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Kathryn Williams - The Quickening, out now on Amazon.co.uk - low price with free shipping

This eighth album from the Liverpudlian folk-rock singer songwriter follows 2006's 'Leave To Remain' and her 2008 release with Neill MacColl, 'Two', and is her first for powerhouse indie One Little Indian. Recorded live at Bryn Derwen Studio in North Wales in just four days, with a self-imposed limit of three takes per song, and without her band members hearing the songs beforehand, it has an almost shocking immediacy and a "raw, sinister mood", and has already been hailed by critics as her best material to date. - amazon.co.uk

Amazon:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Quickening-Kathryn-Williams/dp/B0031NC6Q4

Related posts on this blog:
www.uselessdesires.co.uk/tag/kathrynwilliams

Official homepage:
www.kathrynwilliams.co.uk

Contact me:
ryan@kathrynwilliams.co.uk

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Filed under  //   arts   culture   kathryn Williams   music   press   reviews   the quickening  
Posted February 24, 2010
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50 White Lines - the New Single, New Album & New Tour from Kathryn Williams


UK folk songstress Kathryn Williams has announced that '50 White Lines', the first single to be taken from her new album will hit stores on February 8th 2010. 'The Quickening', the forthcoming full-length album is due February 22, 2010, marking her exciting new relationship with One Little Indian Records.

Speaking about the new single the songwriter said: “I was talking about all the nights of travel you have on tour and how you are always leaving a city and watching it behind you. I said that I imagined I was on the run, and that’s how this Bonnie and Clyde song came about. When I think of the song, it’s like a film. A close shot of two faces looking ahead to a border where they will be safe from what they are escaping. The adrenalin, the fast heart beat, thoughts flashing like car lights passing by ‘lights on the dashboard darting like fish/ if I can drive through this town I can vanish’.”

So that's it straight from the folk-horse's mouth as it were, no offence intended.

In other news KW will also be making appearances at the Queen Elizabeth Hall on London's Southbank as a special guest of Robyn Hitchcock on January 30 and at The Barbican and Chris Difford's (of Squeeze fame) 'Songs In The Key Of London' event on March 9.

Kathryn Williams 2010 UK Tour Dates:

January 30 LONDON - QUEEN ELIZABETH HALL (in support of Robyn Hitchcock)
February 21 BIRMINGHAM - THE GLEE CLUB February
22 BRIGHTON - KOMEDIA
February 23 BRISTOL - THE TUNNELS
March 1 MANCHESTER - BAND ON THE WALL
March 2 GLASGOW - KING TUTS
March 3 NEWCASTLE - LIVE THEATRE
March 6 LONDON - PURCELL ROOM
March 9 LONDON - THE BARBICAN

Original Article:
http://www.rivmixx.com/latest-headlines/kathryn-williams-new-single-2010-tour-dates/9008/1
[edited/updated slightly by Ryan Price on 05/01/2010]

Related articles on this blog:
http://www.uselessdesires.co.uk/?sort=&search=Quickening

Download exclusive content & Press Pack from Kathryn's previous solo-album, Leave to Remain:
http://www.kathrynwilliams.net/presspack.html

Thanks to Chris for supplying the info.

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Posted January 5, 2010
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First Listen - The Quickening by Kathryn Williams


 

Due for release in February 2010, The Quickening will be the seventh solo studio album from Kathryn Williams, and her first since 2007’s Leave To Remain. For an artist with such a consistently strong catalogue and a Mercury Prize nomination under her belt, she remains something of a well kept secret, while other lesser artists have ridden into the mainstream on the back of the recent ‘new folk’ resurgence. That could all be set change next year, with the help of a new deal with One Little Indian and perhaps the most accomplished album of her career. The Quickening was recorded live at Bryn Derwen Studio in North Wales in just four days, with a self imposed limit of three takes per song. Incredibly, Kathryn did not allow the other musicians to hear the compositions before entering the studio, giving a palpable sense of immediacy to what must surely be recognised as some of her best material to date. A full review of the album will follow in February. For now, here’s our track-by-track preview:

‘50 White Lines’
The album opens with the sound of rainfall and a ticking indicator giving way to a song about long distance driving. Given the subject matter, it’s a beautiful and slightly hypnotic way to open the album. A male voice counts the white lines on the road as Kathryn sings about “lights in the mirror, darting like fish”.

‘Just A Feeling’
A softly spoken vocal and finger-picked guitar reminiscent of Nick Drake accompany a lyric full of philosophical musings and self-doubt: “Is belief a scratch you’ve got to itch? What if love is just a feeling?”

‘Winter Is Sharp’
The closest thing to a traditional English folk song Kathryn has released to date, this short little shanty sees Kathryn accompanied by a backing vocal that evokes The Unthanks or Eliza Carthy, plus accordion and ukelele that picks up pace to bring the track to a frenetic conclusion.

‘Wanting & Waiting’
Backed by piano and banjo, this reimagining of The Kinks’ ‘Waterloo Sunset’ is a song about wishing away the hours of a 9 to 5 job and yearning instead for long romantic nights. It’s an evocative portrait of young love in the city and perhaps the album’s most obvious choice for a single.

‘Black Oil’
At just 83 seconds long, ‘Black Oil’ punctuates the album with a snapshot of a field at dusk full of shining yellow flowers and birds “head to toe in black oil”. Like ‘Little Black Numbers’ before it, this mysterious curiosity of a song leaves much to interpretation.

