Search - The Pearlfishers :: Up With The Larks

Up With The Larks
The Pearlfishers
Up With The Larks
Genres: Alternative Rock, Folk, International Music, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (12) - Disc #1

After an extended hiatus, Glasgow's The Pearlfishers return refreshed and improved with Up With The Larks, their sixth album for Marina Records -- the latest in a line of orch-pop masterpieces. The album is clear evidence ...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: The Pearlfishers
Title: Up With The Larks
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Marina
Original Release Date: 1/1/2007
Re-Release Date: 9/25/2007
Genres: Alternative Rock, Folk, International Music, Pop, Rock
Styles: Indie & Lo-Fi, British & Celtic Folk, Europe, Britain & Ireland
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 4047179047128

Synopsis

Album Description
After an extended hiatus, Glasgow's The Pearlfishers return refreshed and improved with Up With The Larks, their sixth album for Marina Records -- the latest in a line of orch-pop masterpieces. The album is clear evidence that main Pearlfisher David Scott continues his unique musical journey with renewed joy and verve -- and that classic songwriting and well-crafted arrangements are alive and well in 2007. Joyous title track, "Up With The Larks" starts it off, rich with lush vocal harmonies, multi-layered guitar texture, the wild jangle of a battered upright piano and exquisite melodic twists and turns. Teenage Fanclub's Norman Blake co-produced four of the album's cuts, starting with "The Bluebells" -- a beautiful, string-laden rumination on the turning of seasons. "Womack and Womack" recalls Scott's early days running with the hawks of the major music industry and "Ring The Bells For A Day" is complete with the glittering Big Star chime of massed Fender Stratocasters. The Pearlfishers' 2006 Japanese tour with BMX Bandits is thrillingly recounted in "The Umbrellas Of Shibuya," a song which references Michel Legrand's classic movie opera, The Umbrellas Of Cherbourg, but locates itself in a Tokyo rainstorm -- with neon puddles, painted in Morricone banjos, Sakamoto synth blooms, Nilsson mouth music and, most tellingly, Scott's truly unique sense of melody and structure. Another highlight is the Randy Newman-esque "With You On My Mind," which sounds like a lost Tin Pan Alley classic arranged by Van Dyke Parks. "London's In Love" could be the theme song to an as-yet-to-be-made romantic comedy blockbuster, set in the "blue black air" of Britain's capital, full of promise and heartbreak. The Pearlfishers, firmly rooted in the classic tradition of three-minute cinematics as pioneered by Webb, McCartney and Rufus Wainwright, reach a great finale with the album's closing songs: "Blue Riders On The Range," a sparkling widescreen epic (sounding like Marvin & Diana doing Ram) and the gorgeous, pastoral "I Just See The Rainbow," which ends the album on an optimistic note.
 

CD Reviews

Another Classic Album From The Masters Of Melody!
Richard S. Ledford | Provo, Utah | 10/01/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)

"It was about this time, 2 years ago that I first heard The Pearlfishers. They quickly became my favorite, contemporary pop band. This current album was released just last week. I have been eagerly awaiting its arrival. It is yet another great album from "the most melodic pop band in the world." Fans who are particularly fond of the 2001 album, Across The Milky Way will feel right at home with this new album. Up With The Larks has the reflective and more personal feel of that album. There are also some influences from the Young Picnickers album in addition to those wonderful Bacharach seventh and ninth chords, providing pure ear candy to the listener. A recurring, lyrical theme running through this album is that of having hope and lifting ourselves up (like the lark) from an increasingly difficult world. The following are some of musical and lyrical highlights from the album:



"Up With The Larks" - An upbeat number with an extremely catchy, hook-laden chorus. We all need to be

lifted to a hgher plane.



" The Bluebells"------- A beautiful, quiet ballad musically reminiscent of "Blue December" (from A Sunflower

At Christmas or The Young Picnickers). To me, the Bluebells are a metaphor for

constancy and hope in a troubling world.



"Send Me A Letter"--- Another lilting, catchy tume. In our information society, computers rule and real,

human contacts are minimized. A simple note or phone call from a significant other

can make quite a difference in our lives.



"Umbrellas Of Shibuya" The first single from the album. This is a slow triple meter song which is musically

reminiscent of "I Was A Cowboy" from Across The Milky Way. What sounds to me like

pizzicato strings adds a nice touch to the music.



"Womack And Womack" A soul-tinged song about the music industry sharks who exploit and control their

victims, the recording artists. Now I have to read up more on Bobby Womack!



"London's In Love"-----One of my favorites upon the initial hearing of the album.



"Eco Schools" ---------A song about the need for getting in touch with the flora and fauna of our good earth.

Also, the respect for the delicate balance of our planet. while there is still time.



"With You On My Mind"- The reviewer from Amazon compared this song with the music from Randy Newman (

an excellent comparison). This is a lighter song which easily could have come from

Newman's, Sail Away album. The clarinet add to the frolicsome nature of the song.



"Fighting Fire With Flowers" -Revenge is sweet for a day or two. However, in time, one feels much worse as a

result. This is a song about replacing vengeance with kindness, instead. In the

Bible (Matthew 5:44) it says, "Do good to them that hate you."



"I Just See The Rainbow" - A great endpiece about maintaining an optimistic (but not "Pollyanna") view of the

world, in spite of the surrounding darkness. It is our choice to see the good in life.

Musically, this song is similar to "Across The Milky Way."



The only thing missing from this album is an instrumental track, typically found in previous Pearlfishers albums. Although there is nothing "groundbreaking" on this new album, I still give it 5 stars because of its

impeccable craftsmanship and indelible melodies!"
Simply Great
Mark Johnson | Houston, TX USA | 03/30/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I knew nothing about the group and had no idea what to expect, but this turned out to be on of those albums you can play time and time again without getting bored. 9 times out of 10 someone hearing it for the first time has wanted to know who it is. (In a positive manner...rather than wanting to report them for aural offences.) It was so nice to buy an album and enjoy it from start to finish."