Thousands to Tour the UK with Tune-Yards in June
aaamusic | On 24, May 2011
Seattle duo Thousands – who released their debut album ‘The Sound of Everything’ earlier this year on Bella Union – will once again be heading to these shores in support of Tune-Yards following a successful run of shows in April. The tour takes in most UK cities, those dates are below…
Wednesday 8 June – LONDON, Scala
Monday 13 June – Manchester, Deaf Institute
Tuesday 14 June – ABERDEEN, The Tunnels
Wednesday 15 June – GLASGOW, Captain’s Rest
Thursday 16 June – LIVERPOOL, Mojo
Sunday 19 June – LEEDS, Brudenell Social Club
Monday 20 June – BRISTOL, Fleece
Tuesday 21 June – BRIGHTON, Green Door Store
Some of the critical acclaim for ‘The Sound of Everything’…
“This album is so fragile and tender it makes Robin Pecknold and co sound positively brash, consisting as it does of just two voices and two acoustic guitars…There’s a lot of zippy finger-picking redolent of ’60s folk pioneers Davey Graham and John Fahey…their voices possess the same thin, papery charm, peaking high, cracking into falsetto, then falling away into silence…natural music in the most literal sense…a delightful exercise in singing up and out into the wider world”
Uncut – 4 stars **** [Debut of the Month]
“Love of homespun folk melodies and tight vocal harmonies…this album could hardly be more stripped-down…intricate, lilting rhythms…tender, hushed beauty…In this instance, less is definitely more”
Q – 4 stars ****
Thousands is the name of Seattle duo Kristian Garrard and Luke Bergman whose beguiling debut album, “The Sound Of Everything”, is one of the gentlest, most tender records you’ll ever hear; just two entwined voices, exquisite acoustic guitar and a very occasional harmonium. Oh, and sounds from nature; bird calls, falling leaves, blowing wind and natural reverb are allpresent, underlining the organic creation of Thousands songs and their surreal, nature-focused lyrics.
Thousands came to Bella Union’s attention via Fleet Foxes’ guitarist Skye Skjelset, who is a friend of the pair, and the duo are both are long-standing members of Seattle’s heralded underground scene. When the band’s initial home recordings didn’t feel right, Kristian and Luke decided “to travel around Oregon and Washington looking for interesting or inspiring places to record. To get away from the sterile sounds we were achieving at home, and to offer something with a real sense of place. We want people to listen to this with headphones on and feel like they’re immersed in these locations, and there’s us, sitting next to you, playing a song.” The field recordings led them across the Pacific Northwest; to Luke’s family’s cabin on the Oregon coast, the banks of the Columbia River, abandoned barns and old farmhouses.
At times the music of Thousands echoes Fleet Foxes’ hymnal beauty. But the overriding feel shares some of the hushed simplicity of Elliott Smith and Simon and Garfunkel, fused to the finger-picking dexterity of John Fahey and BertJansch. But don’t let the simplest of acoustic formats hide the deep well of emotion inside. “The Sound Of Everything” is all about the human voice and heartbeat, the purity of sound, capturing a specific place at an exact moment; in other words, the sound of everything that matters.