July Sounds
Folk and classical virtuosos Cannell & Ellis revel in warmer blasts of pipes and swooning string duets on the ‘July Sounds’ instalment of their series describing a year in the life...
After June’s apex, the improvisors outline their feelings on high summer in a further four parts that combine their roots in a mix of English and Irish folk and classical music traditions, and explore their urge to adapt and add to those paradigms.
We can’t confirm, but that does sound the series’ first appearance of Uilleann pipes on the awning opener ‘Within Reach,’ presumably from the duo’s Irish half Kate Ellis before they connote a sort of steady heat beating down with the wide open pastoralism of their string duet ‘Nine Hours,’ whereas ‘Four Days’ evokes a strange mix of lighter headed and melancholy sensations with its mostly upper register explorations, and ‘425 Miles’ spies a horizon of more foreboding cello with wounded woodwind and wordless vocals.
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Folk and classical virtuosos Cannell & Ellis revel in warmer blasts of pipes and swooning string duets on the ‘July Sounds’ instalment of their series describing a year in the life...
After June’s apex, the improvisors outline their feelings on high summer in a further four parts that combine their roots in a mix of English and Irish folk and classical music traditions, and explore their urge to adapt and add to those paradigms.
We can’t confirm, but that does sound the series’ first appearance of Uilleann pipes on the awning opener ‘Within Reach,’ presumably from the duo’s Irish half Kate Ellis before they connote a sort of steady heat beating down with the wide open pastoralism of their string duet ‘Nine Hours,’ whereas ‘Four Days’ evokes a strange mix of lighter headed and melancholy sensations with its mostly upper register explorations, and ‘425 Miles’ spies a horizon of more foreboding cello with wounded woodwind and wordless vocals.
Folk and classical virtuosos Cannell & Ellis revel in warmer blasts of pipes and swooning string duets on the ‘July Sounds’ instalment of their series describing a year in the life...
After June’s apex, the improvisors outline their feelings on high summer in a further four parts that combine their roots in a mix of English and Irish folk and classical music traditions, and explore their urge to adapt and add to those paradigms.
We can’t confirm, but that does sound the series’ first appearance of Uilleann pipes on the awning opener ‘Within Reach,’ presumably from the duo’s Irish half Kate Ellis before they connote a sort of steady heat beating down with the wide open pastoralism of their string duet ‘Nine Hours,’ whereas ‘Four Days’ evokes a strange mix of lighter headed and melancholy sensations with its mostly upper register explorations, and ‘425 Miles’ spies a horizon of more foreboding cello with wounded woodwind and wordless vocals.
Folk and classical virtuosos Cannell & Ellis revel in warmer blasts of pipes and swooning string duets on the ‘July Sounds’ instalment of their series describing a year in the life...
After June’s apex, the improvisors outline their feelings on high summer in a further four parts that combine their roots in a mix of English and Irish folk and classical music traditions, and explore their urge to adapt and add to those paradigms.
We can’t confirm, but that does sound the series’ first appearance of Uilleann pipes on the awning opener ‘Within Reach,’ presumably from the duo’s Irish half Kate Ellis before they connote a sort of steady heat beating down with the wide open pastoralism of their string duet ‘Nine Hours,’ whereas ‘Four Days’ evokes a strange mix of lighter headed and melancholy sensations with its mostly upper register explorations, and ‘425 Miles’ spies a horizon of more foreboding cello with wounded woodwind and wordless vocals.