Sackcloth 'N' Ashes
| Not what you're looking for? Try smart custom search: |
Customer Review
You've never heard ANYTHING like this!
16 Horsepower is shattering all types ofboundries. Musically, they are one of the most original bands to comeout in the 1990s. Lyrically most people aren't willing to touch these themes with such honesty.16 Horsepower's main component is singer & multi-instrumentalist David Eugene Edwards (who also writes the lyrics.) Edwards plays banjo, guitar, accordian, hurdy-gurdy and probably some other stuff. The other members play bass & drums. These songs deal with religious conviction, temptation, wrestling with one's dark side, hope, and basically the torments of a man looking towards heaven but trapped in an earthly body. The creaky, vintage instruments Edwards uses are the perfect vehicle for his message. And with such a wide range of instrumentation the sounds are extremely varied. Everything from knee-slapping bluegrass to dark, jangly guitars to grinding accordian to old-timey country tinged rock music.This is their first full length album. The two since then...
Top to learn more
Truly Creepy Graveyard Rock
This is some seriously eerie stuff... it has a Christian bent to it (and I'll freely admit, I'm no fan of Christianity - in fact, I'm a black metal freak), but it's so full of the chill of death and so evocative that few forms of music weave a darker atmosphere than Sixteen Horsepower's. All of their albums are must-gets, but "Sackcloth" is the best. This rates up there with Skip James's blues music as music to scare the heck out of yourself with at 3 a.m. in a darkened room. The Appalachian music style blends well with backcountry rock and the darkness of the lyrics becomes deeper and more haunting with every listen. If you're into goth, blues, Type O Negative-type "metal" (although this is anything but metal), or anything else *strange* and have an open mind for things that are more than a bit different, you're gonna have a hard time pryin' this puppy out of your CD player. It's albums like this that make me glad that CD's don't wear out so...
Top to learn more
Wonderfully Creepy
I love the description that another reviewer gave this album: Appalachian Gothic. With it's "roots" instrumentation and off-kilter lyrics, Sackcloth and Ashes is the dark side of "Oh, Brother Whereart Thou", invoking a strange and brooding "South" of hidden hollows and watchful people, a place that would be familiar to William Faulkner, not to mention Mulder and Scully. The music's not religious, not in the church goin' sense, but rather plays with themes of sin and redemption, heaven and hell, good and evil, that are such a part of the American past--and present. If you're open to travelling to a strange place, you could do much worse than Sixteen Horsepower.
Top to learn more








