Arrowhill

Between Two Mountains

2015-03-11

Arrowhill is a family band based in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Borne of the Treehouse Community in the Baxter neighborhood, their sound embodies the collective. On their debut album, “Between Two Mountains,” Male and female vocals sing synchronously on a backdrop of mountain folk-style instrumentation. The songs incorporate plucky banjo, fiddle, bare percussion, and even a musical saw and train whistle at some points. Lyrically, Arrowhill treats spirituality, love, and the universality of living.

Most songs on “Between Two Mountains” have a ghostly, minor-keyed feel to them. They have a momentum that chugs forward as a train might through Appalachia. The sunniest track on the album is the third, “paddling upstream, downstream,” which most prominently expresses the community everyone in the world is part of: living beings. The harmonic vocals are beautiful, and they are occasionally joined by the sweet voices of children. Those voices combined with the gypsy folk sensibilities of Arrowhill’s sound make “Between Two Mountains” a positively charming record. It will both warm your heart and inspire you to reflect.

review by Marie

Quick Links:

More reviews tagged #Folk

  • reviewed 04/2016

    Brian Fallon
    Painkillers

  • reviewed 10/2014

    YAEL MEYER
    WARRIOR HEART

  • reviewed 09/2010

    KELLI SCARR
    Piece

  • reviewed 04/2007

    Todd Snider
    Peace, Love and Anarchy (Rarities, B-Sides and Demos, Vol. 1)

  • reviewed 06/2006

    The Del McCoury Band
    The Promised Land

  • reviewed 01/2007

    NEIL YOUNG & CRAZYHORSE
    Live

Compiled by the WYCE Journalism Club

The opinions expressed in these reviews are those of the individual volunteers that submitted the article and do not necessarily reflect the views of WYCE or GRCMC; nor its staff, donors, or affiliates.