Product Details
Truelove's Gutter

Truelove's Gutter
Richard Hawley

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Track Listing

  1. As The Dawn Breaks
  2. Open Up Your Door
  3. Ashes On The Fire
  4. Remorse Code
  5. Don't Get Hung Up In Your Soul
  6. Soldier On
  7. For Your Lover Give Some Time
  8. Don't You Cry

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #129 in Music
  • Released on: 2009-09-21
  • Number of discs: 1

Editorial Reviews

CD Description
As well as being universally critically acclaimed and having a Mercury Prize nomination to his name, Sheffield singer-songwriter Richard Hawley received praise from hugely influential acts including Coldplay , Radiohead and REM. On Truelove's Gutter, his sixth solo album, Hawley experiments with unusual instrumentation, with the album featuring a waterphone, megabass and cristal baschet, amongst others. These unusual sounds add even more depth to what is already Hawley's darkest album.


Customer Reviews

For this album, give some time...5
I have to say that I was very surprised when I pressed play and found that Richard Hawley's latest was a heady mixture of Drum 'n' Bass, gangsta rap and speed metal.

I am, of course, joking. If you have heard "Coles Corner", "Lady's Bridge", or any of his earlier solo albums, then you will be fairly familiar with Hawley's style and will know pretty much what to expect from "Truelove's Gutter". However, what you possibly won't have been expecting is just how brilliant his new piece of work is. It is a further collection of beautiful, gentle, romantic songs in his timeless style. Like a contemporary Nat King Cole (only better), Richard Hawley has delivered an exceptional collection of emotionally-engaging, truly beautiful ballads which may, just, be the best of his career so far. This album is also a little more understated than his last, a tad more subtle - and it works all the better because of it.

At eight songs long, you may be forgiven for thinking that this could be a short album, but with three songs at over six minutes long, this still feels like a whole, complete long-player. Besides, if you're anything like me, you prefer quality over quantity and "Truelove's Gutter" has quality in abundance. The opening song, "As The Dawn Breaks" is an exquisite introduction to the album, tender and delicate. "Open Up The Door" is simply an amazing track, gorgeously romantic and impeccably augmented by the sweeping, swelling Red Skies string section. "Ashes On The Fire", a tale of heartbreak in a slow waltz time, is both beautiful and sad at the same time. "Remorse Code", with its very punny title, starts like gently acoustic version of Lennon's "Imagine" but, at just under ten minutes in length, develops into a beguiling extended instrumental with some genuinely wonderful guitar work.

"Don't Get Hung Up In Your Soul" is simple but effective, with Hawley's rich, expressive voice pulling quite a few emotional strings over an understated acoustic guitar, saw and zither. I really do appreciate that the more unusual instruments haven't been allowed to take over the song. Often artists and groups will make too much of a highlight of an instrument if it is perceived as unconventional, but Richard hasn't been caught in that particular trap. Perhaps the highlight of the album - and it really does have to be a very special track to stand out in this distinguished crowd - is "Soldier On". It starts and builds gently, showcasing a subtle guitar solo, but when it thrillingly explodes, resplendent with rippling cymbals, bold drumkit, throbbing electric guitar and heavenly strings... well, it truly is something quite magnificent. The penultimate song, "For Your Lover Give Some Time", is a real tear-jerker - sincere, emotional and absolutely beautiful. The album finishes on "Don't You Cry" (it could easily be an instruction for those trying to get through the previous song without welling up!) which is a ten minute piece of sheer loveliness.

This is an exceptional and flawless album. It is, arguably, the best of Richard Hawley's exemplary career and I can't recommend it highly enough.

