The resulting album illustrates Rusby’s charming musical history perfectly, while the guestlist shows that during her two decades in the business, she has amassed some seriously talented fans and friends. The album begins with Awkward Annie, perhaps Rusby’s calling card. Its playful, animal-themed lyrics suit her uplifting, smiley singing voice. Chris Thile adds gentle backing vocals and mandolin, augmenting the song while not imposing himself on it.It seems a while since Rusby recorded traditional songs, and 20 serves as a reminder of her considerable ability in this field. Unquiet Grave is solemn and wistful, while Annan Waters, to which Bob Fox lends his voice, is a quite different proposition to those familiar with Nic Jones’ version harmonies, pipes and strings lending it a calmer, more mournful air. Jones is one of many impressive collaborators on an album many folkies will enjoy playing ’guess the guest’ to - his backing vocals on the tender The Lark hit the mark perfectly. Elsewhere, Jim Causley and Sarah Jarosz deserve particular praise for their beautifully balanced vocals, on I Courted a Sailor and Planets respectively, while Dick Gaughan and Mary Chapin Carpenter also make predictably impressive contributions. Paul Weller is arguably the most famous guest on 20, singing alongside Rusby on the album’s only new song, Sun Grazers. Strangely, his pained delivery seems to fight against, rather than work with, Rusby’s voice, resulting in an unusually grating track. As her fans will know by now, the Grimethorpe Colliery Band complement Rusby beautifully. 

Their previous work together has evidently informed a musical understanding, and Underneath the Stars is lifted to a moving, melancholy level by the band’s evocative brass arrangement. The album does sometimes become trapped in pleasant-but-uninspired territory, and some will find the arrangements at times samey and safe. The Good Man, for example, is a little on the twee side, while a languorous version of the Elfin Knight rattles along enjoyably enough without really pulling the listener into the story. But perhaps this is forgivable on a 20-track double album. And it is compensated for, particularly on the CDs’ final tracks. Disc two’s closer, Bring Me a Boat, is a peaceful, warm way to end, but the first CD’s finale, The Bitter Boy, is absolutely lovely, featuring a lush-yet-tasteful string arrangement, achingly sad lyrics and sensitive vocals from Rusby’s husband, Damian O’Kane. As an introduction to Rusby, 20 is perfect, while the new collaborations and arrangements offer her loyal fans plenty more to enjoy. Perhaps only the diehards will love every track, but there’s certainly at least something for everyone here. http://brightyoungfolk.com/records/20-kate-rusby


Tuesday, July 24, 2018

Kate Rusby - The Girl Who Couldn't Fly

Styles: Vocal, Guitar, Folk
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:52
Size: 114,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:40)  1. Game of All Fours
(4:15)  2. The Lark
(3:29)  3. No Names
(3:22)  4. Mary Blaize
(4:52)  5. A Ballad
(3:24)  6. You Belong to Me
(4:04)  7. Elfin Knight
(5:40)  8. Bonnie House of Airlie
(4:24)  9. Moon Shadow
(4:14) 10. Wandering Soul
(3:51) 11. Fare Thee Well
(4:30) 12. Little Jack Frost

Yorkshire singer/songwriter Kate Rusby has been quietly resurrecting English folk music for the last ten years with a grace, wit, and reverence that others have attempted yet failed to achieve. 2004's Underneath the Stars was a triumph of contemporary music both new and borrowed, an acoustic symphony of brass, guitars, and Rusby's mesmerizing voice. Listeners craving a sequel will find much to love in The Girl Who Couldn't Fly, another collection of traditional ballads and self-penned charmers that firmly establish Rusby as the Alison Krauss of British folk music. Produced again by John McCusker, her renditions of songs both old and new are presented with an effervescence that belay their sometimes wistful and often sexual, as in the bawdy opener, "Game of All Fours" natures. Rusby's own compositions ("Elfin King," "Little Jack Frost," and "The Lark," just to name a few) are marvels of timelessness. Like June Tabor and Gillian Welch, she's got one hand on the pulse of history and the other on a heart that contains a very old soul. Here's to hoping that those hands continue to pen such lovely tales.~ James Christopher Monger https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-girl-who-couldnt-fly-mw0000181513

The Girl Who Couldn't Fly

Thursday, February 22, 2018

Kate Rusby - Ghost

Styles: Vocal, Folk
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:58
Size: 138,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:56)  1. The Outlandish Knight
(5:43)  2. The Youthful Boy
(4:11)  3. We Will Sing
(5:43)  4. The Bonnie Bairns
(3:39)  5. Three Jolly Fishermen
(5:06)  6. I Am Sad
(4:17)  7. Martin Said
(4:50)  8. After This
(4:49)  9. The Magic Penny
(5:42) 10. The Night Visit
(5:08) 11. Silly Old Man
(5:48) 12. Ghost

Ghost received generally positive reviews from music critics. Writing for The Daily Telegraph, Martin Chilton stated that the album has a "pleasing freshness", partly down to the blending of Stevie Iveson's electric guitar with more traditional folk instrumentation.

