Deliver to Australia
IFor best experience Get the App
Product Description Singer-songwriter Taylor Kirk, known professionally as Timber Timbre, garnered attention is his native Canada by delivering a dark, mysterious combination of folk, blues, and indie rock that was often both contemporary and ancient-sounding. His self-titled album opens with the unadorned guitar-and-vocal 'Demon Host', but adds increasingly more complex, yet still spare, production elements as the record progresses. 'Until the Night' features tinkling autoharp, garage rock organ, and a languid oriental melody, while 'Trouble Comes Knocking' is driven by sleazy strip-club saxophone and a throbbing bass drum beat. Throughout, 'Timber Timbre' sounds like the soundtrack to some great lost '60s b-movie, at once colourfully original and creepily unsettling. Review It’s somehow hard to believe that Taylor Kirk, the man behind Timber Timbre, is Canadian, so drenched in the sweat of the American Deep South is his eponymous third album (actually his first UK release). Filled with the kind of tunes that sound as though they were conceived specifically with the likes of True Blood in mind, Kirk’s world is dark, brooding and ever so slightly threatening, combining folk, blues and country to conjure up a world in which – as he puts it on No Bold Villain – “One of us is not normal / And it might not be you”. Throw in wheezing organs, out-of-tune saloon pianos and vocals treated with a claustrophobic reverb and it’s enough to make you reconsider that trip to Toronto.It’s a subtle affair, though, shadowy yet full of space. Opener Demon Host begins mournfully, Kirk’s voice, accompanied only by guitar until near the song’s conclusion, delivering lines so gently that their enigmatic portent takes time to grasp. But the confusing succession of religious iconography sinks in slowly, with lines like “Death, she must have been your whale / A bone beneath the reaper’s veil” an indication of the voodoo-esque content to come, and as the album progresses these images begin to leap out with increasing strength beyond the intimate backing of autoharp, lap steel, violin and drums laid down by his new bandmates, Mika Posen and Simon Trottier. Like random sentences extracted from a Southern Gothic short story, they leave the listener to piece together evidence, with Magic Arrow offering a vision of “perimeters scratched across the nation’s native hide” over what could pass for Calexico, had they ever been produced by Angelo Badalamenti. Trouble Comes Knocking, meanwhile, recalls Mannish Boy, albeit one with chained legs, threats such as “When your trouble comes knocking / I hope you ain’t there” underlined by rattlesnake percussion and strings like distant sirens.It’s Lay Down in theTall Grass that takes the Oscar on this cinematic feast, however, its twitching groove combining Dr John, Tom Waits and Elvis Presley before breaking out into the kind of guitar solo that Duane Eddy might perform in his nightmares. It’s the perfect introduction to Kirk’s film noir environment of empty roadhouses and dusty jukeboxes, pitch-black swamplands and spooky shacks. You might not want to live there, as they say, but it’s an extraordinary place to visit. --Wyndham WallaceFind more music at the BBC This link will take you off in a new window
P**E
Quirky but intriguing
Different style for me, interesting vocals and aural textures - growing on me
H**E
Slow Paced Stunners - Fantastic album
Released in 2009, it's both beautiful and disturbing, with lyrics and imagesthat evokes a sense of disaster and personal ruin. Spooky, hypnotic and strange.If Chris Isaak went to hell after his first two albums, met up with David Lynchfor a drink and a puff of hobbit-tobacco, listening to a Leonard Cohen recordin the devils living room, he might have ended up sounding like Taylor Kirk!The music is a combination of folk, blues and country, with Kirk's rich croon anddark, sometimes surreal lyrics at the centre of attention. Call it whatever youwant; Folk Noir, Twisted Americana or Gothic Rockabilly Blues, it doesn't matter,there is a restrained beauty and unsettling atmosphere to most of the songs andit's easy to understand why a lot of people tagged this cinematic and well-suitedto soundtrack True Blood or a Lynch movie.Standouts: "Demon Host", "Lay Down In The Tall Grass" and "I Get Low".
M**S
cd
No problems. This item was for a friend so dont know about the cd. Delivery was prompt. Wrapped beautifully. Will use this seller again. Thankyou.
P**R
Five Stars
Love this album. Wish they were more dynamic live though!
M**Y
Perfect!
Where to start with this album! I love it a lot. I often put it on to fall asleep to (or just to listen to it in the day, of course) because although it is quite sorrowful in tone it is extremely relaxing. There's something about the pace & beat of the songs that lulls you into an entirely different place; perfect for escaping a hectic brain that won't stop working like mine does at night.
W**E
Haunting, intriguing, morbid, magnificent.
My introduction to Timber Timbre came in the form of the truly beautiful Demon Host, which left me needing to hear more.The rest of the album has more layers than the stripped down acoustic beauty of the opening track, but the effects are the same. Each song creeps under your skin and quickly wins you over.The songs are sparse and simple, and combined with his quivering vocals and dark, morbid lyrics, they create a really dark yet exciting atmosphere.I absolutely love this album, and the bonus disc, which contains a live recording, is truly wonderful.Timber Timbre blends country, folk and blues in a unique way. I really can't recommend his work enough. Buy this now and let him cast his black magic spell on you.
Trustpilot
5 days ago
1 month ago