For Folk's Sake
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Gigs
  • Interviews
  • New Bands Panel
  • News
  • Playlists
  • Records
  • About FFS
  • FFS Radio

FFS favourites

  • Laura Marling
  • Mumford & Sons
  • Peggy Sue
  • Johnny Flynn
  • Alessi's Ark
  • The Leisure Society
  • Emmy The Great
  • Slow Club
  • Noah and the Whale
  • Broadcast 2000
  • Caitlin Rose
  • First Aid Kit
  • Jeffrey Lewis
  • Darren Hayman
  • Jay Jay Pistolet
  • The Mountain Goats
  • Joni Mitchell
  • Jeremy Warmsley
  • Rachael Dadd
  • The Low Anthem
  • Cocos Lovers
  • Sea of Bees
  • Mechanical Bride
  • Anais Mitchell
  • Bon Iver
  • Laura Hocking
  • Midlake
  • Treetop Flyers
  • Eels
  • Emily & the Woods
  • She & Him
  • The Wave Pictures
  • Fleet Foxes
  • Left With Pictures
  • This is the Kit
  • Devon Sproule
  • Mountain Man
  • The Decemberists
  • Anna Calvi
  • St Vincent
  • Alela Diane
  • Matthew & the Atlas
  • Field Music
  • The Beach Boys
  • Blue Roses
  • King Creosote
  • Local Natives
  • Admiral Fallow
  • For Folk's Sake It's Christmas 2011
  • Villagers
  • Rufus Wainwright
  • Paper Aeroplanes
  • Summer Camp
  • Sam Airey
  • Pete Roe
  • Noah & the Whale
  • Sarah Blasko
  • Stealing Sheep
  • Marcus Foster
  • Ben Howard
  • The Secret Sisters
  • Wild Beasts
  • Diane Cluck
  • Stornoway
  • AVI Buffalo
  • Dan Mangan
  • Laura Veirs
  • Tunng
  • Sparrow & the Workshop
  • Iron & Wine
  • Regina Spektor
  • Sarabeth Tucek
  • Tiny Birds
  • Michael Kiwanuka
  • Dark Dark Dark
  • Joanna Newsom
  • Drever McCusker & Woomble
  • Angus and Julia Stone
  • Tune Yards
  • Herman Dune
  • Butcher Boy
  • Dan Michaelson & The Coastguards
  • Wye Oak
  • Beach House
  • The National
  • Sufjan Stevens
  • Daughter
  • Rachel Sermanni
  • Jens Lekman
  • Rozi Plain
  • Erica Buettner
  • The Unthanks
  • Nancy Elizabeth
  • Martha Wainwright
  • Willy Mason
  • Richard Hawley
  • John Grant
  • Old Crow Medicine Show
  • The Felice Brothers
  • Bright Eyes
  • Isobel Campbell & Mark Laneghan

Album: Clogs – The Creatures in the Garden of Lady Walton

21 July 2010
By Lynn Roberts

Picture 7How would you define beauty? And what would you consider beautiful? Surely the Garden of Eden represents the epitome of beauty? Humans have developed a view of it in their minds and throughout the years have struggled with weeds to recreate a little piece of it. Yet no garden is the same. From Japan to England to Morocco, the concept of Heaven on Earth is personal and circumstantial – culture, climate and physiognomy of the land are variable elements.

But what does all this have to do with Clogs? Converting a visual representation of beauty into sonic language is not an easy task. Clogs, however, have succeeded in delivering that with their new album The Creatures in the Garden of Lady Walton.

The way I see it, each track is morphed and shaped as a different creature, each one unique and independent from the others but united in unison to the group as one, as if an umbilical cord based on love and bliss would tie them all together.

From the starting tune of ‘Cocodrillo’, built on choir vocals and harmonies as if the introduction of liturgy is being read, to ‘The Owl of Love’ where Shara Worden (aka My Brightest Diamond) stretches the concept of modern operatic style singing, each tune brings along a vast array of instruments like viola, mandola, or bassoon. This might sound like a project of chaos and clutter but it is far from it. Elegant, spacy, clear, crisp and sparse are elements that spring to mind.

Even if collaborators such as Sufjan Stevens or Matt Berninger could have managed to overwhelm such pieces with their mastery, it is the purity of each work that strikes the most and the soft and velvety quality of it all.

Words:  Liane Escorza

Post to Twitter

You might also be interested in...

  • Sufjan Stevens announces UK tour
  • Christmas show on London Fields Radio
  • EP: Sufjan Stevens - All Delighted People
  • Brian's Mixtape #40: New York, New York

Tags: Clogs, My Brightest Diamond, Sufjan Stevens

  • Louis

    Bloody love this album!!!

Find us…

mailing list

Close

about the writer

Lynn is For Folk's Sake's editor. Find her on twitter @LynnFFS.

Videos


  • Slow Club - Two Cousins



  • This Is The Kit - Two Wooden Spoons



  • Dory Previn - Mythical Kings and Iguanas



  • Les Plus Beaux cover by This Is The Kit



  • Dead Man’s Bones - My Body is a Zombie for You



  • Broke by Sea of Bees



  • Dominican Rum by Larkin Grimm 



  • M. Ward - The First Time I Ran Away



  • Solo session from James Mercer of the Shins



  • Wanda Jackson’s cover of Bob Dylan’s Thunder on the Mountain


More Videos >>

your comments

  • Karen Rakos on News | Daytrotter becomes paid service, teams with Communion
  • Breezemountain on About FFS
  • katie palani on Album | Django Django – Django Django
  • Jasmine on EP: Mondesir – It Would Not Be A Rose
  • frankiee kray on Live: Otis Gibbs @ The Sheepwalk, Leytonstone
Copyright © 2012 For Folk's Sake. All Rights Reserved.
Header illustration by Elizabeth Pocock.
Contact