‘Just Leave’
Far from the all-consuming young love of ‘Wanting & Waiting’, ‘Just Leave’ is a bleak depiction of a couple falling apart at the seams. Weighed down by heavy silences and her partner’s wandering heart, the song’s narrator pleads, “Just leave, just leave, just leave.”

‘Smoke’
The theme of a love slipping away is continued on ‘Smoke’. A glockenspiel leads a stripped back arrangement while Kathryn sings, “Holding you is like holding smoke… I kiss and I blow and you float out of sight.”

‘Cream Of The Crop’
The first of two consecutive jazz-infused tracks that bring about a strange shift in tone at this point on the record. Co-written with long-time collaborator David Scott and previously performed live, it’s a strong song but one that would perhaps have sounded more at home on earlier album,
 Old Low Light.

‘There Are Keys’
The second slightly incongruous track on the record with its woozy vocal and atmospheric production, the lyric is centred around a missing loved one and the narrator’s desire to know that they’re safe.

‘Noble Guesses’
It’s back to a more folk-oriented sound with ‘Noble Guesses’. Kathryn sings about the importance and value of absence and various ‘holes’ – from the gaps needed to structure the first periodic table to the enigmatic space left in a family album where a polaroid once was.

‘Little Lesson’
A curious track co-written with poet Nev Clay and Kathryn’s new touring bassist Simon Edwards. With a lead bassline, handclaps and an undulating vocal, it’s a kind of campfire song that quickly works its way into the consciousness with the refrain “Give a little lesson for our love”.

‘Up North’
A paean to Kathryn’s home in the north of England, she sings “If I could always be next to you I would”, perhaps regretting that she has to spend so much time on the road away from family and friends. The song brings the album, which began behind the wheel, full circle, with the first and last tracks providing neat bookends for a diverse but inspired collection of songs.

Source: Richard Steele

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Filed under  //   kathryn williams   music   reviews   the quickening  
Posted December 14, 2009
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The Quickening - The new album by Kathryn Williams

"The Quickening" is the most accomplished album of Kathryn's career to date, and is due for release in the UK on 22nd February 2010. The album will be Kathryn’s first release on One Little Indian Records.

The new record was recorded at Bryn Derwen studio in North Wales ‘in four days, all live, three takes maximum’ Kathryn explained to Mojo magazine earlier this year, and contains some of her sharpest, most mesmerising song writing to date, including a couple of co-writes with longstanding collaborator, guitarist David Scott. ‘It has a mood’ she suggests, ‘a slightly sinister palette with lyrics that are raw. I see myself in these songs a lot, whereas before I invented characters.’ It is produced by Kathryn and Kate St. John and mixed by Kathryn and David Wrench.

The recording set-up of ‘The Quickening’ lends the record an urgency and immediacy borne directly out of the musicians playing off each other – none of whom had heard the songs prior to the recording. Says Kathryn ‘When I listen to the songs now, I can see that room in Wales, remember what each take felt like, with my heart in my mouth, wanting to get to the end without a fuck up!’

Of the songs Kathryn says ‘I always wonder if people get the same pictures in their head as me from the lyrics and music. I see the songs as shapes when I sing them, as journeys through pictures or film’. Album opener ‘50 White Lines’ is a great example, Kathryn re-imagining the long journeys on tour as a Bonnie & Clyde style escapade; in the background a male voice ‘counts’ the road markings or lights as they flash by in the protagonist’s flight from city to city, town to town.

‘It’s a little world of rules I couldn’t write down but I work to them and around them, and I know my way around that world,’ says Kathryn of her song writing itself, ‘I’m forever scared that the way of making the songs will leave me. But in the end, that is part of what drives me.’

For sometime Mercury nominee Kathryn, ‘The Quickening’ marks the beginning of a new relationship with One Little Indian records in a deal that will also see the release of archive material, a children’s record made with Anna Critchley, and the debut by Kathryn’s other sideline The Ish Inventors – a work in progress that is being made with Nev Clay, a songwriter and poet Kathryn has worked with as an artist in residence.

Source: www.kathrynwilliams.co.uk (official)

Related Article: First Listen

Other Links:

Official Site
One Little Indian

A First Listen Review by Richard Steele

Kathryn Williams signs to One Little Indian

Fans can share stories here by posting comments below or email ryan@kathrynwilliams.co.uk

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Filed under  //   kathryn williams   music   reviews   the quickening  
Posted December 14, 2009
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Reeder RSS Reader - App Store Review

THE GOLD STANDARD

Reeder is without doubt the best RSS reader for use with Google Reader. In fact, Reeder is simply the Gold Standard in apps of this genre. I've tried many premium readers, and as another reviewer commented, other apps either tend to be top-heavy on features or top-heavy on aesthetics. Until now, no app developer has managed to combine the two effectively. Reeder is fast, sleek, beautifully designed, unclutteted and does what you need well. Twitter integration coming in the next update (I'm a beta tester) works seamlessly as do the other share options. Even sharing an article by email creates a simple but elegant email with clickable headings. In short, it's just a beautful, simple app to use, and takes pride of place on my iPhone homescreen springboard.

I would argue that Tweetie 2 is the gold-standard of Twitter apps. By this virtue, Reeder is well on the way to being THE best reader app; the gold-standard of apps in it's class. I would like to see more features available, such as the ability to add feeds from within the app, and to be able to manage existing subscriptions, again within the app. But for now, I'm one happy Reeder!

Here's the link to the Reeder Site:

http://reederapp.com/

Or just get it from the app store. You could also follow @reederapp on twitter for advance preview betas

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Filed under  //   app   app store   iPhone   iTunes   Reeder   reviews  
Posted November 27, 2009
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