Fleet Foxes

Jun 03 2008 12:12 pm,

4.0

Fleet Foxes

Fleet Foxes
‘Fleet Foxes’

(Bella Union)

Fleet Foxes' debut is the unlikely but deeply compelling sound of a band fully realising their musical roots. The Seattle five-piece juggle culturally dead Crosby Stills & Nash folk-rock, Zombies-esque baroque-pop, along with various country, bluegrass and gospel undertones, but to build something still as altogether new as it is warmly referential.
The offensive on 'Fleet Foxes' comes on two fronts: the staggeringly beautiful four-part harmonies, then the soft-psyche narrative intricacies in their celestial midst. 'White Winter Hymnal' shuffles stomping, reverb-drenched vocals through five kinds of folk into one, then byway of hymnbook-harmonic anthems ('He Doesn't Know Why') and warm, rugged folklore ('Heard Them Stirring') you find yourself hustled into a listless, but mesmerising and deeply satisfied state of weirdly nostalgic stupor.

Jeremy Kingsley

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Comments

Dale E Albury - 2008-06-04 03:16:37
The fox has many tricks. The hedgehog has but one. But that is the best of all.
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