Trackimage | Playbut | Trackname | Playbut | Trackname |
---|---|---|---|---|
83283291 | Play | Shifting Sands | 00:00 Tools | |
83283292 | Play | The Sailor And The Siren | 00:00 Tools | |
83283293 | Play | Kindling | 00:00 Tools | |
83283294 | Play | The Ravager | 00:00 Tools | |
83283295 | Play | Dandelion Wine | 00:00 Tools | |
83283296 | Play | Rusalnaia | 00:00 Tools | |
83283297 | Play | Winter | 00:00 Tools | |
83283298 | Play | Wild Summer | 00:00 Tools | |
90258304 | Play | Cast A Spell | 00:00 Tools | |
83283300 | Play | Take Me Back | 00:00 Tools | |
83283301 | Play | Driving | 00:00 Tools | |
83283303 | Play | The Beast | 00:00 Tools | |
90258305 | Play | The Honeymoon Is Over | 00:00 Tools | |
83283302 | Play | Lullaby (For a Future Generation) | 00:00 Tools | |
83283304 | Play | The Love I Want | 00:00 Tools | |
83283306 | Play | Bright Things | 00:00 Tools | |
83283307 | Play | Time Takes Away | 00:00 Tools |
Rusalnaia is about honouring (some would say placating) the Rusalki - mischievous water nymphs capable of tickling victims to death - with song, dance, tree-decorating and wreath-making. Rusalnaia is what happened when Sharron Kraus and Gillian Chadwick of Ex Reverie, then neighbours in Fishtown, Philadelphia, became friends and decided to honour the Rusalki in each other! The two, coming from very different musical backgrounds, made journeys into each other's terrain until it was no longer clear what the boundaries were. In the collaborative process they became as close as sisters and found their way to the shared musical aesthetic that is Rusalnaia. Rusalnaia's eponymous first album was recorded at Hexham Head Studios in Philadelphia, engineered by Greg Weeks (Espers, The Valerie Project) in two sessions through 2007 that corresponded with Sharron's extended visits to the country. Weeks helped capture the duo's organic and sometimes unusual instrumentation, from dulcimer and guitar to pennywhistles and goat's nail shakers, and contributed his own accents to a few tracks: acid Les Paul leads and vintage 70's synths. Eight tracks of haunting, ritualistic, magical pagan-folk were the result, varying from the darkly processional tale of dispossession "Shifting Sands", though the Comus-like ceremonies of the title track to the extended forest-folk trance of the concluding "Wild Summer". Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.