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Before the Ruin

Before the Ruin


Other Views:
Artists: Kris Drever, John Mccusker, Roddy Woomble
Label: Navigator
Category: Music


New (15) from £8.78

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 847

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

EAN: 5060169470002
ASIN: B001EINVNK

Release Date: September 15, 2008

Tracks:

  • Silver And Gold
  • Into The Blue
  • All Along The Way
  • Before The Ruin
  • Hope To See
  • Rest On The Rest
  • Out Of Light
  • The Poorest Company
  • Moments Last Forever
  • Stuck In Time

Similar Items:

  • That's Proper Folk
  • Poor Man's Heaven
  • Fleet Foxes
  • Black Water
  • Fotheringay Vol.2

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk Review
Supergroups, under that term's various severity of meaning, occur for myriad reasons, but chiefly out of a mutual respect and sense of fun. Or because respective creative wells have run dry and they still have commercial currency together. And while that principle reason must apply to this Scot trio (a more comfortably entwined modern folk record you surely won't hear all year), it feels like a deep, underlying necessity overrules any other reasoning. This had to be made, or so it feels--it exists both because and independently of three perfectly successful, if low key, careers; Kris Drever is a folk singer-songwriter, John McCusker a lauded fiddle supremo and Roddy Woomble may be the best known of the three as sometime frontman of Idlewild and blossoming solo artist. Before the Ruin is very much its own entity, a debut album in its own right. From the hyper traditional fluttering on an evening breeze fiddle-n-accordion folk of "The Poorest Company" to the slow-budding arm-waving shoot of hope in the poetic "Silver & Gold" and pattering, atmospheric twinkles of "Moments Last Forever", there is an unruffled, hand-woven synchronicity to it all. It also lies on a rich bed of secondary instrumentation provided by members of Teenage Fanclub, Radiohead drummer Phil Selway and others, enhancing the feeling of collaboration. That it is not performed for any clear financial dividend, and in spite of its completeness was recorded largely over just seven afternoons, makes it all the more precious. --James Berry


Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars A little over-dominated by Woomble?   October 18, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

As a fan of Kris Drever's "Black Water", I was a little disappointed to find that this album comes across more as a follow up to Roddy Woomble's solo work. Drever and McCusker are very much in the background, and for me the result is that Woomble's tendencies towards overwrought lyrics and under-developed melodies comes to dominate proceedings.

There are some bright spots, but to me it seems like a missed opportunity for a more balanced collaboration.




1 out of 5 stars too much water in the Scotch..the emperors new folk?   October 16, 2008
 2 out of 4 found this review helpful

I read the reviews of this album and excited by Lau and the teaser from That's Proper Folk (see below), eagerly awaited this album. Initially I thought it was good but in reality it slips away to mediocrity after a listen or two... most songs seem thin or over reliant on the lyrics, which appear a little silly to me at times - maybe all that adulation has gone to his head, less quantity (busy man) more quality maybe?
NOTE: The (apparently Exclusive) track "Steal What we can" and "Poorest Company" are one and the same, so don't buy That's Proper Folk for it, in fact buy that for a couple of quid and give this a miss. Steal What you can is a FAR Better version of the best track on the album - borrow it from the library maybe? i promise you it will move to the back of your stack of cds



5 out of 5 stars Crafted set   October 3, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

A crafted set of songs by these three excellent musicians who all gel in each others company. Woomble is the star, taking nearly all the lead vocals but great musicianship throughout.


5 out of 5 stars a subtle, beautiful album from 3 giants of Scottish music   September 16, 2008
 9 out of 9 found this review helpful

As the old adage goes, if you want something done, ask someone busy. And if you want to hear some of the freshest, savviest, sweetest and most original songwriting around, look no further than three of the busiest musicians in Scotland, newly in cahoots as a trio: Kris Drever, John McCusker and Roddy Woomble.

"Our paths had all crossed in various ways over the past few years - working with Kate Rusby, and on Kris and Roddy's solo albums - and our starting-point was basically just that we all really liked each other's stuff," says McCusker, equally renowned as a producer, composer and multi-instrumentalist.

For Woomble, who recently marked ten years as lead singer of Idlewild, the new trio project is a natural onward step from his acclaimed 2006 solo debut, My Secret Is My Silence. "Being in the same band for that long, you get used to writing songs in that context," he says. "The solo record was the first time I'd really pushed myself in other directions, and that's given me the confidence to take it further: Kris and John each have such a different take on things like melody and lyrics, but we're all working equally on the songs together, so the whole thing feels totally new."

That forthcoming fresh yet seasoned debut, named simply for its authorial triumvirate, was written over the course of just six or seven afternoons in McCusker's Edinburgh living-room, demo-ed on a laptop, then transferred to the studio with judiciously minimal embellishment. "It was amazingly quick," says Drever, the Orcadian singer-guitarist who won a 2007 Radio 2 Folk Award for his own first solo album, Black Water, and is a member of firebrand folk trio Lau. "We had a target number of songs we wanted to record, and we really didn't discard many. A lot of them have stayed quite stripped-down, keeping that rawness."

An array of stellar guests from both the folk and rock spheres contribute to the album, including Radiohead drummer Philip Selway, Teenage Fanclub's Norman Blake (vocals) and Francis MacDonald (drums), Capercaillie bandmates Donald Shaw (keyboards), Mike McGoldrick (flute/whistles) and Ewen Vernal (bass), plus Irish singer Heidi Talbot.



