You can hear clips from all these releases here |
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Afterwords £3.99 |
Back to Pumajaw site |
| cdr in handmade sleeve with original longer version of Slowly, Slowly the Water Flows plus two rare tracks and an unreleased track. | ||
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Jacky Daw £3.99 | |
Limited release of 200 . Comes with a cdr of both tracks. Two of these records have a lucky ticket to win the new album due in January. |
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Pinkie Maclure + John Wills aka
Pumajaw |
Pumajaw aka Pinkie Maclure & John Wills The latest album by Pinkie Maclure and John Wills straddles the old and new UK folk-rock movements. The band refer to their sound as 'folkadelica.' Maclure is blessed with a deeply resonant voice, as dark as the underside of a leaf; she can hold her own against other mistresses of duskiness such as Sandy Denny, June Tabor, or Christine Collister. However, Maclure utilizes her voice differently, wielding her voice as another instrument in the precious mix, swooping when you least expect her to, crying out at unexpected times, repeating lyrics in a loop as if she were possessed. Yet none of these vocal acrobatics push Maclure beyond her range or into discordance; she is assured, and deeply shamanic. Wills' contributions are sympathetic to Maclure's voice and they create open and spare music with magical shadows. Wills' guitar playing is never flashy, but he can provide a good freakout, as on the traditional "The Holly King" where lovely acoustic strumming gives way to some pure electric psychedelia. Pumajaw excel in highlighting the drone of their tunes, evident on their perfect version of "Rosemary Lane." In itself, the trance-like aura that pervades Becoming Pumajaw makes listening a hypnotic experience. Lyrically, Pumajaw are fascinating. The last track, "Outside It Blows," is the most darkly experimental song on the album. It sounds like a fleeting memory: Maclure's voice whisks around, occasionally looped in the background, while Wills' strings make you feel as if you're descending into a well. "Outside it blows/How many like us in the world?/How many worlds without wires?/The dawn is such/ A fickle fiend/With its deadly devices/It's such a cruel world that hypnotizes us." Whew! Becoming Pumajaw's songs are like so many gems strung together. For all of the haunting skill shown on Becoming Pumajaw , Wills and Maclure do not come off as showboating grandstanders. This is remarkably ego-less music, the very blood and guts of emotion; human and true to the psychedelic spirit. Becoming Pumajaw is one of my favorite records of the year thus far. - Lee Blackstone
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Pinkie
Maclure & John Wills Released April 2004 few remaining |
This
UK duo has been making some serious waves recently in psych/folk circles. Their latest record, "Cat's Cradle," is
a potent blend of dark hymnals and timeless incantations that will have fans of the aforementioned genres frothing
at the mouth. Maclure and Wills construct music that feels like it was extracted from history books about ancient
mythology. Maclure's voice is a lilting presence amongst the scattered sonic folk wreckage the duo creates. It's
enchanting and entirely memorable. |
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![]() Pinkie Maclure From Memorial Crossing 1. Sorcery 2. Within and Without 3. Frozen in Sleep 4. Blue Rose 5. Sweet Kind of Suffering 6. Fellini Overdrive 7. We Spin 8. Memorial Crossing 9. I'll Shoot the Moon 10.Too Late Brother 11.Sycamore Trees |
I feel as fortunate to have caught sight of this album as I would a snowflake in
a winter sky. 'From Memorial Crossing' is filled
with songs of heartbreak, loneliness and unrequited hopeless love Maclure and Wills' work is
down tempo and definitely dark. Pinkie has a voice that will reach into your heart and transport you to the time it was broken. ANDY GILES, OTHER MUSIC 9/10 |
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![]() Lumen This Day and Age 1. Betrayed 2. Dust wont Lie 3. Stranded 4. The Killer 5. Harbour Song 6. All the way to Greenland 7. In the Barricades 8. The Swings 9. Weird Light 10.Pearls |
Lumen is John Wills - formerly drummer with the mighty Loop and The Hair and Skin Trading Co - and Pinkie Maclure, a remarkable vocalist who's worked with John Parrish and PJ Harvey among others. This collaborative effort fuses their interests in all things avant-textured and minimally soundscaped - at times, recalling Diamanda Galas sighing over the most delicate glitch, others Marlene Dietrich joining Talk Talk. Overall, a weird and wonderful flight of fancy to a seductively mysterious destination. Sharon O'Connell |
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