The tragic virtue of folk music is its earnestness. That is, while honesty and openness are clearly good things in many contexts, too many songs about the need to save the rainforests or spreading your love around can quickly wear on the nerves. Raleigh's Bowerbirds, a couple plus a friend who have just put out their debut album, manage to keep the virtue without any tragedy. An accordion, a big thumpy bass drum (marching band-style), some pretty guitar that echoes into the far reaches of what sounds like a large space, and, most of all, the tone of voices twining like the paths of birds in flight shape these ten songs into unromantic yet loving paeans to nature. There's darkness and a sense of the warping power of humidity in the piano that needs tuning and, like their contemporaries Midlake, who work in a similar vein, Bowerbirds are at their best when they strive for slightly dissonant harmonies, as on the later choruses of "Bur Oak." In its strongest moments, Hymns for a Dark Horse evokes the pleasure of finding the right path in the woods, the sense of regaining control in the midst of the strangeness that is part of man's relationship with nature.
—Hillary Brown
07.13.07
Hymns for a Dark Horse
07/01/2007 | Dead Oceans
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LP
$14.99HYMNS FOR A DARK HORSE
Videos from Hymns for a Dark Horse
Hymns for a Dark Horse Review
All Music Guide Review
Originally released in 2007 on the band's own Burly Time label and reissued the following year with two additional tracks, Hymns for a Dark Horse is that rarity, an album from the modern acid folk scene that doesn't sound like a hipster put-on by an act that five years before would have been trying to sound like the Strokes. Written when singer and guitarist Phil Moore and his girlfriend Beth Tacular were living in a remote rural cabin while Moore was working for the North Carolina Museum of Natural Science, tracking and cataloguing local birds, these songs are suffused with avian and other natural imagery, but in a very natural way that doesn't smack of the classic old rock band cliché "getting our heads together in the country, maaaaaaaaaaaan." Songs like "Bur Oak" and "The Marbled Godwit" have enough of the verbal mystery of vintage folk tunes to connect them to a larger musical continuum than the likes of Joanna Newsom can manage. Though the hipsterish oddness of the songs' arrangements -- alongside Moore's vocals and guitar, Tacular plays accordion and wallops on an old-fashioned marching band-style bass drum to keep time -- and Moore and Tacular's typically unlovely indie rock voices keep Hymns for a Dark Horse from sounding like a new generation Dock Boggs, Hymns for a Dark Horse stays close to the folk side of the acid folk label. However, the two new songs on the Dead Oceans reissue, recorded after producer Mark Paulson joined the band as a full-time member, adding bass and drums to the duo's previously spartan sound, show that this vibe may now be a thing of the past. Though the dark, droning "Matchstick Maker" merely sounds like a slightly fuller and more menacing version of the rest of the album's signature sound, the full-band "La Denigracion" sounds straight out of Beirut's faux-European playbook. ~ Stewart Mason, All Music Guide
Hymns for a Dark Horse Track Listing
Credits of Hymns for a Dark Horse
- Beth Tacular
- Guitar, Accordion, Vocals, Illustrations, Artwork, Drums, Group Member
- Phil Moore
- Guitar, Drums, Piano, Group Member, Violin
- Bradley Cook
- Bass (Upright)





















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