Monday 21 May
 
 

Kindest cut

Paperscissor with Horse Thief and So Called Savages
8:30 p.m. Friday
The Conservatory
8911 N. Western
conservatoryokc.com
607-4805
$10
05/16/2012 | Comments 0

Key master

Eliza Rickman
7 p.m. Saturday
Istvan Gallery
1218 N. Western
istvangallery.com
831-2874
free
05/16/2012 | Comments 0

K.C. and the sunshine grand

K.C. Clifford
8 p.m. Friday-Saturday
The Blue Door
2805 N. McKinley
bluedoorokc.com
524-0738
$15-$20
05/16/2012 | Comments 0

David lean

David Ramirez and Matthew Mayfield with Justin Joslin and Braylon Warr
8 p.m Wednesday, May 23
VZD’s Restaurant & Club
4200 N. Western
vzds.com
524-4203
05/16/2012 | Comments 0

Chug along

Last Train Home
7 p.m. Friday
The Blue Door
2805 N. McKinley
bluedoorokc.com
524-0738
$15-$20

05/09/2012 | Comments 0
Home · Articles · CDs · Folk · Zach Winters — They Were Longing...
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Zach Winters — They Were Longing For a Better Country


Matt Carney October 19th, 2011  

Redemption, peace, fate and desire. Banjos, harmonicas and handclaps. God and man. Stillness.

No, Mumford & Sons hasn’t released their second album yet. Norman singer/songwriter Zach Winters’ fourth LP, “They Were Longing for a Better Country,” blends all the aforementioned into a haunting, but peaceful work that’s more personally convicting and beautifully recorded than what you’ll typically find in the local coffee shop after hours. 

“Country” is rich with delicate, acoustic interludes (I especially enjoyed “While You’re Making Other Plans”) and Winters’ voice, which performs harmonic acrobatics while whispering pastoral and fatherly wisdom.

“And the Little Child” is the centerpiece, chugging along on a fat acoustic bassline provided by brother Alex, as it pulls along a load of biblical symbolism. A midway breakdown transplants the listener to a desert, where the singer’s voice surrounds him as the “fear of the Lord.” It’s Christian music for Christians who seek the presence of God, not for those who just talk about it.

Soon after comes the other standout, the lovely ballad “Small Boat,” which ebbs and flows like the tide implied by the title. Winters’ voice echoes so murkily with the minor piano keys that the track couldn’t have been recorded anywhere but the bottom of the ocean.

What a terrific effort from a local talent. Buy it at zachwintersmusic.com. —Matt Carney

 
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