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Quiver

 
Album Review: Quiver

  • Artist: Monk
  • Rating: StarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: 1997
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Monk is not so much a band as a notebook for the musical doodlings of guitarist Ric Hordinski. In 1997 Hordinski left the band he helped to found, Over the Rhine, to pursue a career as a producer and songwriter. Quiver is in effect his debut solo album. Hordinski shuffles about a small supporting ensemble, alternating between two bass players and two drummers (including OTR's Brian Kelly). The songs smartly blend a number of Hordinski's influences, including the Beatles, Bruce Cockburn, Phil Keaggy, and David Wilcox (who appears on the album). But those ghosts inhabit an ambient guitar atmosphere which is pure Hordinski. Using fancy fretwork and digital effects, he produces an inordinate variety of different guitar sounds -- sonorosly quivering vibrato, aggressively buzzing grunge, cleanly shimmering beams of ambiance, and rushes of reverberating rhythm which bounce from wall to wall like Speedy Gonzales on fast-forward. At the time of this release, however, Hordinski was a more accomplished guitarist than producer. His appealing atmospherics occasionally sound less like they're "filling the room" than filling a walk-in closet. And his ability to create interesting sounds sometimes exceeds his ability to arrange those sounds coherently. In some songs, a complex mesh of conflicting rhythms and meandering riffs gets tangled in the background of his tidy pop songwriting. Over the Rhine fans should not expect Hordinski's writing to match the beauty and spark of his former collaborators' songcraft. His pleasant melodies often lapse into flat familiarity, and as a lyricist he seems to be straining hard to surpass the limits of his cliche-prone vocabulary. Happily, he frequently manages to do just that, scrambling fairly ordinary phrases into a kind of fragmented poetry of metaphysics. There are some transcendent recordings here, including most of the instrumentals which pepper the album, and the lead track ("Womb of God"), which spins a lulling web of shimmering guitar and winding violin as its lyrics uneasily nestle into a peace which passes understanding. ~ Darryl Cater, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Womb of God Monk
One Eye Open Monk
Traveler Monk
That's My Love Monk
This Train Monk
Can't Drink the Water Monk
Gyre Monk
Green Monk
Lullabye Monk
Bird of Appetite Monk
Afterglow Monk
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Wikipedia: Quiver (Monk album)
Top
Quiver
Studio album by Monk
Released December, 1997
Genre Rock
Length 48:24
Label Ether Records
Producer Ric Hordinski
Professional reviews
Monk chronology
Quiver
(1997)
Hush
(1998)

Quiver is the debut album by Monk, released in 1997. It was Ric Hordinski's first release after leaving Over the Rhine in 1996.

Track listing

All songs written by Ric Hordinski except "This Train," lyrics by Ric Hordinski and Mike Helm, and "One Eye Open," lyrics by David Wilcox and Ric Hordinski.

  1. "Womb Of God" (5:58)
  2. "One Eye Open" (5:51)
  3. "Traveler" (1:44)
  4. "That's My Love" (5:53)
  5. "This Train" (4:56)
  6. "Can't Drink The Water" (4:35)
  7. "Gyre" (3:32)
  8. "Green" (4:46)
  9. "Lullabye" (2:41)
  10. "Birds Of Appetite" (4:26)
  11. "(Afterglow)" (3:57)

 
 
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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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