This gutter runs freely with the compassionate flow of human experience.5
One of the great singer songwriters of the age , Sheffield's Richard Hawley is also one of the great male vocalists , his voice a rich deep burr that flows like dark oak casketed molasses . Trueloves Gutter is his sixth album and is arguably his most rounded consistent album yet which coming on the back of wondrous albums like Cole's Corner & Lady's Bridge is really saying something .
This album is not a lavish and opulent as Coles Corner or as glitzy and brash as Lady's Bridge .Trueloves Gutters is more reflective and pared back , the songs more ruminative and sparse, though that's not to say it isn't without those moments of fulsome beauty that followers of Hawley will know and love. "Open Up Your Door " for instance features the Red Skies string section who for this gorgeous songs last third burst effulgently from the speakers like a cloud of iridescent feathers.
Only a true master of the song writing art could take a song as ( on the surface ) simple as "Remorse Code " which centres on a deceptively straightforward guitar refrain and over nearly ten minutes weave a beguiling and tender enchantment without the listener losing interest. Similarly "Soldier On " for half of it's nigh on seven minute just features lonely lap steel , muted percussion and Richards vocals until (for this album ) discordant guitars and keening strings rupture the bereft arrangement.
Aficionados of exotic instrumentation will be in heaven with this album. Opening track "As The Dawn Breaks " features the celestial wailing of the glass harmonica." Ashes In The Fire " uses Celeste and tremolo mandolas while the fragile diaphanous "Don't Get Hung Up On Your Soul " has Alpine concert zither and musical Saw. Not that all this instrumental exotica is a cover for dull songs. The wonderful plea for universal appreciation of those closest to us "For Your Lover Give Some Time " may feature fisherman's lyre but mostly is a truly lovely affecting song. Best of all is the epic closing track "Don't, You Cry " .I cannot differentiate the water phone or indeed the Tibetan singing bowls in the mix but the song is a glorious almost hymnal comfort blanket. The final coda is absolutely spine tingling .
I am tempted to lament the fact that while myriad turgid bland singer songwriters garner excessive radio exposure and clog up the charts a careworn genius like Richard Hawley is largely ignored. But it probably doesn't bother him too much and really we should just be grateful that music this special , this marvellously moving, exists at all. A deeply personal work I feel , Trueloves Gutter is the best thing Richard Hawley has ever done . A minor miracle. This gutter runs feely with the benefit of love , life and the compassionate flow of human experience.

Sad Songs From A Generous Heart5
'Coles Corner' (2005) and 'Lady's Bridge' (2007)
were both gorgeous albums. Mrs Wolf played 'Valentine',
from the latter, to death when I bought it for her
birthday that year. We can be a soppy pair at times !

Mr Hawley has a rare gift for writing songs which sound like
they've been around in your (and your Mum's) life for ever.
Plaintive, nostalgic, anachronistic and perfectly realised.
The unaffected honesty of his rich and warm baritone is palpable.

'True Love's Gutter' is a somewhat darker affair than the
sound-world to which we have become accustomed.
The composition which emerges from the haunting opening drone
of 'As The Dawn Breaks' does a rare and wonderful thing.
Mr Hawley makes us see and hear a small moment in time through
his ears and eyes. Dawn breaking over slate rooftops with
the early birds stretching their wings and their voices.
The strangely familiar vividly recreated and transformed.
It is a truly mesmerising experience.

The eight songs in this collection are all quite beautiful.

The slow, lilting, stripped-down country ballad 'Ashes On The Fire'
deserves a high place in the pantheon of the very best examples
of the genre. Jim Reeves would have loved it ! I love it too.

This is music for the lost and the lonely
as well as for those who have known love.

'Don't Get Hung Up In Your Soul' is arguably the single most
affecting song he has written in his career so-far.
Keep a box of tissues handy - you're likely to need them.

'Soldier On' is another highlight. The simple melody and lyrical
imagery takes time to work its magic and when the anthemic
central section bursts through the effect is utterly breathtaking.

Final track 'Don't You Cry' is an almost unbearably candid
outpouring of private emotion. The deeply personal made universal.

A stunning album. Timeless and quite perfect in every detail.

Essential.