Search - Half-Handed Cloud :: We Haven't Just Been Told We Have Been Loved

We Haven't Just Been Told We Have Been Loved
Half-Handed Cloud
We Haven't Just Been Told We Have Been Loved
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (24) - Disc #1


     
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CD Details

All Artists: Half-Handed Cloud
Title: We Haven't Just Been Told We Have Been Loved
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Asthmatic Kitty
Original Release Date: 1/1/2002
Re-Release Date: 10/1/2002
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
Styles: Indie & Lo-Fi, Progressive, Progressive Rock
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 656605929828
 

CD Reviews

We've been loved!
E. A Solinas | MD USA | 03/06/2006
(4 out of 5 stars)

"In the loosest sense, Half-Handed Cloud is Christian music.



No, not generic pop-rock that tells you to love Jesus or else. Instead, "We Haven't Just Been Told, We've Been Loved" lives up to its title -- it's charming, joyous, energetic music that is equal parts psychedelica and circus folk. And yes, those twee little songs are centered on the Bible.



The songs are also very short -- the longest is less than three minutes long, and the shortest is only twenty-six seconds long. But from the start, it's a charming experience: John Ringhofer sings cheerily over a clashing piano-pop melody and the odd burst of kazoo. "Not because you were exhausted/but because of the perfected/finished work of your creation..."



But if you listen carefully, you'll hear a bit of a spiritual odyssey woven into the album -- Ringhofer describes his own past problems and arrogance, and adds quizzically, "I am humiliated/and I am ashamed/disgrace, dishonor/it makes me wonder why you keep on waiting."



Not all the songs are so personal -- some of them are just cheery, optimistic little pop songs about the Biblical Samuel, absentmindedly sowing seeds, kings and princes, and needing new pairs of glasses. The final song has the weirdest lyrics -- "I was balding like a berry/but my knees were always hairy..." Hello, oddball songwriting! It's not Ringhofer's most charming, nor his most imaginative, but it's weird and cheery enough to be enchanting.



As the labelmate to Sufjan Stevens, Ringhofer has actually done something difficult -- he's created religious pop that isn't going to make the non-religious run for the hills. Instead, it's just warm, cuddly music that happens to have religious lyrics, with no preaching and more reflections on being loved and loving.



Vocally, Ringhofer is a dead ringer for Wayne Coyne -- he's got that off-key thing down. And it works very well with his music, which tends to be either acoustic guitar or some very fast piano; he also adds a carnival sound with xylophones, kazoos, and the odd cash register sound. And, of course, bursts of horns and the odd bit of echo effect.



Half-Handed Cloud is in their second-best shape here, with an unusual concept album wrapped up in weird pop melodies. Why can't there be more music like this album?"
Brilliant, eclectic music
Phesto | OKC, OK | 09/26/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"On the second listen of this album, I fell in love with it. Overflowing with a wide variety of vocal and instumental melodies, it's like someone took the best minutiae from a thousand pop, folk, and Christian songs and compressed them into one record. If you're someone who dislikes musical repetition, then you certainly shouldn't miss this: feel-good music that's bursting at the seams with creativity and imagination. I also find it to be subtly humorous in spots; how else can you describe an artist imporing you at the start of a song to "Please listen", immediately following this with some playful kazoo-ing. Very highly recommended."
Precocious child draws map of the Faith... in crayon.
Joshua Neds-Fox | Columbus, OH United States | 08/20/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Actually, this is very adult music-- think Brian Wilson meets Daniel Johnson-- made by one John Ringhofer, a man with a particular vision and a singular (read: childlike) voice. But he approaches his music like a child, and like a child his imagination and energy abound in both music and lyrics. Half-Handed Cloud's approach to songwriting-- whimsical and weighty at the same time, and above all brief-- is jarring at first, and his eclectic instrumentation amplifies the apparent eccentricity. But a close listen to this album reveals it to be a towering accomplishment, inventive and layered. And for Christians: know that this is a re-introduction to the Lord by a musician who knows how to communicate his childlike faith-- that is, his music will make you wide-eyed and innocent again."