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Fern Knight

Music for Witches and Alchemists

(VHF; US: 15 Nov 2006; UK: 20 Nov 2006)

Fern Knight play a vibrant British-influenced folk that sounds like all their clocks stopped dead some time between 1972, when Scottish singer Shelagh McDonald became an acid casualty, and the break-up of Pentangle the following year.  Lush string arrangements and ghostly cello glide over this second album by the Philadelphia-based musical collective as Margaret Wienk’s voice beguiles you into a rich tapestry of singular tales that, among other things, humourously uses tapeworms as a metaphor for a love broken (“Lintworme, Pt.I”).  Elsewhere, Greg Weeks and Meg Baird, two thirds of Philly neighbours the Espers, help Wienk out by contributing tight harmony backing, and in Weeks’s case, some excellent psych-drone on acid lead guitar, to a clutch of songs including the melancholy poesy “Awake Angel Snake”, while Alec K. Redfearn provides a haunting accordion that resonates across the majority of the eleven cuts here to startling effect.  Spellbinding.

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Fern Knight - Song for Ireland
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7 May 2008
Margaret Wienk's folk noir enters a new realm, traveling through gorgeous fantasies and inspiring landscapes as she confronts the more sinister aspects of the real world.
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