DREVER McCUSKER WOOMBLE - BIOGRAPHIES

KRIS DREVER: Orkney-born Kris, emerged from the ferment of the late-90s Edinburgh session scene as a member of bands including Fine Friday and Session A9, and an increasingly sought-after accompanist, working with artists including Eddi Reader and Julie Fowlis. Fast building his name both as a guitarist of exceptionally eclectic talent, and a singularly eloquent interpreter of traditional and contemporary songs, he released his debut solo album, Black Water, in October 2006 for Reveal Records, going on to win the Horizon prize for best newcomer at the following year's Radio 2 Folk Awards. Doubling as a founder member of the electrifying folk trio Lau, alongside fiddler Aidan O' Rourke and accordionist Martin Green, he spent much of 2007 taking the international festival circuit by storm.

JOHN McCUSKER: Was born in the same Bellshill hospital as most of Teenage Fanclub and Sheena Easton, John McCusker formed his first band, Parcel O'Rogues, at fifteen, and joined top Scottish folk act the Battlefield Band two years later, remaining with them until 2001. During this time he also began a twelve-year partnership with celebrated Yorkshire folk-singer Kate Rusby, producing several of her award-winning albums and anchoring her live band. John's film and TV soundtrack credits include the Damien O'Donnell movie Heartlands, Jennifer Saunders' BBC1 sitcom Jam and Jerusalem, and Billy Connolly's World Tour of New Zealand. He has recently recorded on Mark Knopfler and Paul Weller's latest albums, and is current producing the forthcoming debut solo release by Radiohead drummer Philip Selway. In between working with Kris and Roddy, John will be spending much of 2008 in private jets and stadiums, as a guest on Mark Knopfler's world tour before releasing another album and tour from his Under One Sky commission in the early Autumn of 2008.

RODDY WOOMBLE: A native of Irvine - small-town Scotland writ large - Roddy co-founded Idlewild in 1995, naming the band for the quiet haven featured in his then-favourite book, Anne of Green Gables. Given that the NME likened their early punk-fuelled sound - deftly revisited on their latest album, 2007's Make Another World - to "a flight of stairs falling down a flight of stairs", the quiet haven part was initially somewhat ironic, but gradually came closer as Idlewild meanwhile progressed through sweeping melodic rock to rootsy, melodic sparseness. Extending that softer lyrical vein of Roddy's songwriting, 2006 saw his first solo release, My Secret Is My Silence, winning rave reviews across both the rock and folk press. He was also a key instigator behind the acclaimed 2007 album Ballads of the Book, bringing together leading Scottish poets and musicians to collaborate on new songs. After extensive recent touring with Idlewild, Roddy will be spending much of 2008 - as every other year - scribbling observations and lyrics in his notebook while out on walks.




4 out of 5 stars Sets the mood for any occasion   September 16, 2008
 12 out of 14 found this review helpful

Ever since hearing Roddy Woomble's first solo project, My Secret is My Silence, i have been eagerly anticipating a follow up, so i was counting down the days when i discovered two weeks ago that the album was set for release on September the 15th. I knew Roddy was working on some new songs and figured he would be looking to attempt a solo - idlewild - solo - idlewild ratio to his efforts so it was only natural that following 'Make a New World' we would be treated to another chapter to what, i imagine is the vast majority of his fans, is our second introduction to folk.

So what is it like. Well, those expecting another installment of 'My Secret..' should note that the front sticker clearly lables this a 'debut' album for the callaboration, it isnt so much a sequal for Roddy but the work of what can only be described as a group of performers, and this is evident in the first track, Silver and Gold; whereas 'My Secret.' could be linked to idlewild in a musical devolution in most of the tracks, Before the Ruin makes a claim straight away as an entirely seperate species. The guitars are light , the bass-heavy finger plucked acoustics have been replaced by light, soft picking which is more atone with traditional folk sounds, clearly Drever and McClusker's influence, and its by no way a bad thing as Roddy's earthy, imagery-rich lyrics compliment the tone quite beautifully, it certainly is a different sound that what we are used to hearing.

This theme continues throughout, many of the tracks at first may seem rather tame or understated, but as usual with anything written by Roddy Woomble, the listener is rewarded every now and then by a lyric that demands attention or a harmony that makes you want to listen again and again to the song, which in turn leads you through different paths of the music until the whole track makes for repeated enjoyment.

The stand out tracks, as well as the opener, have to be the title track, a 4 minute journey which, quite frustratingly yet brilliantly only includes two chorus lines early on, keeping the listener intent on going back for more, and the quite brilliant 'Rest on the Rest' which is awash with verse, chorus, bridge, harmony so that its not quite clear exactly which is which, but this isnt a bad thing, it gives the track real depth and such is the tone of the singing, could make any day a happy one, and this is before Drever's heavenly voice takes the lead for one round of whay i can only assume is the verse.

In a way i am glad that this isnt a sequal to My Secret is My Silence, it would be nice if this were to remain a one off, while that would rob us of more Roddy Woomble magic, it just adds to the lure of what is a truly special album. I will however be first in the queue for a sequal to this new trio of quite exceptional musicians. I gave My secret 5 stars and in a way created a rod for my own back as i dont think this could ever have been as good as that, so i will call it four, but only in relation to that quite exceptional benchmark

Rich


 

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