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Red Horse

Red Horse

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Album Review

Red Horse is something of a folk supergroup, a trio containing the respected singer/songwriters John Gorka, Lucy Kaplansky, and Eliza Gilkyson. A dozen years earlier, Kaplansky had been part of a similarly styled trio called Cry Cry Cry, which featured Richard Shindell and Dar Williams. But unlike the latter group, whose lone album consisted mostly of cover tunes, Red Horse is focused on original material. Three-fourths of their self-titled debut album is self-penned, most of those songs being new versions of tracks originally heard on Gorka, Kaplansky, and Gilkyson's respective solo albums. The mood throughout is cool and contemplative — most of the songs are adorned with sparse arrangements, allowing for a more intense focus on the vocals. Though there's always a designated lead singer, there are plenty of warm, inviting harmonies on these tracks, and Gorka, Kaplansky, and Gilkyson all take admirable turns in front of the microphone. It's in the songwriting department that things get a little unbalanced — while there are no clunkers here, Gorka is the most skilled songsmith of the three, and the album — which places his compositions at the end — winds up feeling heavily backloaded. Still, with all of the singers taking on each other's tunes, Red Horse feels like a truly collective effort rather than just a glorified round-robin song swap. The covers that begin and end the album — Neil Young's early tune "I Am a Child" and the traditional spiritual "Wayfaring Stranger" — are both high points, and the presence of a previously unreleased Gorka song, the winningly concise "If These Walls Could Talk," should be a draw for devotees of the songwriter. ~ J. Allen, Rovi

Customer Reviews

Great Album

When you combine 3 great folk artists (Gilkyson, Gorka, and Kaplansky) and let them all show their stuff by giving them them each the lead in different songs with the backing of the others, how can the album fail.... It can't! If you are not familiar with them individually you have been missing each in there own uniqueness. Buy this album and get to know them all, but beware, you will start to download all their individual albums!
Enjoy

Good album...not great

I've followed all three of these very good artists for many, many years now and was very eagerly looking forward to this collaboration. Each artist individually are among my most favorite people out there today and I figured a project like this---along the samelines as the Cry, Cry, Cry project---would be fantastic. While the performances of the songs are as good one would expect, I think what disappointed me the most was the recyling of old material on this album. Several of the songs had been covered on the solo cds of each of these singers. I was hoping for more new material, especially from Lucy---considering that it's been awhile since her last album. In the end, the songs are good. The performances are solid. But I was a bit underwhelmed. For anyone not familiar with their solo work, I'd highly recommend getting this album as a nice sampler of what they're capable of. For long-time fans like me, it's just a bit disappointing.

Red Horse, Red Horse
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Customer Ratings

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