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Welcome to the Horses Brawl Shop |
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| RUMINANTIA | RUMINANTIA 2012 |
![]() Track Listing: 1. Trip to Paris 2. Overstrand 3. Brid one Brere 4. Onse Vader 5. Isabella Dansa Alta 6. Gentle Robin 7. Bass Polska 8. Magister 9. Skolion |
Horses Brawl enter a new musical phase with their 2012 release Ruminantia. Drawing on their backgrounds in traditional, early and contemporary improvised music, the CD is a naked but true account of the duo at work. The whole album is recorded in single takes and minimally mixed, creating an intimate record which includes the puffing and wheezing of the harmonium bellow, the chords of an overbowed fiddle and the clack and draw of a guitar being bowed. Based on fragments of tunes from as far back as 200 BC to their own compositions, Ruminantia is a rare beast which encompasses many faces but is independent of one home, it lives between the field and the woods, between traditional and contemporary music and between time and place. Release Date: May 10th 2012 Pre-release Sales available now direct from Horses Brawl £10 (+£1.50 p&p) RUMINANTIA REVIEWS JUST IN... Among the album's nine tracks there's the spirited dance 'A Trip to Paris' the lingering beauty of the love song 'Brid One Bere' the soft yet insistent engagement of 'Isabella Dansa Alta' and the sonorous depth of 'Magister'. The musical foundations that Horses Brawl use include English country dance, ancient love songs, medieval estampie dance tunes, plus influences from ancient Greece, Spain and Sweden. Around the structure of those groundworks Laura and Andre build their tunes. Ruminantia defies traditional classification as it deftly moves between musical worlds and times. The album was recorded in one single take, succeeded to sound inspired by vision. This opportunity gave gives the advantage of building up the atmosphere from track to track." |
| WILD LAMENT | WILD LAMENT 2009 |
![]() Click on iTunes to Listen ![]() Track Listing 1. Tourdion 2. Maggots 3. Merula 4. Loyaute 5. Ave Maria 6. L'ymage 7. Psalm 33 8. Pase el Agoa 9. The Bonny Miller 10. In Aeternum |
"Impossible to pigeonhole the Horses Brawl duo, Laura Cannell and Adrian Lever. Armed with recorders, fiddle, guitar, and guest artist Philip Thorby, they build improvised fantasias from scraps of medieval chansons, folk music and other ancient history. Ancient, but not dead; your foot taps and heart sings as these virtuoso magpie musicians duck and weave, making Northumbrian hornpipes and Guillaume de Machaut share common ground. A breath of fresh air" THE TIMES review 4**** "Horses Brawl, the very talented Norfolk-based duo of Laura Cannell and Adrian Lever have been together for about five years. With the former on recorders and fiddle and the latter on acoustic guitar. A guest on this album is early music specialist Philip Thorby on viol. Together they produce a truly memorable sound. Entirely instrumental, the music certainly has it's roots in traditional folk in the broadest sense. The guest's specialty says much as it has a very definite "early" feel. I say "feel" deliberately because Laura and Adrian cleverly re-work or indeed rewrite tunes from at least as far back as the thirteen hundreds. On many occasions the pieces are woven together from fragments and phrases of early music that are sometimes quite disparate. In fact the breadth of the source material is fascinating, from fourteenth century Italian Court music though traditional English folk to Bulgarian wedding tunes. The musicianship is excellent and through use of a variety of playing techniques, very varied. Tourdion, the first track is a good example of what's to come. Blending French, Spanish and Irish tunes in a delightful interwoven composition. Track two has two fine maggots (repeating tunes), the second of which is played quite ferociously, joined by a fine Northumbrian pipe tune. This is a great album. Don't let any doubts about "ancient music" put you off, this is no hollow replica, this has all the wit and fire of music created yesterday." BRIGHT YOUNG FOLK "Norfolk duo Horses Brawl are causing a stir in the lofty world of traditional folk by bowing their guitars. Their third album, Wild Lament, sees them turn fragments of Bulgarian wedding dances, Irish minuets and Bolivian melodies into chilling experimental art – via the medium of "preparation". The pair meld renaissance styles with pop music by adding stickers and clothes pegs to their fiddles and recorders. The nature of folk music has always made it open to embellishment, but adding modern paraphernalia in this fashion is taking the genre to new levels." THE GUARDIAN |
| DINDIRIN | DINDIRIN 2007 |
![]() Click on iTunes to Listen ![]() Track Listing 1. Passim Estampie 2. Brannells 3. Fawrhoro 4. Misdelight 5. Bibit 6. La Gamba 7. Alca 8. Shave the Donkey 10. Dindirin |
"In the morning I arose, and I walked among the meadows. There I met a nightingale who was singing in the treetops: Dindirin dindirin dindirin dana dindirindin. "Dindirin", the song of the nightingale passing messages between two lovers, sets the stage for English, Spanish and Italian music from the 12th to the 19th century, including an excerpt from the "Carmina Burana" and the well known medieval estampie "La Rotta". |
| HORSES BRAWL | EPONYMOUS DEBUT ALBUM 2005 |
![]() Click on iTunes to Listen ![]() Track Listing 1. Mofo 2. Stampanasa 3. Hobo 4. Douce Dame 5. Inspiration 6. Galliard 7. Frisk 8. a Bruxa 9. Chara 10. Istanbul |
"Gymnastic anachronisms from terpsichorean trio "The music of this trio, with Laura Cannell on recorder and crumhorn, Adrian Lever on guitar and Jonathan Manton on cello, takes as its starting point the dance music of medieval and Renaissance Europe, performed with tremendous energy, virtuosity and verve. It's clear that each performer has achieved a level of technical assurance and experience, and their familiarity with elements of European folk adds an extra dimension to the sound. Romanian, Bulgarian and English Traditional dances rub shoulders with material such as 'Douce Dame Jolie', a virelai by the seminal French composer and poet Guillaume de Machaut (performed here as an instrumental), and happy experiments with sound colour and technique means that it is sometimes impossible to tell exactly who is doing what.
Cannell's fleet recorder scoots along above lively ostinato figures and rambunctious strumming, while slower pieces carefully balance emotion and poise. The bouncy good humour that marks much of the playing here is clearly founded on deep knowledge and long study, yet there is neither a slavish attempt to imitate folk styles, nor have the players taken out shares in the deeply irritating 'Merrie Englande Inc'. Instead they have come up with a solid piece of work which bears repeated listening, and makes me want to see them live – not simply to find out how they produce such fascinating and intricate textures with a band that is only three members strong." SONGLINES MAGAZINE |