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Thy Is a Word, and Feet Need Lamps

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Download links and information about Thy Is a Word, and Feet Need Lamps by Half - Handed Cloud. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Rock, Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 29:28 minutes.

Artist: Half - Handed Cloud
Release date: 2005
Genre: Rock, Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 16
Duration: 29:28
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. You Get a Horseshoe! 2:30
2. Mud... 1:07
3. Out of Crudeness/ Healing 2:08
4. Let's Go Javelin' 1:16
5. Ezekiel Bread 2:21
6. The Famine's Hard 1:30
7. Flea Market Temple 1:18
8. Pup-tent Noah 0:49
9. Grandfather Foreskin 0:46
10. Quail 1:17
11. Thumb/Toe Collection 0:54
12. Animals Are Cut In Two 1:45
13. Disaster Will Come Upon You & You Will Not Know How to Conjure-It Away 2:49
14. Jael Peg Caper 1:07
15. Everyone Did What Was Right In Their Own Eyes 4:34
16. Considered It a Loan 3:17

Details

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Experimental/Christian indie rock has far more in common with the British folk movement than it does with traditional American rock & roll. The slightly pagan themes, strange time signatures, communal living structures, and arsenals of found instruments sound awfully progressive, so if the Danielson Famile are Comus, then Half-Handed Cloud are the genre's Incredible String Band. Led by performance artist/multi-instrumentalist John Ringhofer, HHC introduce a melody, destroy it, and then introduce a new one, often in the span of a couple of minutes. Ringhofer's vocal style is very Wayne Coyne (another artist who owes a great deal to the String Band's Robin Williamson), and his trippy ruminations on the band's third release, Thy Is a Word & Feet Need Lamps, fill the 16 tracks with colors both real and imagined. Engineered and mixed by Danielson mastermind Daniel Smith, Half-Handed Cloud's songs are perfect little pop nuggets disguised as atmospheric and horn-drenched mini-symphonies. Like Of Montreal, they're as memorable as you're willing to allow them to be. Opening with the engaging "You Get a Horseshoe" is smart, as it dupes the listener into thinking that the rest of the record is similar — it is, but far more difficult to ingest. It's like a litmus test meant to weed out the flowers, and by the time listeners reach the Syd Barrett-inspired "Considered It a Loan," they may not realize that the "Madcap Laugh" is on them.