Pillowfish - prog folk

Pillowfish News

Download and CD Shop Now on Bandcamp

February 22nd, 2010

We’ve moved all of our music hosting, downloads and CD sales to bandcamp.com, so that’s where you’ll find our download shop from now on.

At the moment we have all our material available as digital downloads (including free downloads of singles Whisky in the Dark and The Ice Sculptor), plus you can buy physical copies of our acoustic album, Common Knowledge. What’s more, you get an automatic download when you buy a physical CD, so you don’t have to wait for it to arrive before you can listen.

Also, it’s possible to listen to every track all the way through in preview quality, before you download. You can even share the music-listening widgets (such as those embedded on our homepage) easily in various social media and blogging sites – just click the ‘Share’ button at the bottom of each track for options to decorate your blog, website or Facebook feed with a Pillowfish track.

 

New studio version of ‘The Ice Sculptor’ – Download Track

December 29th, 2009

The Ice Sculptor

We’ve recorded a new version of ‘The Ice Sculptor’ – one of the songs from our acoustic first album Common Knowledge. The new track has an expanded studio arrangement – rather than just being a rendition of what we can perform live in the duo – and a reworked lyric.

The new version of the song was recorded as a experiment in trying out new equipment and techniques prior to recording the next album.

We’re offering the full track as a high quality download in a variety of formats, which you can burn to CD or play from your computer or portable audio device. To download it, visit our download and CD shop. Like all our downloads, this is available on a pay-what-you-like basis – there is no minimum.

Lyric Reworking

Helen: “The original version of this song featured an ice sculptor carving a figurine of an angel from ice, but after performing the song for some time I became uncomfortable with the fact that it was somewhat twee, and also that the song could possibly be misconstrued as having religious undertones.

“The theme of the song is impermanence, and I felt that the image of an angel – an immortal – contradicted this idea. So, in the new version, the figures that the sculptor is carving have been changed to isotopes of carbon. The ‘isotopes’ lyric was initially tried out on a whim, but actually I feel this relates better to the idea of mortality and decay. Now the song is centred around the radioactive decay of carbon-14, and the impermanence of carbon-based lifeforms.

“It still remains, as it was originally intended to be, a defence of and tribute to all practitioners of performance art.”

You can read the reworked lyric here.

Cover Art

The cover picture is a 3D virtual model of a fanstasy-ice-sculpture carbon-14 atom in the process of decaying, which was built by Tom in the virtual world Second Life during an extended moment of extreme geekiness. In this instance the beta particle being emitted by the nucleus is depicted by a blue dragonfly, and all the other particles have dragonflies on them too, which may not strictly be atomically correct.

 

“Seven Stolen Stars” on Proper’s Folk Rising 2 Compilation

January 29th, 2009

Folk Rising 2 - Released Monday 7th JulyOur track Seven Stolen Stars is included on the Folk Rising 2 compilation of folk and folk-influenced acts signed to Proper Distribution. Since almost the entire English folk scene (and beyond) is distributed through Proper, there’s quite a selection. The CD is to be released on 7 July.

More information is available on the Proper Distribution website.

 

Live

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Common Knowledge CD album - £10 + £1 p&p

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