Search - Richard Hawley :: Coles Corner

Coles Corner
Richard Hawley
Coles Corner
Genres: Alternative Rock, Folk, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (11) - Disc #1

Coles Corner, the follow up to previous albums on Setanta, Late Night Final (2001) and Lowedges (2003), was recorded at Yellowarch Studio in Sheffield, singer/songwriter Hawley's hometown and is a beautiful album, filled w...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Richard Hawley
Title: Coles Corner
Members Wishing: 5
Total Copies: 0
Label: Mute U.S.
Original Release Date: 1/1/2005
Re-Release Date: 9/6/2005
Genres: Alternative Rock, Folk, Pop, Rock
Styles: Indie & Lo-Fi, Singer-Songwriters, Adult Alternative
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 724596929728, 0094633510005, 094633509818

Synopsis

Album Description
Coles Corner, the follow up to previous albums on Setanta, Late Night Final (2001) and Lowedges (2003), was recorded at Yellowarch Studio in Sheffield, singer/songwriter Hawley's hometown and is a beautiful album, filled with nostalgia, emotion and romance. The album's orchestral splendour sits alongside earthy rock and roll with songs that are by turns intimate and soaring. Richard Hawley insists his mind is full only with 'confused thoughts and Guinness'. But when he sings, he does so in a voice that's deep and low, and does not lie. His merciful, wise songs tell of the heart's truths as seen in the dark, revealed by moonlight. Thom Yorke (Radiohead) says... 'Richard Hawley is all I'm listening to at the moment' and Scott Walker says... 'Richards voice is up there with the all time greats'...Mute. 2005.

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CD Reviews

A True Romantic Corner
Juan Mobili | Valley Cottage, NY USA | 09/16/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Richard Hawley -a favorite of Nancy Sinatra and Ryan Adams- may just have earned a place in the lineage of singers and songwriters who have a legitimate gift for genuine romanticism, in a tradition wide enough to include Bacharach, Scott Walker, Dion and Roy Orbison.

I know that's quite a strong statement to make, yet Hawley belongs there by his capacity to evoke a certain nostalgia and joy of true romance that is authentic and exquisitely crafted, without ever indulging in trite sentimentality.

Whether you are already familiar with Hawley or not, Coles Corner, his most accomplished album thus far, is a perfect place to take delight on this man's work. Hawley has a distinct voice tone and sense of phrasing that can conjure up the many moods of love that many of us have felt, and that those people mentioned before have so memorably expressed.

I would add that the fact that these songs are written by him may clearly contribute to the confidence and credibility of his delivery. Whether it is the longing in his voice in "Coles Corner" or "Wait For Me," which reminded me of Orbison, or the romantic pleas of "The Ocean" or "Born Under A Bad Sign," he hits the mark.

Another remarkable fact is that Hawley is not even a singer first, his guitar work -a fixture in Pulp's sound in recent years- is what he's been originally recognized for, and in this album he confirm that too. This is one of those rare cases of virtuosity without showing off, confessional without self-consciousness, gorgeous chords and subtle solos weaving seamless stories between words and melodies.

Coles Corner, it's conveyed in the liner notes, was a place where everyone in Sheffield met -specially those looking for romance- and although, many of us were never there, it would feel like a familiar place. Whatever "your corner" was called, or my memory takes me, this music could probably be how those places sounded when we looked for love."
Still up to his same tricks.
MEWZIK | 09/11/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Richard Hawley is one of the few artists that can release albums with limited variations and still hold the continuing listener fascinated by his take on "pop standards." Hawley is a pop standard and there is almost no way of getting around his passion for his contemporaries including Roy Orbison, Johnny Cash, Leonard Cohen, etc. The man has definitely nailed melody.



Cole's Corner might be his best record. Owning it a week, I can defintely say it is his most uplifting record musically - all beautiful love songs that make anyone with a soul melt like an ice cream cone in the Sahara. The Ocean is one that stands out, symphonic towards the middle on, the build up makes this one of Hawley's greatest tracks to date. Other favorite tracks offhand are "I Sleep Alone" and "Darlin Wait For Me"



As of now, Amazon does not have a sample to play from this record. As far as I am concerned, this record is a GO. If you enjoyed any of the previous records, this one will own you on impact. I hear he is touring in the US for this one as well. Keep your eyes open for dates."
Classic Late Night Songcraft
bdlove@earthlink.net | Los Angeles, California | 03/29/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This is a lovely record, one worth listening to every time it rains, as I'm doing now, here in old LA. The vocals are warm, the songs classically structured, and despite other reviews, this is NOT over produced. Yes: There are understated, very understated, strings on a few cuts--a FEW. Some reverb touches appear here and there. But that constitutes over production? In what parallel universe, what Bizzaro World? And the nonsense about this being a Country record is laughable. Which country, exactly, are we talking about? There's exactly one song that might fit that genre. And it is classic and beautiful. Sure, there are some songs that derive from the precursors to country, the old folk song styles, which were themselves derived from Celtic ballads. But "Country?" Not to offend anyone, but that just isn''t accurate.



I would say the vocal and songwriting analogy would be closer to Nick Lowe's latest work, rather than Cohen or Cash. Cash had more of an edge to his tone; Cohen doesn't have Hawley's sense of pitch, though he has a whole lot of lyrics. This is more Spartan, like Nick's "Dig My Mood," though melodically it also closes in at times on Orbison, and there is an echo of Roy in the phrasing. I might offer the caveat that the lyrics are not the kind of wordplay that makes Nick Lowe a genius, nor the vocal passion that trademarks Roy Orbison, but Nick and Roy belongs to a different pantheon entirely. What Hawley is doing here is turning cliches around and upside down, perfectly respectable in my book, and singing them with the kind of integrity that honors the emotions behind the otherwise stock imagery.



I grow weary of cricics who have never played music, never taken a music course, critics whose sole credential is that they passed Freshman English with a B, damning great records like this one just to see their own prose in print. If you like classic popular song forms, delivered with grace, skill, dignity and a sincerity that cannot be faked, then this is for you. I, for one, would love to shake the hand of the man who could make a record like this in these times of abject vapidity."