Norwegian Arms

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
And then I Found Myself in the Taiga 00:00 Tools
Wolf Like a Stray Dog 00:00 Tools
Run! Ran! Run! Rah! 00:00 Tools
She Lives in a Secret Town 00:00 Tools
At the Formerly British Council Supported English Centre 00:00 Tools
Soviet Bicycle 00:00 Tools
How We Move 00:00 Tools
Tired of Being Cold 00:00 Tools
My New Toy Piano 00:00 Tools
Proof of an Art Object 00:00 Tools
Kiva Ikva 00:00 Tools
Pu-Erh 00:00 Tools
Jitterbug 00:00 Tools
EZ a LVR Goes West (Be Fruitful, Wear Less Clothing) 00:00 Tools
Ez a Lvr Moves West (Be Fruitful, Wear Less Clothing) 00:00 Tools
Tramplebeasts 00:00 Tools
Visions 00:00 Tools
West Queen West 00:00 Tools
Resource Sucker 00:00 Tools
Te Mando Un Beso 00:00 Tools
New Sky 00:00 Tools
Find Truth 00:00 Tools
Louise 00:00 Tools
The Iceman/Kiva Ikva 00:00 Tools
A Preconception To Be Proven Partially Inaccurate 00:00 Tools
Polyphemus Creeper 00:00 Tools
Zima Tomska 00:00 Tools
The Iceman 00:00 Tools
Conversations With A Chinese Woman 00:00 Tools
Hungry Boy 00:00 Tools
Cardinal Directions 00:00 Tools
Quite the Contrary to a Rainy Day 00:00 Tools
East Hollywood 00:00 Tools
Girard Freeloader 00:00 Tools
Make the Rules 00:00 Tools
Pu Erh 00:00 Tools
VIKAVIKA 00:00 Tools
Secret Town 00:00 Tools
title track 00:00 Tools
EZ A LVR Goes West 00:00 Tools
Welcome to Daytrotter 00:00 Tools
Basketball Really Well Lit 00:00 Tools
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Three years, two EPs and one album since his Siberian sojourn, Keith Birthday of Norwegian Arms has turned his focus away from the confines of his tiny apartment in the Taiga which largely informed the songs on Wolf Like a Stray Dog. That doesn't mean that the sunny folk music generated by his time in Tomsk, Russia has become any less relevant, or that the sound has changed drastically. Instead, it's morphed from real-time cultural awe and suffering to nostalgia, and while the memories remain, new ones have taken their place. That being said, nothing has, or perhaps ever will, replace the childhood mandolin on which these songs are written, perhaps the only constant in this ever-evolving project. In the time since returning to his native Philadelphia, Birthday has found new beauty in the wreckage that surrounds his post-industrial warehouse apartment. Dilapidated buildings, shifting friendships, and late night bicycle rides inform this new batch of songs, a celebration of deeper personal understanding. Still deeply influenced by his continued travels, these new songs draw from trips to South America and Europe, and the sense of Wanderlust remains. Still obsessed with languages and their systems, Birthday refers to these new songs as imperfective, referring to verb 'aspect' present in Slavic languages, which focuses on the current process, not a past event or a future result. He still feels strongly that it's about the journey, not the destination. They released their debut album "Wolf Like a Stray Dog" on January 15 2013. It is available on their website norwegianarms.bandcamp.com. The record is comprised of eleven introspective songs written during songwriter/mandolinist Brendan Mulvihill’s year long fellowship in Tomsk, Russia, nestled in the heart of Siberia. Self- described as an “ember glowing in the distance of an otherwise frozen taiga”, Wolf Like A Stray Dog deals with themes of homesickness, discovery, frustration, and wanderlust. Thematically, it is an album about the quest for identity, a resistance to permanence, adapting to new environments, questioning one's knowledge and perspective, and never being satisfied with what you know. It's wanderlust and curiosity, distilled and neatly packaged into sonic bursts of intense energy. Simply put, it’s apparent that Norwegian Arms suffers from a chronic case of the human condition. credits Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.