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LateNightTales in Franklin, TN
Current price: $35.99

Barnes and Noble
LateNightTales in Franklin, TN
Current price: $35.99
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Size: OS
Enlisting Berlin-based, Danish-born singer/songwriter
Agnes Obel
to participate in the popular artist-curated, U.K.-based compilation series
Late Night Tales
feels a little on the nose, as her austere, brooding, and icy/elegant chamber folk is already the perfect soundtrack for the wee hours of the morning. As expected,
Obel
has chosen a compelling set of tunes for her turn in the booth, and she wastes little time in setting the tone with
Henry Mancini
's "Evil Theme," an ominous exercise in pizzicato-heavy, late-'50s cinema-jazz that suggests wisps of smoke rising from ashtrays beaded over with late summer humidity and long trench coats casting shadows on dirty concrete. Everything bleeds into each other like a proper late-shift radio program, adding considerable heft to the already thick atmosphere.
ultimately shifts her attention from the '50s and '60s -- the inclusion of the tiki-breezy but undeniably creepy "Eden's Island" by fanciful hippie outlier (and composer of "Nature Boy")
Eden Ahbez
, provides a sly sonic counterpoint to some of the beatnik gloom -- tapping into everything from oddball electronic pop (
Yello
's "Great Mission") and diaphonic Eastern European choral music (
Bulgarian Folklore Choir
's "Pilentze Pee") to Krautrock (
Can
's "Obscura Primavera") and avant garde-classical (
Alfred Schnittke
's "Piano Quintet V." Peppered throughout are four of
's own pieces, the most engaging of which is a lovely rendering of beloved Danish folk song "Glemmer du.. sa husker jeg," that like the rest of the 20-track set, feels like the soundtrack to a
David Lynch
-sponsored Ayahuasca retreat. ~ James Christopher Monger
Agnes Obel
to participate in the popular artist-curated, U.K.-based compilation series
Late Night Tales
feels a little on the nose, as her austere, brooding, and icy/elegant chamber folk is already the perfect soundtrack for the wee hours of the morning. As expected,
Obel
has chosen a compelling set of tunes for her turn in the booth, and she wastes little time in setting the tone with
Henry Mancini
's "Evil Theme," an ominous exercise in pizzicato-heavy, late-'50s cinema-jazz that suggests wisps of smoke rising from ashtrays beaded over with late summer humidity and long trench coats casting shadows on dirty concrete. Everything bleeds into each other like a proper late-shift radio program, adding considerable heft to the already thick atmosphere.
ultimately shifts her attention from the '50s and '60s -- the inclusion of the tiki-breezy but undeniably creepy "Eden's Island" by fanciful hippie outlier (and composer of "Nature Boy")
Eden Ahbez
, provides a sly sonic counterpoint to some of the beatnik gloom -- tapping into everything from oddball electronic pop (
Yello
's "Great Mission") and diaphonic Eastern European choral music (
Bulgarian Folklore Choir
's "Pilentze Pee") to Krautrock (
Can
's "Obscura Primavera") and avant garde-classical (
Alfred Schnittke
's "Piano Quintet V." Peppered throughout are four of
's own pieces, the most engaging of which is a lovely rendering of beloved Danish folk song "Glemmer du.. sa husker jeg," that like the rest of the 20-track set, feels like the soundtrack to a
David Lynch
-sponsored Ayahuasca retreat. ~ James Christopher Monger
Enlisting Berlin-based, Danish-born singer/songwriter
Agnes Obel
to participate in the popular artist-curated, U.K.-based compilation series
Late Night Tales
feels a little on the nose, as her austere, brooding, and icy/elegant chamber folk is already the perfect soundtrack for the wee hours of the morning. As expected,
Obel
has chosen a compelling set of tunes for her turn in the booth, and she wastes little time in setting the tone with
Henry Mancini
's "Evil Theme," an ominous exercise in pizzicato-heavy, late-'50s cinema-jazz that suggests wisps of smoke rising from ashtrays beaded over with late summer humidity and long trench coats casting shadows on dirty concrete. Everything bleeds into each other like a proper late-shift radio program, adding considerable heft to the already thick atmosphere.
ultimately shifts her attention from the '50s and '60s -- the inclusion of the tiki-breezy but undeniably creepy "Eden's Island" by fanciful hippie outlier (and composer of "Nature Boy")
Eden Ahbez
, provides a sly sonic counterpoint to some of the beatnik gloom -- tapping into everything from oddball electronic pop (
Yello
's "Great Mission") and diaphonic Eastern European choral music (
Bulgarian Folklore Choir
's "Pilentze Pee") to Krautrock (
Can
's "Obscura Primavera") and avant garde-classical (
Alfred Schnittke
's "Piano Quintet V." Peppered throughout are four of
's own pieces, the most engaging of which is a lovely rendering of beloved Danish folk song "Glemmer du.. sa husker jeg," that like the rest of the 20-track set, feels like the soundtrack to a
David Lynch
-sponsored Ayahuasca retreat. ~ James Christopher Monger
Agnes Obel
to participate in the popular artist-curated, U.K.-based compilation series
Late Night Tales
feels a little on the nose, as her austere, brooding, and icy/elegant chamber folk is already the perfect soundtrack for the wee hours of the morning. As expected,
Obel
has chosen a compelling set of tunes for her turn in the booth, and she wastes little time in setting the tone with
Henry Mancini
's "Evil Theme," an ominous exercise in pizzicato-heavy, late-'50s cinema-jazz that suggests wisps of smoke rising from ashtrays beaded over with late summer humidity and long trench coats casting shadows on dirty concrete. Everything bleeds into each other like a proper late-shift radio program, adding considerable heft to the already thick atmosphere.
ultimately shifts her attention from the '50s and '60s -- the inclusion of the tiki-breezy but undeniably creepy "Eden's Island" by fanciful hippie outlier (and composer of "Nature Boy")
Eden Ahbez
, provides a sly sonic counterpoint to some of the beatnik gloom -- tapping into everything from oddball electronic pop (
Yello
's "Great Mission") and diaphonic Eastern European choral music (
Bulgarian Folklore Choir
's "Pilentze Pee") to Krautrock (
Can
's "Obscura Primavera") and avant garde-classical (
Alfred Schnittke
's "Piano Quintet V." Peppered throughout are four of
's own pieces, the most engaging of which is a lovely rendering of beloved Danish folk song "Glemmer du.. sa husker jeg," that like the rest of the 20-track set, feels like the soundtrack to a
David Lynch
-sponsored Ayahuasca retreat. ~ James Christopher Monger