Woven Hand slipper splitter nytt album 15. september. På "Ten Stones" bidrar storheter som blant annet Emil Nikolaisen (Serena Maneesh) og Daniel Smith (Danielson).

I sommer kan man oppleve Woven Hand på tre norske festivaler:

17.07. Tromsø/Bukta

18.07. Tønsberg/Slottsfjell

31.07. Storåsfestivalen.


Pressemelding:

In the words of Robert Browning, Wovenhand heralds "another greater, wilder country" on TEN STONES, the new album by musician David Eugene Edwards (also frontman of acclaimed band 16 Horsepower). Wovenhand grazes in yet stranger pastures on its fifth release with Sounds Familyre. Co-produced by Daniel Smith of Danielson, TEN STONES was recorded at the label's New Jerusalem Recreation Room in Clarksboro, NJ, as well as at Dust Bowl Studios in Glade Park, CO. Songs were further finessed by guest artist Emil Nikolaisen's (Serena Maneesh) driving guitar and co-engineering, the rumbling vibrations of 16 Horsepower bandmate Pascal Humbert on electric and double bass, the incisive drumming of Ordy Garrison, and the soulful guitar of Peter Van Laerhoven. On "His Loyal Love," Elin Smith, also of Danielson, adds guest vocals to Humbert's melody.

These sophisticated musicians-many of whom share co-writing credit with Edwards-freshly illumine his considerable vocal range and masterful song craft.

Like a welcome draught from a bottomless well, Edwards sings ten untamed and mercy-drenched songs for thirsty listeners on TEN STONES. From the jarring folk of "White Knuckle Grip", to the eerie bossa nova of Antonio Carlos Jobim's "Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars", to the fiery foot-stomper "Not One Stone", the album forms a song-cycle that is singular in its breadth and eclecticism. Flanked by the haunting strains of the bandoneón and the drones of the double bass, Edwards' lyrical inversions stitch symbols into a tapestry of peaceable and hellish imagery-horsetails, honeybees, and bird wings meet flaming battles and barbed wire to proclaim sin's devastation and the sweetness of redemption. The music of Wovenhand is utterly unique, dizzying those who encounter it, with turnings and lashings of shadow and light. TEN STONES renders a beautiful encounter with healing, suffering, and sorrow. "Not one stone/ atop another will stand," sings

Edwards as creation lies motionless, paralyzed in the canyon of time. Then, as all great artists await a time when the pinnacle of

their craft will be caught up in greater glory, he sings: "This weary melody ends/ The host of heaven descends/ Down beneath

this bleeding ground/ Behold the lamb."