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Album Review - "Soon It Will Come Time To Face The World Outside"
Shoeshine Records
Slowly and dolefully creeping out of Cork city, the time is certainly
here for Boa Morte's resolutely elegant debut to face the world
outside. While it was recorded for a US label some time ago and
shamefully left on the long finger, Teenage Fanclub drummer Francis
McDonald stepped in to push this little beauty into the public domain
via his Glasgow-based Shoeshine Records. Distilling pure gold from
ennui and pathos and creating a gorgeously arranged, intelligent and
spacious collection of Americana melancholy, Soon it will come.wraps
around you and tilts your head to the stars. Like Smog or Oldham or any
great purveyors of rural lament, it offers warm solace through the
perpetual tumbling movement of the seasons.
Irish Times, July 2002
Album Review - "Soon It Will Come Time To Face The World Outside"
Shoeshine Records
What is it about melancholy that makes you feel all warm and syrupy inside,
as if a big, sad-looking floppy teddy just fell pathetically out of skip
into your childhood arms? Did I just write that? Sorry, I¹m listening to
this Boa Morte album at the moment and it does things to you. It¹s
simultaneously life-affirming and heart-wrenching; easily-grasped yet
possessing infinite layers of complex melodic emotions. Sometimes 100 words
is too little to accurately pin down such a great work. Lamentably this is
one of those times. Boa Morte have graduated from that school of pondering,
YLT-esque melancholy with top honours.
Dubfly - Album of the Month, July 2002
Album Review - "Soon It Will Come Time To Face The World Outside"
Shoeshine Records
"Cork quartet in spellbinding debut...
Occasionally a record comes along that's so intimate and immediate you want to disconect the phone, get under the duvet and forget the outside world. Soon It Will Come...is one of those records, and the more you play it the more seductive it sounds. Singer Paul Ruxton has a distinctive and elegant voice with a soft Irish accent, but it's the spares instrumentation, haunting orchestrations and organic production that makes this such a rewarding and memorable debut". ****
Uncut Magazine, July 2002
Album Review - "Soon It Will Come Time To Face The World Outside"
Shoeshine Records
By the time you've got the full measure of their sombre elegance,
the band are confirmed masters, not slaves, of the idiom. Bare-boned thrums
like Unfortunate Leader or Burn, a single phrase like "Oh, tired eyes, they
hold their water", are ultimately priceless.
Mojo, July 2002
Album Review - "Soon It Will Come Time To Face The World Outside"
Shoeshine Records
The cumbersomely titled debut album from Cork-based quartet Boa Morte is a
delight to tired ears. A reflective mix of melancholia and soft-spoken
delight. 'Tonight she said' is a beautiful song built on a gentle, bare
guitar melody, while the vocals and strings in the chorus are almost
tear-inducing in their honesty. 'Tonight...' is but one jewel in Boa Morte's
shimmering crown. The entire album is aglow with more stars than a summer
night sky.
From the haunting opener 'Clarence White' through to the slightly up-lifting
'Tired eyes', the stunning 'December' and on to the closing track, the
atmospheric instrumental 'Milking machine', this is a perfectly rounded
collection of emotional outpouring. It may sound quiet and unimposing enough
to be background music, but, to really appreciate this, you need to let it
wash over you, uninterrupted.
A brief pause for breath in an all too hectic world, Boa Morte have created
morning music to ready you to face whatever surprises life may hold in
store.
Sorted, August 2002
Album Review - "Soon It Will Come Time To Face The World Outside"
Shoeshine Records
As if to prove that Cork is about more than absurd proto punks, cartoon indie bands and, of course, world-class midfielders, Boa Morte have released a debut album pitched somewhere between the broken-down madness of Bonnie Prince Billy and the purity of Smog. Released on Shoeshine, the label run by Teenage Fanclub's Francis McDonald, Soon It Will Come... is another fine addition to the growing ranks of Irish bands with an appreciation of the oft-abused Americana tag, but Boa Morte avoid the pitfalls of straight imitation with several songs here achieving the same poignancy of acoustic tunemeisters The Kings of Convenience. Sweet and very low down.
