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Tracklisting:
1. Half Truth
2. Automobile Noise
3. Hold Your Stare
4. Won't Last Forever
5. Son of Everyone
6. Here Beside
7. Your Rescue
8. Universal Rehearsal
9. Desperate Days
10. Your Only Friend
To
listen to low quality versions of each track,
click here.
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No.15
in the 'Top Scottish Albums of All Time' poll
- Is This Music? Magazine, April 2005.
"...stunning...a
work of beauty...what took Snow Patrol's 3 albums and 4 people to accomplish,
Calamateur's Andrew Howie manages straight off with songs of desolate
beauty underpinned with a savage hope. Buy it. 8/10" -
Planet Sound
"...the
aim is true and the heart is strong in this beautiful little record. 4/5"
- The List
"Super
smashing great" - Is This
Music?
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AIRPLAY:
Played on Beat 106's The Beatscene, Cielo Liquido, Radio Magnetic's
Fallout, BBC Radio Alba's Rapal show, Lord Litter, the Jimmy Possession
show, CyberStormRadio, Radio Marabu & Alooga Radio.
Record of the
week on Radio Ceredigion's Phil Olyott show.
REVIEWS IN FULL:
Planet
Sound (Channel 4 Teletext)
"Based
in the Scottish countryside, released on the miniscule Autoclave label,
Calamateur's stunning album is a work of beauty that deserves to make
Autoclave very rich people indeed. What took Snow Patrol's 3 albums and
4 people to accomplish, Calamateur's Andrew Howie manages straight off
with songs of desolate beauty underpinned with a savage hope. Shivering,
yearning epics, as sublime as his Blue Nile cover is it's not the best
song here by any stretch. Buy it. 8/10"
The List
"Eclectic
and more than occasionally brilliant, Calamateur is the work of one Andrew
Howie, a lo-fi Scottish songwriter of no little talent. This is his first
full-length release and it is peppered with great moments, from the Mogwai-meets-New
Order of opener 'Half Truth' to the achingly fragile Sparklehorse crackle
of 'Won't Last Forever'. Throughout 'The Old Fox of 45', Howie blends
inventive instrumentation with simple melodies and a dreamy vocal to create
a record which is both atmospheric and intimate. The pace is lethargic,
but the aim is true and the heart is strong in this beautiful little record.
4/5"
Is This Music?
"It's hard to find superlatives to describe the music of Calamateur.
Not because they're hard to come by, they've simply been used up in previous
reviews! This, the first full-length album from Andrew Howie, is simply
another triumph. With Calamateur less of an Oldsolar side project now,
the stripped-down sounds are still as thrilling as ever. The album actually
starts with a full band - 'Half Truth' creates a massive sound driven
by pulsating New Order-style bass and an almost singalong chorus. There's
a cover of the Blue Nile's 'Automobile Noise' here too, with an overloaded
beatbox driving what's almost a one-man dance remix. The Blue Nile comparison
was one I'd never made before but whether it's the voice, or the at times
sparse production I can't be sure, but at times The Old Fox seems like
it might contain some long forgotten/destroyed demos from the legendary
Glasgow trio. There's a couple of songs from their previous album - the
title track from 'Son of Everyone' is given more bells and whistles in
the new production but 'Here Beside' retains the starkness of the original.
The jarring percussion on 'Your Only Friend' slowly drags an enthralling
listen to a close. I can only echo the words of Jim Bowen : "Super
smashing great"."
Diskant.net
"Calamateur's CD album, The Old Fox of '45, is a lot less strange
than Tiny Pushes Vol. 1, the only other work I've heard from them. Having
said that, it's still pretty strange, if for no other reason than the
incredible diversity of styles it encompasses. The first three tracks
take in assured and polished REM-style melodic rock, noisy and glitchy
vocal electronica and effortlessly swooning acoustic sadness. So it goes
on, swinging from style to style, but never losing the core qualities
of a confident voice, tuneful compositions and sharp, clean production.
At times that clean production threatens to sap the soul from the music
at times, but that's just the view of somebody with a slightly twisted
and illogical view of independent music."
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