Recommended by us on 12th November 2009
...according to our Phil on Thu 12 Nov, 2009.
I've had a soft spot for Josephine Foster for ages. Not in that way like but some of her albums have proper enchanted me. I always get excited by new albums by her and here's a brand new one on her new UK home Fire Records. 'Graphic As A Star' is its name and it's based around the poems of 19th century folk poet Emily Dickensen (who I've never heard of but I'm sure she's fantastic). Josephine has a lovely melty voice which glides around your ears like melting bees covered in chocolate. Some of the songs here are acapella and others feature her with guitar. It's all very gentle music with her classical voice driving the whole thing. There's a very old feel about the album which I don't think is specifically to do with the source material.... it's just her sound. She's the queen of oley worldey....She makes things sound old and timeless....It's an excellent folk album which I don't particularly want to turn off but needs must.Fire Records are very excited to have Josephine Foster joining the roster. Her new album Graphic as a Star is based upon the poems of the 19th century American poet Emily Dickenson. Josephine lays stairsteppy melodies beneath a collection of Dickenson gems and sings them with a burnished soulfullness like the purple sunsets so often described in the poems. Massachusetts mountains pearled spiderwebs and folk heroe William Tell are all present in this unforgettable meeting of Dickenson’s posey and Fosters music making a natural and inevitable whole. Ms. Foster is a Colorado-born artist whose songwriting draws from far corners of the musical spectrum to form a truly singular body of work. Her voice is sometimes compared to singers as disparate as Grace Slick, Shirley Collins or Tiny Tim, and it’s certainly difficult to pigeonhole her varied music. She says her craft is strongly shaped by "Tin Pan Alley on my maternal side, rock and roll on the paternal side, Western folk music by birth, art-song and classical music via my adolescent passions". A personal introduction to the new album Graphic as a Star from Josephine herself: As to the source of these interludes, I wrote them this past winter while living in this remote half abandoned Spanish mountain village, a deadly quiet place with occasional interruptions of goats' bells donkey brays and the church bell announcing the passing of another old neighbor every day or so. I had just a few books with me, and one was the poetry of Emily Dickenson. Her poems proved such good company that in a few short weeks appeared this "song cycle". Whether for the irony of distance and homesickness being 3 years away, or through inevitable kinship with this long dead lady these songs seem to veer more towards America than ever before. Back in music school I heard a few musical settings of Dickenson made by classical composers, but its my hope to unite some of her poems into more intimate and intuitive musical settings being so lyrical and transparent as they are.
Track listing ! 1. Trust in the Unexpected 2.How happy is the little Stone 3. She sweeps with many-colored Brooms 4. Ah Teneriffe! 5. Who is the East? 6.They called me to the Window 7. This Is the land the Sunset washes 8.Like Mighty Foot Lights 9. Exultation is the going 10. In falling Timbers buried 11 With thee in the desert 12. I see thee better in the Dark 13. Your thoughts don’t have words every day 14. My Life had stood a Loaded Gun 15. Eden is that old-fashioned House 16. Beauty crowds me till I die 17. I could bring You Jewels 18. Wild Nights - Wild Nights! 19. Only a Shrine, but Mine 20. Tho’ my destiny be Fustian 21. What shall I do - it whimpers so 22. Heart! We will forget him 23. Strong Draughts of Their Refreshing Minds 24. Tell as a Marksman 25. The Spider holds a Silver Ball 26. Whoever disenchants
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