Friend of All the World

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
First Snow 00:00 Tools
Oh Come, Oh Come Emmanuel 00:00 Tools
Remembering the Stars 00:00 Tools
By the Trees 00:00 Tools
The Heartwood 00:00 Tools
Smokestack 00:00 Tools
The Dance 00:00 Tools
At Home On the Sea 00:00 Tools
You 00:00 Tools
In the Life 00:00 Tools
Eyes 00:00 Tools
The Old Year Now Away Is Fled 00:00 Tools
The North Wind 00:00 Tools
Asleep for the Winter 00:00 Tools
Porcupines and Marmalade 00:00 Tools
All These Days 00:00 Tools
The Huron Carol 00:00 Tools
Golden Days 00:00 Tools
The Buzz 00:00 Tools
O Come O Come Emmanuel 00:00 Tools
Good King Wenceslas 00:00 Tools
Porcupines & Marmalade 00:00 Tools
Scouting 00:00 Tools
More that I Could Say 00:00 Tools
Father I See 00:00 Tools
Devil May Care 00:00 Tools
Up these Branches 00:00 Tools
Smoke Stack 00:00 Tools
Under the Dome of the Night's Sky 00:00 Tools
The Living Light 00:00 Tools
Trinity Bellwoods 00:00 Tools
The Northwind 00:00 Tools
That Old Year Now Away is Fled 00:00 Tools
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As their name suggests, Montreal indie-folk outfit Friend of All the World craft tunes that evoke the camaraderie of a kitchen party or the fellowship that springs up between strangers who meet on the road. Perhaps that’s because songwriter and front man, Rob Cole, employed a hitchhiker’s optimism and an ad on Craigslist to assemble the band. Friend’s 2009 debut, Up These Branches, was largely a solo effort by Cole, released in the hopes of attracting like-minded musicians with his haunting harmonies and rustic acoustic riffs. Through a series of local gigs to promote the album, Friend of All the World found its footing and came to include Cole, Celine Bianchi, Benoit Duval, Kenton Mail, and Steph Park, who together are carrying the band’s sound into more collaborative territory. Their new release, The Wild, has the same melodic hook of Cole’s earlier songs, but explores greater emotional range. Harmonies are brought forward (“Smokestack”) and rich arrangements (“You,” “The Heartwood”) conjure melancholy without melodrama. The result is the sense of shared intimacy to which the band’s name (taken from the Kipling classic, Kim) alludes: these are songs you can take with you on the road, for both the sweet and rough parts of the ride. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.