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The Julius Work Calendar
 
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The Julius Work Calendar

Rhubarb Audio CD
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Music

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Biography

Rhubarb is the pseudonym for Edinburgh musician Richard Haswell who has already self-released 20 albums to date, the latest being the widely-acclaimed Julius Work Calendar in 2007 and If I Could Only Make It Through January in 2008.

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Product details

  • Audio CD (2 Nov 2007)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Rhubarb music
  • ASIN: B000W0DGJU
  • Other Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 403,020 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         

Samples
Song Title Time Price
Listen  1. Forest Fear 4:44£0.89
Listen  2. Kill It At Birth 5:00£0.89
Listen  3. Too Close to See 5:17£0.89
Listen  4. Perfect Parallel 3:34£0.89
Listen  5. Brick By Brick 3:31£0.89
Listen  6. Boiler Room 2:28£0.89
Listen  7. 52nd State 5:56£0.89
Listen  8. Lanterns 5:48£0.89
Listen  9. As If 3:05£0.89
Listen10. The Banks of Claudy 7:36£0.89


Product Description

Review

After self-releasing a score of albums, Richard Haswell took some time out - three years to be precise - to write the highly anticipated 'The Julius Work Calendar' under well-worn moniker Rhubarb. For those who are aware of Edinburgh based songwriter, the complex character expressed in this album will come as little surprise, but for those who have never heard of Rhubarb, the album may trace an uncomfortable journey that the ear is unprepared for. It isn't that the ten tracks are noise and discord; rather, the depth of sadness burrowing inward from each song demands an attention most are not willing to give. Much like the acidic Bill Callahan in his 'Julius Caesar' or 'Wild Love' days, 'The Julius Work Calendar' seems intended to alienate the listener by forcing him or her to face that which is uncomfortable to face. Each song is lyrically highly personal, with sharp cuts of sound, and is accompanied by a particular brand of intimacy, though the intimacy of a murderer not a lover. The hypnotic beat that starts 'Forest Fear', and breaks open to a trash can rampage, resembles the pulse of a criminal building up to his moment of passion, while the steely acoustic guitar riff stabs sharply into the darkness emanated by Haswell's distorted voice. Like fellow sonic-masochist Callahan, Haswell often hides behind layers of effects, only coming to the fore in moments of warmth or confidence - like in 'Too Close To See' where the disarming gentleness of his voice is eventually corroded by a metallic reverb. The chorus becomes uplifting only when considered against the backdrop of ominous tones. The familiar sounds instruments should make Haswell ignores; instruments are shredded, extended to their breaking point. Acoustic guitars become angular when they are not distorted, and jagged violins do not croon as they normally do - they screech like a dying animal. Haswell uses his instruments to confuse and amplify the failure of our expectations - so when they do play nice and fuzzy the results are glorious, like rain in a desert. There are some sunny spells that light up the landscape too, like in 'As If' and 'Perfect Parallel'. Although probably not the masterpiece his fans had hoped for, Rhubarb has created a subtle record with the atmosphere of a storm. It is chaotic and brooding with flashes of incredible brilliance and loud bangs. The songs buffet the listener from one emotion to another, and it is all in the music, which creates a magical experience. A listener should be touched whilst in its presence, even if one is unsure of why. --Click Music

The Julius Work Calendar is the new album from Edinburgh based musician Richard Haswell. This album, like all his previous efforts, has been recorded pretty much by himself on either 4 track, or on his laptop, which considering the range of sounds which he has created is a very impressive feat. On the opening song Forest Fear he manages to evoke memories of Dark Side of the Moon era Pink Floyd, with the rest of the album tending more towards the twisted folk of King Creosote and the more experimental side of James Yorkston. The album s fourth track is Perfect Parallel a bruised ballad, which is followed by Brick By Brick which, with its distorted and cracked vocals is the best track on the album. After this, the album takes a welcome instrumental break with Boiler Room , as if perfectly placed to let Haswell s voice have a rest after Brick By Brick . The highlights from the remainder of the album are 52nd State which sounds a little bit like Rachel Steven s Some Girls (but in a good way), and Lanterns which is heavily influenced by acoustic Led Zeppelin. In short, this is one of the best and most varied albums that I have heard all year. --Is This Music

Rhubarb is Britain's own enduring eccentric song-writer making his own style of acoustic indie-pop song over a number of albums. Earlier this year he bought his 'Introduction To' album to our service and here we have his most recent set. Richard Haswell (aka Rhubarb) has a developing aspect of folk music to his releases which is evident on this release which the artist took three years to make. Many reviewers are discovering Rhubarb for the first time and wondering how he can have passed us all by for so many years. When writing about his last release at the service we wrote a description that we have seen widely used since and so we say it again, to spread the word about this singular artist. "There is so much to enjoy, his music feels constantly as though it will fall apart but it never does. Instead we are charmed and often moved by his outsider view, the eccentric perspective of the duffel coated geek with only one lens in his glasses. So it's not purely folk? Where else is he going to go? Let's welcome him in." We've welcomed him in last time, now let's make him a tea. --Woven Wheat Whsipers

CD Description

The long-awaited new album from Rhubarb, 3 years in the making. 10 extraordinarily strong tracks featuring a host of guest musicians - this is the masterpiece Richard Haswell has promised us for the past decade. Highly recommended.

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By Mr. Stuart Bruce TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Audio CD
I was given this album as a present so I came to it 'cold' with no idea what to expect. I was intrigued by it. It's a blend of more conventional male 'singer-songwriter' material, but with a new freshness in the production department- delving into distortion, ambient interludes, sound effects and more experimental material. It's pretty complex and while it's not 'easy listening' it's definitely worthwhile listening.

There is a home-made feel to some of the album, particularly the quality of the vocal recording which lets down some of the rest of the production. Despite this though you should check it out.

Normally I'd try and compare a CD to other similar-sounding albums to give you an idea what to expect, but I can't think what to suggest... but you've obviously ended up on this page for a reason, and if that's a good reason then it's worth a shot.
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Magical Music 20 Mar 2010
By TWOLFF
Format:Audio CD
This happens rarely - you have a CD playing in your car while having your wife and two seventeen + blokes sitting beside you and travelling to the sunday football under 18s game - and the boys say: 'what's there playing - sounds great ...' (one heavy metal, one Radio 1 fan) while your wife says 'this sounds really nice - like in the old times.

This wraps up what I think about Rhubard's music myself - it is of timeless quality and creeps into your ears and mind - you just have to listen to it... and having played it to many people I have not heard anyone who was not impressed by it. Although it sounds sometimes like psychedelic folk music from the late 60s / early seventies with a lot of psychedelic edges each song has a very special note and it is something very special - so certainly simple,peaceful and melodic is one think which always comes to my mind, but never dull or boring. If people still know a band called Tractor - some stuff on this CD sounds reminded me of Tractor without the amps. The simple orchestration and the use of his voice within his limits is always perfectly balanced - no miss on this CD - even some more experimental slightly progressive bits are not destroying the overall balance.

So ... magical acoustic & careful selected electronics bridging the gap between space rock and psychedelic folk - you miss something if you do not listen to Rhubarb.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  1 review
Astounding!! Record of the year. 6 Nov 2007
By Vinylhead - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Audio CD
"20 self-released Cds into his career, he comes up with this, his masterpiece! Last year's essential Introduction to Rhubarb only hinted at the greatness on offer here - a real hidden national treasure"
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