PRICE:
$17.00
IN STOCK
ARTIST
TITLE
Taken By The Dream
FORMAT
CD

LABEL
CATALOG #
GR 991CD GR 991CD
GENRE
RELEASE DATE
4/26/2019

Following Hugo Race's recent excursions into world electronica -- Dirtmusic's Bu Bir Ruya (GB 055CD/LP, 2018) and Gemini 4 -- meets 21st century blues -- John Lee Hooker's World Today (2017) -- the former Bad Seed is back with a new album of modern folk songs. Hugo Race Fatalists' Taken By The Dream is a cinematic tapestry of complex emotional states illuminated by mercurial moments of dazzling light and grace. Recorded in Sicily in collaboration with Diego Sapignoli and Francesco Giampaoli from one of Italy's most popular and influential instrumental bands, Sacri Cuori, studio guests include Chris Brokaw (Lemonheads, Come, Codeine), Bryan Colechin (The True Spirit), violinist Vicki Brown (Calexico), New Zealand pop songstress Lisa Crawley, Giovanni Ferrario (Scisma, Micevice), and cameo appearances from Race's long-time musical partner Michelangelo Russo. Following Hugo's 2010 solo album, Fatalists, a unique mix of alt-country and electronica recorded in Italy with Sacri Cuori, the band took on the name of Fatalists and toured extensively in Italy, consolidating their unique sound on 2012's We Never Had Control. A five-track EP Orphans followed in 2014, along with tours in greater Europe and Australia. In 2016 Hugo Race Fatalists' released 24 Hours to Nowhere to international critical acclaim: "24 Hours from Nowhereis darker than the darkest Walkabouts song, it's a scorched earth vision... The songs sound magnificent, the instruments like blocks of grey tones, beautifully picked out, with plenty of room between them... Overall this is a dark Gothic piece that skillfully calls on Lee Hazelwood and Ennio Morricone to create a suite of songs that is beautifully constructed and breathlessly cinematic." --David Cowling, Americana UK "In Australia, Hugo Race is present not only with his music which speaks for itself, but also with a book he has recently published, Road Series, an autobiographical road novel. In it, he processes his travel experiences of the past 30 years -- a mixture of Bruce Chatwin and Jack Kerouac. But despite the unexpected literary success, Hugo Race continues to make music. He needs songwriting as the air we breathe, he says." --Carsten Beyer, Deutschlandradio Kultur