record reviews:
Rio en Medio
Bride of Dynamite
(Gnomonsong)
I consider myself indie, but
not this indie. Rio en Medio is the band name, but the band
really is just Danielle Stech-Homsy playing an amazing
variety of musical instruments (with help) and singing in a
dreamy, creepy, high-pitched voice. I would call this music
‘folk-new age’; she advertises herself on MySpace as
‘Folk-Electronica-Experimental’ which I would also call
correct.
It seems
the ukulele is Stech-Homsy’s main instrument; it’s heard on
almost all of the twelve songs on this album. But there are
so many other instruments, perhaps too many. Between the
echoing bells, the music box tones, and some sounds I can’t
even identify (probably the ‘bulba tarang’ that is listed on
the back of album cover), it sort of takes over the music.
There’s a lot going on, and Stech-Homsy’s voice, although
beautiful and ephemeral, sometimes gets overpowered.
Lyrics
are another thing that makes Stech-Homsy stand out. “I’ll
marry me a farmer who’s got a plot of land, or heaven is
high the apple tree, come hold a brother’s hand,” and “Here
is a story of how you came to born, how you came to be born”
both start songs that continue to keep the listener’s
attention. Track five, “Europe a Prophecy,” is a William
Blake poem, and Stech-Homsy has kind of Enya’d it, to an
extreme.
One thing
you could never say about this woman is that she lacks
creativity. Rather, she oozes it, going a little far for
conventional tastes. As the daughter of a John Cage fan, I
know that anyone who mentions him as an influence on their
MySpace page is unlikely to be featured on MTV anytime
soon. Which is fine. The world needs more dreamers.
—
Amber Henson
www.myspace.com/daniellestechhomsy
More by this
writer:
The Safes
- Well, Well, Well
The Flesh
-
Firetower
Noel Gallagher
- Live - November 9, 2006
The Tender Box -
Feature Interview
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