2012-04-15
Like the album's namesake, Baba Yaga (a witch of Slavic folklore) is both atmospheric and haunting (the first half of the disc, anyway). This is Futurebirds' second full-length and it's full of guitar, drums, pedal-steel, occasional cello, vocal harmonies, and fine production. Due to the band's origins (Athens, GA), it is frequently likened to REM. Other than their common roots, I don't think the bands are comparable. I see Futurebirds as a folk or alt-country band. Indeed this album gets twangier as it goes along. Comparisons aside, Futurebirds has enough substance to be able to stand on its own. Rebecca Ruth
HEM
No Word From Tom
Mark Knopfler/Emmylou Harris
All The Roadrunning
JAKE SHIMABUKURO
Gently Weeps
Get Together
Banana Recalls Youngblood Classics
ANJULI DAWN
Give
BRADFORD LEE FOLK & THE BLUEGRASS PLAYBOYS
Somewhere Far Away
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