From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hoarse & Roaring
Studio album by
ReleasedJune 2010
Recorded2010 at
Willamette Mountain Studio
( American Fork, Utah, United States)
Genre folk, indie folk, neofolk
Label Northplatte Records
Producer Joshua James
Parlor Hawk chronology
Hoarse & Roaring
(2010)
Parlor Hawk
(2014)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
themusiccritic.co.uk [1]
Salt Lake City Weekly(very favorable) [2]
SLUG Magazine(favorable) [3]

Hoarse & Roaring is the debut full-length album by American neofolk band Parlor Hawk, released in 2010 on Northplatte Records. The album was produced by Joshua James and featured Neon Trees bassist Branden Campbell on each track (except "Saddest Song") as well as Fictionist member Stuart Maxfield on the tracks "14 Years" and "Home". It was mixed by Todd Burke (Ben Harper, Jack Johnson) and mastered by Reuben Cohen (Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros, Bruno Mars).

The album was chosen by iTunes Indie Spotlight as a "Best of 2010 Singer/Songwriter Album" and was featured on the Indie Spotlight page alongside other notable albums from that year.

Track listing

All tracks are written by Andrew C Capener except as noted

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Home"Capener, Joshua James3:03
2."Like Thieves"Capener, Joshua James, McKay Stevens3:45
3."Every Bone"Capener, Joshua James, McKay Stevens3:02
4."Julian"Capener, Joshua James, McKay Stevens3:45
5."Short Road"Capener, Joshua James, McKay Stevens3:15
6."Lie To Me"Capener, Joshua James, McKay Stevens5:03
7."Second Skin"Capener, Joshua James3:20
8."Lark"Capener3:53
9."Flowers"Capener, Joshua James, McKay Stevens3:15
10."14 Years"Capener, Joshua James, McKay Stevens3:38
11."Saddest Song"Capener, Mark Garbett2:24

Personnel

Parlor Hawk
  • Andrew Clifford Capener– vocals, rhythm guitar
  • TJ Nockleby– guitar
  • Mark Garbett– piano, wurlitzer, additional vocals
  • Jay Tibbitts– drums
Additional musicians
  • Pat Campbell– additional drums, percussion
  • Branden Campbell– bass guitar (tracks 1 to 10)
  • Dylan Schorer- pedal steel guitar, lap steel (track 4)
  • Brian Hardy– Hammond B3 organ (tracks 2,5,7)
  • Sayde Price– additional vocals (tracks 4,6,8)
  • Evan Coulombe– nylon string guitar (track 10)
  • Nate Pyfer– mellotron, string arrangements, additional vocals (track 3)
  • Rachel Hicken– violin (track 8)
  • Jarom Xochimitl– cello (tracks 6,8)
  • Stuart Maxfield– mandolin, violin (tracks 1, 10)

Awards

Year Nominated Work Organization Award Result
2012 "Saddest Song" Independent Music Awards [4] Best Acoustic Song Won
"Hoarse & Roaring" Best Album Artwork Nominated

References

  1. ^ "Parlor Hawk: Hoarse and Roaring". The Music Critic. 2011-03-25. Retrieved 2013-09-28.
  2. ^ "Salt Lake City Music - Music Awards: CWMA 2011: King Niko, Cory Mon & The Starlight Gospel & The Lindsay Heath Orchestra Page 3". Cityweekly.net. Retrieved 2013-09-28.
  3. ^ Housley, Nate (2013-04-09). "Local Reviews: Parlor Hawk | SLUG Magazine". Slugmag.com. Retrieved 2013-09-28.
  4. ^ "HM Magazine - Music for Good". hmmagazine.com. Archived from the original on 2013-01-25. Retrieved 2014-02-11.


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hoarse & Roaring
Studio album by
ReleasedJune 2010
Recorded2010 at
Willamette Mountain Studio
( American Fork, Utah, United States)
Genre folk, indie folk, neofolk
Label Northplatte Records
Producer Joshua James
Parlor Hawk chronology
Hoarse & Roaring
(2010)
Parlor Hawk
(2014)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
themusiccritic.co.uk [1]
Salt Lake City Weekly(very favorable) [2]
SLUG Magazine(favorable) [3]

Hoarse & Roaring is the debut full-length album by American neofolk band Parlor Hawk, released in 2010 on Northplatte Records. The album was produced by Joshua James and featured Neon Trees bassist Branden Campbell on each track (except "Saddest Song") as well as Fictionist member Stuart Maxfield on the tracks "14 Years" and "Home". It was mixed by Todd Burke (Ben Harper, Jack Johnson) and mastered by Reuben Cohen (Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros, Bruno Mars).

The album was chosen by iTunes Indie Spotlight as a "Best of 2010 Singer/Songwriter Album" and was featured on the Indie Spotlight page alongside other notable albums from that year.

Track listing

All tracks are written by Andrew C Capener except as noted

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Home"Capener, Joshua James3:03
2."Like Thieves"Capener, Joshua James, McKay Stevens3:45
3."Every Bone"Capener, Joshua James, McKay Stevens3:02
4."Julian"Capener, Joshua James, McKay Stevens3:45
5."Short Road"Capener, Joshua James, McKay Stevens3:15
6."Lie To Me"Capener, Joshua James, McKay Stevens5:03
7."Second Skin"Capener, Joshua James3:20
8."Lark"Capener3:53
9."Flowers"Capener, Joshua James, McKay Stevens3:15
10."14 Years"Capener, Joshua James, McKay Stevens3:38
11."Saddest Song"Capener, Mark Garbett2:24

Personnel

Parlor Hawk
  • Andrew Clifford Capener– vocals, rhythm guitar
  • TJ Nockleby– guitar
  • Mark Garbett– piano, wurlitzer, additional vocals
  • Jay Tibbitts– drums
Additional musicians
  • Pat Campbell– additional drums, percussion
  • Branden Campbell– bass guitar (tracks 1 to 10)
  • Dylan Schorer- pedal steel guitar, lap steel (track 4)
  • Brian Hardy– Hammond B3 organ (tracks 2,5,7)
  • Sayde Price– additional vocals (tracks 4,6,8)
  • Evan Coulombe– nylon string guitar (track 10)
  • Nate Pyfer– mellotron, string arrangements, additional vocals (track 3)
  • Rachel Hicken– violin (track 8)
  • Jarom Xochimitl– cello (tracks 6,8)
  • Stuart Maxfield– mandolin, violin (tracks 1, 10)

Awards

Year Nominated Work Organization Award Result
2012 "Saddest Song" Independent Music Awards [4] Best Acoustic Song Won
"Hoarse & Roaring" Best Album Artwork Nominated

References

  1. ^ "Parlor Hawk: Hoarse and Roaring". The Music Critic. 2011-03-25. Retrieved 2013-09-28.
  2. ^ "Salt Lake City Music - Music Awards: CWMA 2011: King Niko, Cory Mon & The Starlight Gospel & The Lindsay Heath Orchestra Page 3". Cityweekly.net. Retrieved 2013-09-28.
  3. ^ Housley, Nate (2013-04-09). "Local Reviews: Parlor Hawk | SLUG Magazine". Slugmag.com. Retrieved 2013-09-28.
  4. ^ "HM Magazine - Music for Good". hmmagazine.com. Archived from the original on 2013-01-25. Retrieved 2014-02-11.



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