A Wolf In Sheep's Clothing
General
| Aug 2006
Reviews
Ben Wolfson
Reviewed 2006-10-14
Reviewed 2006-10-14
Freaky-deaky acid folk ... Lieder? Awesome Chicagoan Foster sings a set of seven German lieder (by Schubert, Schumann, Brahms, and Wolf), accompanying herself on guitar, in, putting it lightly, a highly untraditional way. Some of the songs are given a treatment that'll be familiar from her previous solo albums and Born Heller (and Supposed guitarist Brian Goodman appears on a few tracks), but others, especially six, are utterly unexpected. This is a really fantastic, innovative, interesting album; very atmospheric, and Foster's singing is excellent. Everyone should play it.
Best: 6, 1, 2
**1: overdubbed and out of synch vox for a far-away ghostly sound; Goodman contributes a slow psychy electric guitar solo that seems to have nothing to do with the rest of the track but absolutely fits.
2: Stately melody; Nicoesque singing; a capella middle; ends with soloing.
3: Emerges out of swirls, understated. Kind of spacy (not in a space-rock way).
4: Sounds like there's a creaky floorboard here; sort of a (creepy) back porch feel. Starts after 9 seconds, ends with creaking for a while.
5: Title means "melancholy", which actually applies less to this song than any other on the album. Relatively unadorned guitar and restrainedly soaring vocals. A little harmonica.
**6: Absolutely amazing long (11') song, starts off with ghostly singing. Gradually increasing background thrums and wobbles eventually take over Foster's voice entirely in what's practically slo-mo noise sludge, courtesy Plastic Crimewave.
7: Folky strum-a-long, male background vox.
Best: 6, 1, 2
**1: overdubbed and out of synch vox for a far-away ghostly sound; Goodman contributes a slow psychy electric guitar solo that seems to have nothing to do with the rest of the track but absolutely fits.
2: Stately melody; Nicoesque singing; a capella middle; ends with soloing.
3: Emerges out of swirls, understated. Kind of spacy (not in a space-rock way).
4: Sounds like there's a creaky floorboard here; sort of a (creepy) back porch feel. Starts after 9 seconds, ends with creaking for a while.
5: Title means "melancholy", which actually applies less to this song than any other on the album. Relatively unadorned guitar and restrainedly soaring vocals. A little harmonica.
**6: Absolutely amazing long (11') song, starts off with ghostly singing. Gradually increasing background thrums and wobbles eventually take over Foster's voice entirely in what's practically slo-mo noise sludge, courtesy Plastic Crimewave.
7: Folky strum-a-long, male background vox.
Recent airplay
Auf Einerburg
Music Casserole — Mar 02, 2024
Verschwiegene Liebe
Music Casserole — Jun 14, 2014
Auf Einerburg
Music Casserole — Mar 02, 2013
Auf Einerburg
Music Casserole — Jul 08, 2011
Auf Einerburg
Songs: Cantan pts. I & II — Jun 11, 2011
Auf Einerburg
lost and found — Oct 10, 2009
Charting
2006-11-05 — 2007-01-07
| Week Ending | Airplays |
|---|---|
| Dec 31 | 2 |
| Dec 17 | 3 |
| Dec 10 | 1 |
| Dec 3 | 1 |
| Nov 26 | 3 |
| Nov 19 | 3 |
| Nov 12 | 6 |
Track listing
| 1. | An Die Musik | ||
| 2. | Der Konig In Thule | ||
| 3. | Verschwiegene Liebe | ||
| 4. | Die Schwestern | ||
| 5. | Wehmut | ||
| 6. | Auf Einerburg | ||
| 7. | Nane Des Deliebten |
