| フォーマット | CDアルバム |
| 発売日 | 2005年05月14日 |
| 国内/輸入 | 輸入 |
| レーベル | Warner Bros. |
| 構成数 | 1 |
| パッケージ仕様 | - |
| 規格品番 | 248779 |
| SKU | 093624877929 |
構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:43:03
Personnel: Earl (piano, percussion); Earl (vocals); Dave Scher, Claydes Smith (pedal steel guitar); Chris Wood , Eric Gorfain, Daphne Chen, Melissa Reiner (violin); David Sage, Leah Katz (viola); Richard Dodd, John Krovoza (cello); Patrick Warren (saxophone, piano, Fender Rhodes piano, harmonium, pump organ, Wurlitzer organ, chamberlin); Jon Brion (organ); Ben Kenney (bass instrument); Mike Einziger (guitar, 12-string guitar); Wendy Melvoin (guitar, dulcimer, oud); Tony Berg (guitar, dulcimer, tamboura, piano); David Baerwald (guitar); Michael Penn (acoustic guitar); Mitchell Froom (keyboards); Pete Thomas (drums, percussion); Jose Antonio Pasillas II (drums).
Audio Mixer: Clif Norrell.
Photographer: Vava Ribeiro.
Kate Earl's debut has an understated glow about it, a quiet allure that comes from a bright, almost naively honest young singer working with a crew of sure-handed musicians. Earl migrated to Los Angeles from Chugiak, AK. That's near Anchorage. But she sounds at home in front of a California band that includes (at various points) Mitchell Froom, Michael Penn, Wendy Melvoin, members of Incubus, Dave Scher (Beachwood Sparks), and sound artist/pedal steel manipulator Chas Smith. Earl's vocals are throaty, expressive, and pristinely clear. She's a less strident Joss Stone over the winking strings of "Silence," but delicate and half-asleep on "Free," where Scher's pedal steel and the pump organ of Patrick Warren add hundreds of style points. Earl's songwriting on Fate Is the Hunter has some gravity -- she's a girl just trying to make her way in the world, or a lover, or lost thoughts and memories where darkness whispers amidst the happiness. But it's really her unadorned vocal over Hunter's finely rendered instrumentation that makes the record shimmer like an L.A. sunset. "Cry Sometimes" is a gorgeous cut, a slice of soft rock that goes back to Carly Simon or Rickie Lee Jones, and "Sweet Sixteen" is breezy with brushed acoustic strings and a great, vocal saxophone in a supporting role. "When You're Older" feels like the single -- it could be Tegan & Sara. That's not wrong, but it doesn't quite fit with tracks like the ambitious, steadily building "Anything" or the touching Alaska diary "Come This Far." That's OK. For a debut, Fate Is the Hunter hits its marks wonderfully, offering grace, gravity, simplicity, and well-played, well-placed instrumentation. ~ Johnny Loftus
録音 : ステレオ (Studio)
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