King Creosote

Diamond Mine

  • MOG Editorial Review

    Editors_picks_badge
    By pairing with producer Jon Hopkins on his latest, Scottish singer-songwriter Kenny Anderson has created one of the most unique folk records of the year with Diamond Mine. While the songwriting and vocals of Anderson are both intimate and soothing, it's Hopkins' production that truly makes Diamond Mine special. Layering Anderson's sparse folk sounds with vintage field recordings and touches of ambient electronica, the music of King Creosote transforms into something haunting and lost in time, a pastoral effort that's best enjoyed on quiet nights alone in the summer.
  • AMG Review of Diamond Mine

    Amg
    James Christopher Monger
    All Music Guide

    Described by singer/songwriter Kenny Anderson (aka King Creosote) as the "soundtrack to a romanticized version of a life lived in a Scottish coastal village", Diamond Mine is a seven-track collection of previously unrecorded Anderson originals that have been doused in Brian Eno-inspired soundscapes by ambient producer Jon Hopkins, littered with rural field recordings and studded with occasional flourishes of accordions and strings. Languid, pastoral, and remarkably serene (each track segues into each other like ice melting on a spring pond), Diamond Mine is so unobtrusive that it barely registers. Anderson's lilting croon, which deftly blends traditional, Scottish folk stoicism with modern, indie folk candor, sits front and center, though his delivery is so even-handed that even he blends into the foliage, but on stand-out cuts like “John Taylor’s Month Away” and “Running on Fumes,” his deft lyricism and gift for guiding a melody through such open terrain helps to keep this lovely collection of ambient folk songs from disappearing into the ether.

Be the first to post about this album!

Listen free to millions of songs

Connect using Facebook

© 2006-2012 Mog Inc. All Rights Reserved