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Wolf People - Steeple album

Wolf People - Steeple album

  • Performer: Wolf People
  • Genre: Rock
  • Title: Steeple
  • Released: 2010
  • Style: Psychedelic Rock
  • Country: US
  • MP3 version size: 1867 mb
  • FLAC version size: 1853 mb
  • Other: DTS AC3 AA MP4 MMF APE WAV
  • Rating: 4.8
  • Votes: 890

Description

Album · 2010 · 9 Songs.

Listen free to Wolf People – Steeple (Silbury Sands, Tiny Circle and more). Discover more music, concerts, videos, and pictures with the largest catalogue online at Last.

Wolf People are an English psychedelic rock band, formed by singer and guitarist Jack Sharp in Bedford in 2005. Frontman Jack Sharp grew up in Clophill, Bedfordshire. At 14 years old, Sharp approached future Wolf People drummer Tom Watt, who lived nearby, and asked if he would like to join his band, having heard drumming coming from Watt's house. Watt agreed despite the fact that he couldn't actually play drums - the noise Sharp had heard had actually been made by Watt's drummer sister.

Wolf People are time travellers, their tools mythology, history, hauntology, big riffs, bigger beats, electricity. It’s not a concept album, but a lot of the songs consider what the world might be like without humans, says singer/guitarist Jack Sharp. The title refers to the ruins of civilisation. Wolf People began life in the ancient Bedfordshire village of Clophill, a place recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Clopelle (translation: ‘tree stump’), on land owned by a Norman knight, Nigel d'Aubigny. By the time future frontman Jack Sharp and drummer Tom Watt met there, Britpop, hip-hop and fresh fruit had replaced pillaging, chain mail and scrofula, but the mission not dissimilar to that of their forefathers: to embark upon crusades to foreign shores.

Band, Written-By, Performer – Dan Davies, Jack Sharp, Joe Hollick, Tom Watt (2). Engineer – Stevan Krakovic (tracks: 2). Engineer – Jethro Chaplin (tracks: 1, 3 to 9). Mixed By – Ian Carter. Sleeve – Joe Hollick. Words By – Jack Sharp (tracks: 1 to 7), Traditional (tracks: 8, 9). Written-By, Performer – Wolf People.

This album has an average beat per minute of 106 BPM (slowest/fastest tempos: 87/157 BPM). See its BPM profile at the bottom of the page. Album starts at 87BPM, ends at BPM (-87), with tempos within the -BPM range. Try refreshing the page if dots are missing). Recent albums by Wolf People.

Steeple is a music studio album recording by WOLF PEOPLE (Crossover Prog/Progressive Rock) released in 2010 on cd, lp, vinyl and/or cassette. Steeple Jagjaguwar 2010. Sort: Recent best-seller Results cached. Wolf People Steeple Vinyl LP NEW sealed.

Genre: Psychedelic Rock. Or consider a donation?

Album by Wolf People. One By One From Dorney Reach.

Biography by Gregory Heaney. This British rock band reverently followed the sounds of Jethro Tull, Traffic, and the like when creating their bluesy sound. See Full Discography.

Продавец: Интернет-магазин Ozon. Адрес: Россия, Москва, Пресненская набережная, 10. ОГРН: 1027739244741

Tracklist

A1 Silbury Sands 5:19
A2 Tiny Circle 5:10
A3 Painted Cross 3:23
A4 Morning Born 4:09
A5 Cromlech 3:17
B1 One By One From Dorney Reach 5:35
B2 Castle Keep 7:34
B3 Banks Of Sweet Dundee Pt.1 3:27
B4 Banks Of Sweet Dundee Pt.2 5:11

Notes

Includes one sided printed insert and download code.

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode (Text): 6 56605 21591 4
  • Barcode (Scanned): 656605215914

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
JAG159, JAG159CD Wolf People Steeple ‎(CD, Album, Gat) Jagjaguwar, Jagjaguwar JAG159, JAG159CD US 2010
JAG159 Wolf People Steeple ‎(CD, Album, Promo) Jagjaguwar JAG159 UK 2010
JAG159 Wolf People Steeple ‎(CD, Album, RE) Jagjaguwar JAG159 US Unknown
JAG159 Wolf People Steeple ‎(CD, Album) Jagjaguwar JAG159 UK 2010
JAG159 Wolf People Steeple ‎(CD, Album, Promo) Jagjaguwar JAG159 UK 2010

Video

Comments

Voodoogore Voodoogore
Amazing album, however this pressing is a little disappointing. Lacks depth, punch and clarity IMO.
Xmatarryto Xmatarryto
Great retro rock by this English band, it's one of those albums you find it hard to believe it's actually from 2010! Maybe some of the guitar distortion and feedback might be a bit more contemporary than the general early '70s style of this music. Much of this music is guitar-dominated, with blues, hard rock, prog, psychedelic, and English folk influences. "Silbury Sands", make no doubt about that wonderful medieval English folk vibe to it! If you heard this, you might mistake this for something from the early '70s that passed your radar scope. This song totally blew me away. I first heard this song on a Eugene, Oregon public radio station called KRVM, and I'm glad the DJ actually stated who did this song (I was thinking in my head, "I never heard of these guys. Another '70s gem I'm missing out". Wrong. It's a new band, turns out). It was that song that compelled me to buy this album and ended up not disappointed! "Tiny Circle" is in the Jethro Tull vein, helps that a guest plays flute (although it would be nice if the band had a full-time flute player). "Morning Born" starts off a bit bluesy, but there is that folk undertone, while "Cromlech" is largely guitar feedback jam and some screechy synths. "Banks of Sweet Dundee" is a two part piece, I believe it's a cover of a traditional folk song (I'm certain it's Scottish, since the song is about Dundee) and a fantastic closing piece. It's no doubt these guys not only heard Jethro Tull and many different British blues, hard rock, and prog acts, but of Fairport Convention and Steeleye Span. If any newer music acts I've heard or known about has that medieval feel going to it, it's been mainly folk groups, so it's nice to see a newer rock group that has that medieval feel. Of course, not everything Wolf People did has a medieval feel to it, but that probably isn't the point anyways. The point was the guys recreating some of that wonderful early '70s English vibe. A great discovery for me. Oh yeah, and these guys kept the album short, around 40 minutes, enough to cram on one vinyl disc (it's available on vinyl). My pet peeve is, since the 1990s (or probably the late 1980s) too many artists took advantage of the CD by cramming as much material as they can on it (about 75 minutes) when it's clear they don't have enough good material to do such, and ends up being tedious to sit through the entire thing. I'm glad that's not the case of Wolf People, besides a band trying to recreate the '70s would do best keeping the length of an average '70s album, which they did.