Cahalen Morrison & Eli West

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
A Lady Does Not Often Falter 00:00 Tools
Loretta 00:00 Tools
Our Lady of the Tall Trees 00:00 Tools
Stone to Sand 00:00 Tools
All I Can Do 00:00 Tools
Fiddlehead Fern 00:00 Tools
Church Street Blues 00:00 Tools
The Poor Cowboy 00:00 Tools
On God's Rocky Shore 00:00 Tools
Like a Stone 00:00 Tools
Potluck Dinner / Vicco Returns from Spain 00:00 Tools
My Lover, Adorned 00:00 Tools
Red Prairie Dawn 00:00 Tools
Fleeting Like the Days 00:00 Tools
All for the Sake of Day 00:00 Tools
Heartland Sea 00:00 Tools
Lost Lovin' Gal 00:00 Tools
Jealous Sea 00:00 Tools
My Bloody Heart 00:00 Tools
Over There 00:00 Tools
Weathervane Waltz 00:00 Tools
Won't Be Long 00:00 Tools
I'll Not Be A Stranger 00:00 Tools
Kingsfold 00:00 Tools
Since You Took Your Leave 00:00 Tools
Cutting In / Weymann's Last Run 00:00 Tools
Cahalen Morrison & Eli West - Loretta 00:00 Tools
My Bloody Heart Reprise 00:00 Tools
Down in the Lonesome Draw 00:00 Tools
Livin' in America 00:00 Tools
Pocket Full of Dust 00:00 Tools
James Is Out 00:00 Tools
Anxious Rows 00:00 Tools
Natural Thing to Do 00:00 Tools
Green Pastures 00:00 Tools
Voices of Evening 00:00 Tools
Ritzville / Steamboats On the Saskatchewan 00:00 Tools
Off the Chama 00:00 Tools
Lorene 00:00 Tools
Sinner, Come Home 00:00 Tools
Lost Lovin Gal 00:00 Tools
Fiddlehead Fern - Live 00:00 Tools
Cutting In | Weymann's Last Run 00:00 Tools
Fiddlehead Fern Reprise 00:00 Tools
Fiddlehead Fern (Reprise) 00:00 Tools
Loretta (Townes Van Zandt cover) 00:00 Tools
Bloody Heart Reprise 00:00 Tools
Eindhoven May 16 2011 00:00 Tools
On God's Rocky Shore (Live On KEXP) 00:00 Tools
Church Street Blues (Norman Blake cover) 00:00 Tools
Hop High (Live on KEXP) 00:00 Tools
Green Pastures (trad.) 00:00 Tools
Livin' In America (Live @Pickathon on KEXP) 00:00 Tools
Won’t be long 00:00 Tools
Lost Lovin' Gal (Live On KEXP) 00:00 Tools
Loretta (Live @Pickathon on KEXP) 00:00 Tools
Jealous Sea (Live @ KEXP) 00:00 Tools
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“There’s a natural language of American music that flows from a place where strength and tenderness meet; a place up on the mountain where the forces of nature are striking, where rock juts up into the open world… yet where life clings with a reflective vulnerability – like the tiniest seed of pine finding root on that rock – that reveals, perhaps, a greater strength. Cahalen Morrison & Eli West bring us many vivid tales from this place on the Holy Coming of the Storm. I imagine them inhabiting that windblown but inspiring land and carrying down their discoveries – prayers, love songs, tunes full of quiet joy – by the wagonload. Cahalen and Eli’s music evokes a brotherhood of the road that transcends the relatively short time they’ve been touring together. The two came together as adults in Seattle at the encouraging of famed Bluegrass DJ and musician Kevin Brown, who sensed a similar depth in each of their approaches to acoustic music. Eli was instantly drawn to Cahalen’s old soul approach to songwriting, and Cahalen to Eli’s affinity for unpredictable harmonies and syncopated rhythms. Their musical relationship grew over the course of six months and they began touring as a duo in the spring of 2010. In deciding to capture this intense period of expression with The Holy Coming of the Storm, it was fitting that the pair work with Matt Flinner, whose mandolin has consistently defined the open, toneful sound of western Bluegrass music and whom Eli counts as a foundational musical inspiration. Working with Matt in Aaron Youngberg’s Swingfingers studio allowed them to delve into their reflective spirit – the sounds are captured with both an intimate closeness and a sense of air. One can hear the feeling of the moment in every ringing tone. The three-day live tracking process included not only producer Matt on mandolin, tenor guitar and bouzouki, but also Eric Thorin on bass, Ryan Drickey on fiddle, and Aaron Youngberg, who engineered and played 3-finger banjo on one song. The material is primarily original, with “My Lover Adorned” being the very first collaboration between the two. The classics “I’ll Not Be A Stranger” and “Kingsfold” (with the same melody as “The Star of the County Down”) round things out with the timelessness of tradition. Cahalen and Eli bring us the great musician’s willingness to hold things back, to keep the tension strung, to cherish the beauty and not let it all out at once, like the balancing of heat and cold in the highest western mountains, where the days are dry and dusty and full of the smell of pine but the nights are cold and crisp and find you wanting to get next to a fire in a cabin, burning wood that crackles, that is part of you – one piece of wood makes the worn neck of an old banjo and one ends up in the fire, one ends up in a log cabin wall and one ends up split in two by lightning. And so go our hearts – Eli and Cahalen sing about all of it. No note is left unreflected upon. They understand that when it comes to music, we are all on the receiving side, even when we are the ones playing it. It takes a certain drive to declare that you have something to say; but it takes something else, a willingness to explore the depths of your emotions in a different way, to have something worth saying. On the Holy Coming of the Storm, you will find both of these qualities delivered in ways that ring through long after the notes have stopped.” Dirk Powell December 2010 Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.