Uncut's Neil Spencer said that, while the album gives the listener the impression they have heard much of Ghost before, Rusby's "many fans won't mind". https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghost_(Kate_Rusby_album)

Ghost

Monday, December 26, 2016

Kate Rusby - The Frost Is All Over

Styles: Vocal, Folk, Christmas
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:27
Size: 113,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:14)  1. Bradfield
(5:06)  2. Cornish Wassailing
(3:54)  3. Sunny Bank
(3:38)  4. Winter Wonderland
(4:44)  5. Little Bilberry
(5:14)  6. Dilly Carol
(5:31)  7. Cold Winter
(5:03)  8. The Christmas Goose
(4:12)  9. Yorkshire Merry Christmas
(3:49) 10. Mount Lyngham
(3:57) 11. The Frost Is All Over

Kate Rusby's third Christmas album featuring 11 tracks of UK traditional songs and carols. "Warm and inviting, spicy and sparkly she and her marvellous band  accompanied by a sublime brass quintet embody the sounds and joyous spirit of the best Christmases ever! "https://www.amazon.com/Frost-All-Over-Kate-Rusby/dp/B017T1Q6BE

Kate Rusby remains Britain’s most popular female folk singer in part because she has mastered the art of Christmas songs. She is currently on tour promoting this new Christmas album, which follows on from Sweet Bells and While Mortals Sleep by providing a cheerful reminder that Christmas is part of the folk tradition. Once again, she revives songs that are performed in seasonal sing-alongs in pubs in Yorkshire (with Cornish songs now added in), and treats them with her distinctively pure, intimate and understated vocals. She doesn’t stray far from her vocal comfort zone, but variety is provided by classy backing including a five-piece brass section, accordion, and the guitar and banjo work of her partner, Damien O’Kane. The songs include new versions of Christmas carols, a gently jazzy Winter Wonderland, and one Rusby composition, the cheerfully contented title track. A safe and tested format, maybe, but it still works. https://www.theguardian.com/music/2015/dec/10/kate-rusby-the-frost-is-all-over-review-mastering-the-art-of-christmas-songs

The Frost Is All Over

Friday, December 18, 2015

Kate Rusby - While Mortals Sleep

Styles: Folk, Holiday
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:45
Size: 116,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:47)  1. Cranbrook
(3:47)  2. Home
(4:09)  3. Kris Kringle
(5:33)  4. Little Town of Bethlehem
(3:17)  5. Joy to the World
(4:16)  6. Holmfirth Album
(3:48)  7. Seven Good Joys
(3:51)  8. Rocking Carol
(4:45)  9. Shepherds Arise
(5:44) 10. First Tree in the Greenwood
(4:22) 11. Diadem
(3:21) 12. The Wren

Picking up where 2008's Sweet Bells left off, Barnsley's finest folk singer/songwriter Kate Rusby's eleventh studio album, While Mortals Sleep, continues her quest to revive the traditional carols of her beloved South Yorkshire. Like its predecessor, there are a few universally known hymns, such as a gorgeously contemplative rendition of "Little Town of Bethlehem," an appropriately dreamy take on the Czech lullaby "Rocking Carol," and a breezy accordion-led interpretation of "Seven Good Joys," while there are also exquisite performances of songs that derive from the likes of Cornwall ("First Tree in the Greenwood"), Dorset ("Shepherds Arise"), and Wales (New Year's anthem "The Wren"). 

But the songs synonymous with her Northern roots are where her delicate and wistful tones are at their most affectionate, whether it's the joyously uplifting opener of Yorkshire's unofficial national anthem "Cranbrook," the slightly melancholic village carol "Diadem," or the jaunty folk of Sheffield's "Kris Kringle." While its slightly sluggish pace occasionally evokes the feeling of having scoffed too many mince pies, its suitably wintry acoustic style, provided by her regular three-piece backing band, and the wonderfully nostalgic accompaniment from the Brass Quintet Boys ensure that While Mortals Sleep should warm the cockles of even the most miserly of Scrooges. ~ Jon O´Brien  http://www.allmusic.com/album/while-mortals-sleep-mw0002243846

While Mortals Sleep

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Kate Rusby - Little Lights

Styles: Folk
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:23
Size: 120,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:34)  1. Playing Of Ball
(4:03)  2. I Courted a Sailor
(4:03)  3. Withered and Died
(3:25)  4. Merry Green Broom
(5:21)  5. Let the Cold Wind Blow
(3:54)  6. Canaan's Land
(5:10)  7. Some Tyrant
(4:09)  8. William and Davy
(5:23)  9. Who Will Sing Me Lullabies
(5:02) 10. Matt Hyland
(8:15) 11. My Young Man

Kate Rusby won over American audiences in 1999 with her second release, Sleepless, an album of traditional-styled songs with simple arrangements that highlighted her best quality: a lovely, middle-range voice, vulnerable without being waifish. Little Lights continues in the same mode, mixing old ballads with originals and throwing in an occasional contemporary piece. "Merry Green Broom" and "Some Tyrant" are simple and tasteful, continuing Rusby's commitment to the images of old England, while "William and Davy" and "I Courted a Sailor" kick up the tempo a bit. A number of guests, from Tim O'Brien to Danny Thompson to Alison Brown, make appearances, and John McCusker once again lends a hand to the production. 

A slightly different arrangement featuring brass adorns "My Young Man," complementing Rusby's relaxed style and calling to mind Norma Waterson's approach on Bright Shiny Morning. While there are no bad cuts on Little Lights, there probably isn't enough variety. With a couple of exceptions, the songs unwind at a leisurely pace, and most hover around four minutes. There is nothing quite as lovely and lively as "The Cobbler's Daughter" and "Sweet Bride" from Sleepless. Although more variety would have helped, Little Lights is still a solid effort. Fans will enjoy it, and it will also serve as a good introduction to those unfamiliar with this lovely English singer. ~ Ronnie D.Lankford,Jr.  http://www.allmusic.com/album/little-lights-mw0000005115