Search - Little Wings :: Magic Wand

Magic Wand
Little Wings
Magic Wand
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (12) - Disc #1

Little Wings is a diverse musical palette Kyle Field uses to paint stories with sound. The personnel in Little Wings have been in flux through both the Wonder and Light Green Leaves trilogies and last year?s Harvest Joy. S...  more »

     

CD Details

All Artists: Little Wings
Title: Magic Wand
Members Wishing: 2
Total Copies: 0
Label: Ahornfelder
Original Release Date: 1/1/2008
Re-Release Date: 2/19/2008
Album Type: Import
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
Style: Indie & Lo-Fi
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 880918066615

Synopsis

Album Description
Little Wings is a diverse musical palette Kyle Field uses to paint stories with sound. The personnel in Little Wings have been in flux through both the Wonder and Light Green Leaves trilogies and last year?s Harvest Joy. Says Field, "Magic Wand is about trusting to get it right the first time (pointing your magic wand with total faith and projection and focus, sending light in this way). Magic Wand attempts a refined high realism, lyrically and musically, that I have never attempted with the voice." For this album, Field worked with producer Calvin Johnson at Dub Narcotic Studio in Olympia, recruiting a wide variety of other artists, both musical and visual, who came and went throughout the week Magic Wand was recorded: Phil Elverum, Bobby Birdman, Lee Baggett, Genevieve Elverum, Miggy Littleton and more. This results in the child artist deep inside Kyle Field emerging to pick up a pen with his original devotion and purpose. The words "magic wand" become a synonym for a pen, a microphone, a peace pipe, a cigarette and more. This is Little Wings? sixth album, funneling Field?s wood grain/crystal shards through the latest wave of Big Sur revivalism.

Similar CDs

 

CD Reviews

Little Wings just keeps getting better
Craig Clarke | New England | 08/18/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I must say that, after the past trilogies of Kyle Field's Little Wings incarnation -- the Wonder Trilogy consisting of Wonder City, Discover Worlds of Wonder, and Wonderue; and Light Green Leaves in its triumvirate of overlapping-but-different LP, CD, and cassette versions -- that the idea of him releasing a single album with one theme can't help but be ... well .. disappointing, at least on the surface. Luckily, the album isn't.



This is the next step in the artistic development of Little Wings. Mellow, smooth, and unabashedly self-referential (can we assume that indie stardom has gone to his head?), Magic Wand offers more of what we've come to expect from Kyle and friends, and manages to do it better than ever before.



Given that Field refers to songs on Light Green Leaves not once, but four times in three different tracks, it's probably not entirely coincidental that my favorite songs from that album are connected to my favorite songs from this one. The opening "Everybody" starting things off with a mention of "The Way I Deux." "Next Time" is referenced in "Uncle Kyle Says," as is "Look at What the Light Did Now," which also pops up in "So What?"



That last song is piano jazz reminiscent of Jason Anderson's "Pen Pals" (from New England), with a syncopated drum added for good measure. An ode to apathy, it contains lyrics like "Another girl says 'So what?' when her best friend comes home with a tan" and "I record a song and someone says 'So what? It sounds like s**t'" but remains upbeat and positive through the music.



The opening of "Uncle Kyle Says" (my other favorite) will ring true with anyone who has ever tried to put reluctant children to bed. A sample lyric showcases its easygoing-yet-insistent nature:



When Uncle Kyle says it's time to go to bed

It's time to brush your teeth now, too

You better go to bed, you better brush your teeth

You better not ask for food.



When Uncle Kyle says it's time to hit the hay

Don't carry on the way you do

Tell the bedbugs no

Let the sweet dreams grow

In your head, like Uncle Kyle said.



Then there's that "Next Time" reference that, to me, capitalizes on the sense of fun that pervades the album:



So when Uncle Kyle says, "Hey, order in the court,"

Rap a gavel like the "Next Time" dude.



Elsewhere, "Whale Mountain" is particularly evocative, offering a striking portrait of its subject and the percussion on "Hanta Yo Three" (download) includes tongue-clicking, not entirely inappropriate for a song with a natural theme.



Predictable in its tendency to be unpredictable, Magic Wand offers two songs ("Sing Wide" and "Laugh Now") that would not sound at all out of place on Edie Brickell and New Bohemians' debut album Shooting Rubber Bands at the Stars and the title track sounds like a combination of early Cowboy Junkies and Sea Change-era Beck. But after dancing around different styles throughout the album, Field saves the most stripped-down (in more than one way) song -- "Darkened Car" -- for last. Moody and not a little disturbing, it's also -- like Magic Wand itself -- one of Little Wings' maturest efforts yet."