Book of Silk (album)
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| Book of Silk | ||||
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| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | August 10, 2004 | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Length | 52:03 | |||
| Label | ||||
| Producer |
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| Tin Hat Trio chronology | ||||
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Book of Silk is the fourth album of Tin Hat Trio. It is a modern chamber music work, encompassing jazz in the Django and Grappelli vein with a haunting, acoustic soundscape that might have served as a film score.
| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| All About Jazz | (positive) [1] |
| AllMusic | |
| BBC | (positive) [3] |
| Pitchfork | 7.8/10 [4] |
| PopMatters | {positive} [5] |
Reviews were uniformly positive, with critics noting the more introspective and entirely instrumental turn, save for the closing lullaby. That final track, with lyrics by Mike Coykendall, was a response to the death of guitarist Mark Orton's wife Lauren in a rafting accident.[6]
Track listing
- "The Longest Night" – 3:54 (Orton)
- "The Clandestine Adventures of Ms. Merz" – 2:20 (Burger)
- "Compay" – 4:52 (Kihlstedt)
- "Invisible Mobile " – 4:45 (Orton)
- "March of the Smallest Feet" (Kihlstedt) – 3:58 (Kihlstedt)
- "Hotel Aurora" – 3:38 (Orton)
- "Osborne Avenue" – 3:34 (Burger)
- "Elliott Carter Family" – 3:52 (Parkins / Tin Hat Trio)
- "Things That Might Have Been" – 4:26 (Burger)
- "Red Hook Stoop" – 4:48 (Burger)
- "Same Shirt, Different Day" – 1:55 (Burger)
- "Pablo Looks Back" – 1:09 (Kihlstedt)
- "Light Black from Pole to Pole" – 2:49 (Kihlstedt)
- "Lauren's Lullaby" – 4:12 (Orton)
- "Empire of Light" – 2:59 (Orton / Coykedndall [sic], arr. Orton)