The Quickening
AccelerationThe Quickening " contains invaluable guidance on how to hone your inner knowledge, the intuitivity that will lead you in every instant of your being, how to prevent being drawn into another's adverse realities and building a lifetime and a you that you like. The Quickening " is about Mr. Wilde addressing you as a ghost and he gives you a kind of legs up.
Acceleration
In January, Rachel and Dan want to go to a place that'?s gonna be hott. Lately remarried and awaiting their first child, they decided to go to an Caribbean isle. Other than Rachel doesn't. Rachel realizes that as furnishings move and things go around, a waiter pleads with her to go and another customer makes her more and more uncomfortable, everything she cares about is at risk and nothing is as it seems.....
The BBC - Music - Review by Kathryn Williams
Gentle spirit with harsh corners that shows us how peace can sound so loud. She always spins her tunes elaborately and her feelings are difficult with daily lyrics, but the tenderness of her vocals has all too often been associated with tenderness, and the deepness of the water of darkness in her work is ignored.
The Quickening, her 8th record, is called after the odd stages of gestation in which a fetus begins to move in the uterus, and Williams seems intent on reminding us that her musical life is intense. Bringing along a series of odd gadgets - marmubulas, banduras, markosphons and chajons that joined the common guitar and marimbars.
"If I can go through this city, I can disappear," Williams says, while flip flops and Xylophones ring like fat notches. The story of Black Oil about a sunflower in the evenings contains both magical and menacing elements when the low frequencies of a keyboard are heard and softly echoed drum sounds, while Just a Feeling is playing with the heads of the audience, his hurdy-gurdies and sinister rhythm collide with Williams' beautiful tune and tell us how "sad tunes don't ring so mournful in the sun".
Some keys are even darker and stranger; the opening's electric crackling gives way to a dense maze of wire wires, tales of "pylons on stilettos' toes" and pictures of never waking bird life. They deserve to be part of this cannon, and we should enjoy Williams's talents - a gentle spirit with harsh lines that shows us how quiet they can sound so loud.