Год|Year: 2007
Жанр| Genre: Modern Folk, Jazzy
Страна| Country: Korea
Качество| Quality: 256 kbps
Размер| Size: 70 Mb
Track List01. Deja-entendu
02. Song of the time without way
03. 10 days butterfly
04. Chi-Ja flower
05. Way of the White Cloud
06. Whi-Woo(Ash Rain)
07. For the somebody who wanders
08. Free Heart
09. Sacred Ibis
10. When blue butterfly flies over the yellow flower
11. Moment doesn't take care warrior
12. Wind sound
Credits:
Bandoneon, Percussion - Ha Reem
Cello - Lee Hyeon Su
Guitar [Electric], Acoustic Guitar [Solo] - Kim Kwang Seok
Piano - Ji Sung Chul
Synthesizer - Kim Hyo Kuk
Trumpet - Um Tae Won
Vocals, Acoustic Guitar, Harmonica, Written-By, Arranged By, Producer - Kim Doo Soo
Kim Doo Soo is Korean Folk(Modern one) musician, who was only famous in deep underground scene. But in recent years, his 4th. album [Free Spirit] gained high expectation, and became more & more famous.
His vocal & music style are very unique, not comparable to any other Folk Music. Highly recommendable for Modern Folk fans.
Another absolutely breathtaking album that's seemingly landed from out of nowehere and has completely captured our hearts, this album from Korean acid folk troubadour Kim Doo Soo really is an absolutely magical trip through the most sublime, heartfelt and out of the ordinary songs you could possibly wish for.Doo Soo first sprung to our attention last year, making a sizeable impression with his appearance on the office-favourite 'International Sad Hits' compilation. Compiled by US shoegazers Damon & Naomi this picked up tracks from the lesser heard purveyors of wrought emotion, and Kim Doo Soo was without a doubt the saddest of these international hit-makers. '10 Days Butterfly' is not Soo's first album but it is the first we've managed to get our hands on. 'Bohemia' was the song which captured most listeners' hearts, and in '10 Days Butterfly' we have twelve distinct paeans to the melancholy wonderment of our fair earth - from alcoholism and political oppression to suicide and seclusion. 'I am leaving to the road of the wandering wind/It is the floating empty void again' Soo sings and we are left to hang on every syllable - thankfully the English translations are included in this package so the less linguistically gifted among us can enjoy Soo's words unhindered by continental placement. There is a striking calm about his work, no doubt borne from his Eastern upbringing; a level headed, anti-positivist philosophy which reveals his far-flung roots. And although comparisons can easily be made with British folk poets such as Nick Drake or Bert Jansch this distinct over-arching oriental feeling, which can be connected straight back to the sagely words of Confucius himself gives '10 Days Butterfly' a spiritual resonance rarely heard in the acid folk genre. My most immediate thought might be towards the underrated work of Eddie Marcon, who similarly distilled the best of doomed British acid folk into something touched by the presence of cherry blossom and rosewater, but Soo has something unspeakable which defies such simple comparisons. Listen carefully to the mandolin-embellished ghosts at work on 'Songs of Pathless Time' and I challenge even the most stony-faced listener not to experience the spikiest of chills down the spine. This is emotion in its purest form, thankfully amputated from the sentimental sweet nothings the mainstream has foisted upon us in the hope we will all inherit the same views on 'love' and 'virtue'. Those of us with a true desire to hear music, lyrical, poetic and unflinchingly honest simply need to hear '10 Days Butterfly'; an album tailor made for the more reflective among us. Our highest possible recommendation...