RTE Guide, July 2002
Album Review - "Soon It Will Come Time To Face The World Outside"
Shoeshine Records
Boa Morte Soon it Will Come Time to Face the World Outside (Shoeshine Records) 05 Jun 2002 Cork’s Boa Morte have forged an interesting musical link with Glasgow – the thriving city of a thousand independent bands and esteemed cottage labels. Glaswegian band Teenage Fanclub were so enamoured with Boa Morte’s demos that Francis McDonald found them a suitable home for their recordings on his own self-styled award winning imprint Shoeshine Records. Soon It Will Come Time To Face The World Outside is a gentle, soothing song cycle of enriching melancholia, deeply reflective yet never devoid of hope. Paul Ruxton and Cormac Gahan's vocal interplay is rich in quirky emotions and inflections, enveloping the listener into the Boa Morte inner sanctum of warm sounds. ‘Tonight She Said’ is a jauntily narrated dysfunctional waltz, supplemented by a subtle string arrangement and sparse and individual effects. My favourite jewels in this firnament are ‘Burn’ and ‘North Star’, the most engaging and sonically adventurous moments to be found amidst these twelve lovingly crafted tunes.
© Hot Press, June 2002
Album Review - "Soon It Will Come Time To Face The World Outside"
Shoeshine Records
If you like lo-fi, and you like alternative- country, but you’ve never quite found the ideal combination to satisfy both appetites, then welcome to the world of Irish based quartet (Cork to be precise), Boa Morte. Evocative from the word go of both folk icons such as Nick Drake and lofi highflyers like Low, the music is redolent with hints of the kind of amazing ear for songwriting that both Mark Linkous and David Berman have in their quieter moments. “Milking Machine” ambiently and barely audibly waves its way round some stirring chord changes while “Tonight She Says” isn’t your conventional love song, carried by the native violin and original narrative throughout. (“Bring me the fatty calf, Because I have been gone for a year and a half”) “December” too, with its Anna Kashfi type tempo and arrangement, makes its mark as the third best song with the month in its title (read Counting Crows and Mazzy Star here) As with all albums that veer into the lo-fi genre, the problem is that if you’re not in the mood, it can be become an incredibly laborous listen, the songs often requiring a lot of work to familiarise yourself with - we’re not talking stadium rock here. But then that’s also the beauty of the album - it slowly burns its way into your consciousness after repeated late night listens. At three o’clock in the morning with a single candle in a darkened room, you won’t want to listen to anything else.
Americana-UK, June 2002
Album Review - "Soon It Will Come Time To Face the Outside World"
Shoeshine Records
Mellow and understated beauty - the kind of music that is hard to string words together to describe. You know not everyone wants to chill out to the latest goddamn Moby CD - and for those of you out there (and there are quite a few) this could be just for you. Laidback country-folk similar to the Silver Jews or latter-day Palace (but with a LOT more melody than either of those), this really does get under your skin. And if I could string a few well placed words together I would also tell you about how well put together this is and throw in words like 'hypnotic' or 'seductive' or many more that all come to the same conclusion: BUY ME.
©JB Hi-Fi Australia October 2002
Album Review - "Soon It Will Come Time To Face The World Outside"
Shoeshine Records
Boa Morte's debut album arrives into an over crowded downbeat-indie
rock market. Every Tom, Dick and Mervyn seems to be
releasing "monumental" albums of profound harmonies and minimalist
string arrangements. They all usually culminate in ear battering
crescendos of feedback that are considered avant-garde by a couple of
overweight people in check shirts. Thankfully, Boa Morte produce music
that does not pretend to be something it isn't. It's not released into
a scene propped up by an inner clique of uber music nerds. It was borne
in an environment devoid of backslapping and name checking. "Soon It
Will." comes from a vacuum where the one constant is the talent of the
main protagonists.
Boa Morte have not abandoned their Cork lilt in favour of a faux
Midwest alt. country accent. They embrace Americana without being
totally immersed in it. They have a unique voice in Paul Ruxton, though
they still fit into the Nick Drake mould while avoiding the clichés of
sorrowful torment. It's this that sets them apart from the horde of
Dublin bands that ply their wares week in week out in "intimate
venues".
