Catie Curtis - Long Night Moon

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Album Details

Title: Long Night Moon
Artist: Catie Curtis
Release Date: 8/29/2006
Label: Compass
UPC: 766397443621
Genre: Folk
Style: Contemporary Folk
Moods: Plaintive, Bittersweet, Earnest, Intimate, Literate, Reflective
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 7
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Find You Now
  2. Strange
  3. Water and Stone
  4. It's a Wonder
  5. Rope Swings and Avalanches
  6. People Look Around
  7. Innocent
  8. Passing Through
  9. Hey California
  10. New Flowers
  11. Hard Time with Goodbyes
  12. Long Night Moon

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2006CDCompass4436

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

Catie Curtis has hit two extremes on Long Night Moon: several tracks explore her feelings as the new mother of two adopted little girls, while one of the songs, "People Look Around," deals with politics and social issues on a nearly global scale. Not surprisingly, that track is the biggest and most anthemic one on the album, and also the least effective -- even as it gets your dander up and makes you feel like part of a right-thinking community, it tacitly reminds you that songs have much more power to make people feel good about themselves that they do to change the world. The real payoff comes from the songs whose frames of reference match their spheres of impact: on the patient but sweetly longing title track, Curtis waits for the arrival of her daughter; on the sharply observed "Rope Swings and Avalanches," she makes the common-sense observation that "They say if it's love you can work it out/That's the cruelest lie"; and on "Strange" she expresses a strangely joyful sort of romantic confusion over a complex and beautiful arrangement consisting of a fractured string bassline and overlapping layers of organ, mandolin, and dulcimer. "Water and Stone" is winningly simple and direct, and with "Hey California," she wryly expounds on the relative virtues of her Boston home. (If one of the women of Laurel Canyon chooses to write a response, maybe it will initiate a neo-folk East Coast/West Coast spat like the one that raged in the hip-hop communities for years -- could be fun.) All in all, this is one of Curtis' most satisfying albums, and that's saying something. Highly recommended. ~ Rick Anderson, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Ben WischMixing
Catie CurtisVocals, Lap Steel Guitar, Guitar (Acoustic)
Chris RivalEngineer
Chris TrapperVocal Harmony
Elizabeth SteenPiano
Erin McKeownVocal Harmony
John JenningsGuitar (Electric)
John SandsDrums
Kelly DavidsonPhotography
Kevin BarryGuitar (Electric), Guitar (Acoustic), Lap Steel Guitar, Bass (Electric), Slide Guitar, Guitar (Nylon String)
Kris DelmhorstVocal Harmony, Vocals (Background)
Lorne EntressAudio Production, Zither, Percussion, Orchestra Bells, Organ (Hammond), Producer, Various, Wurlitzer, Dulcimer, Drum Programming, Engineer, Mandolin, Accordion
Marc DonahueMastering
Mark ErelliHi String Guitar, Guitar (Acoustic), Vocal Harmony, Guitar (Baritone), Guitar (Electric)
Mary Chapin CarpenterVocal Harmony, Vocals
Meghan DewarArt Direction
Michael RivardBass (Electric), Bass (Acoustic)
Mike RivardGuitar (Bass), Bass (Upright)