Standout songs include 'Clarence White', 'Tonight She Said', the more
up-tempo 'Tired Eyes' and the instrumental 'Milking Machine' complete
with ambient milk parlour atmospherics. All these are songs that
contain a recognisable warmth usually found in this kind of reflective
music. This is a refreshingly unpretentious collection of beautifully
orchestral songs, where gentle melodies accompany understated lyrics to
give us what will no doubt be the Irish album of the year.
All in all Boa Morte make The Frames look like the second rate Will
Oldham cover band that they are. Its time for Boa Morte to step out of
Cork, face the world outside and take their applause that they so
richly deserve.
© Anthony Fortune, Zeitgeist, May 2002
Album Review - "Soon It Will Come Time To Face The World Outside"
Shoeshine Records
Why a Cork band who used to practice above a milking parlour would name themselves after one of the Premiership’s least celebrated players is a mystery. Fortunately, any similarity to the lumbering Fulham forward ends with the name.
From the opening bars of ‘Soon it Will Come Time to Face the World Outside’ it seems obvious what kind of band Boa Morte are. Nick Drake melancholia, delicate acoustic guitars and echoing pianos - everything’s in its right place, but is it anything new?
Not really, but what impresses is the way the band don’t seem to be doing much, but end up with swaying, melancholic gems that are so much more than the sum of their parts. Guitarist Bill Twomey repeats four note arpeggios over and over - think ‘She’s So Heavy’, but less ominous - and singer Paul Ruxton murmurs lines as though they were mantras (‘Burn’, ‘Tired Eyes’). At first it sounds primitive and sparse, but as bar builds on bar the effect is enchanting. It’s a trick Jason Pierce knows well.
Boa Morte may not have the immediate catchiness of fellow tortured souls Belle and Sebastian or The Beauty Shop, but - though the wordy title suggests otherwise - ‘Soon it Will Come Time to Face the World Outside’ is conclusive proof that less can be more.
© drownedinmusic.com, May 2002
Gig Review - Boa Morte/Webb Brothers, The Lobby, Cork - March 2001
Corks Boa Morte demonstrate why, if quiet is not quite the new loud, then slow
is certainly the new fast. Not for this lot the frenzied beginnings and
turbulent flight of many fledgling local acts. Instead, their songs take wing
almost imperceptibly and then proceed to wow you with their elegance and
grace. Its been a while since their 'Passenger measure your time' EP first
announced their presence, but the new album on Moodfood will surely introduce
their stately sound to a wider audience.........
Hot Press, 28 March 2001
Gig Review - The Lobby Bar, Cork - March 2000
Boa Morte and Joe Pernice
Support on the night was supplied by Cork's very own Boa Morte who offered
an extremely mellow and laid back evening of entertainment. Sounding not
unlike the mellower Frames tunes and coincidently featuring a guitarist
with an uncanny resemblance to Glen Hansard, these lads + 1 lady have a
large local following. Something tells me that most of the crowd there
that evening, were there to see Boa Morte (who have recently singed to
Moodfood records) and they were not disappointed by a band who put on a
very tight and pleasing show. An extremely talented band with a mastery of
their instruments which deserves respect.
Zeitgeist - Mar 2000
Boa Morte EP - 'Passenger Measure your Time'
This is the debut 3 track ep from Cork's new lo-fi four piece. Described on the sleeve of the EP as 'Sparse, lo-fi and country-ish'. Their own description is pretty much spot on. This EP reminds me very much of a lot of the work of Domino's 'Smog'. A very low key affair, mellow guitars and brush stroked drums, the vocalist is in the top ten of the unhappiest men in the world. Absolutely perfect sound for this kind of material. Things are looking good for Irish music again, bring on the album boys !
Road Record Review - Sept '98
As someone who has lost faith in indie rock, I approached this with trepidation, only to be pleasantly surprised with a reflective three-song CD awash with plangent strumming, gently stroked drums and occasional piano and strings in an American sadcore vein (Palace Brothers, Jubilee Allstars etc.). Buy it - not because it's from Cork, but because it's good. An excellent start.
The List - Oct '98
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