Product Details
Gloryland

Gloryland
Anonymous 4, Darol Anger, Mike Marshall

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Track Listing

  1. I'm on My Journey Home ("O Who Will Come and Go with Me"), Revival ...
  2. Address for All (William Walker); Like Noah's Weary Dove (American ...)
  3. Wayfaring Stranger, Religious Ballad
  4. Wayfaring Stranger (Instrumental Version)
  5. Where We'll Never Grow Old, Gospel Song
  6. Ecstasy ("Oh, When Shall I See Jesus"), Revival Song
  7. Wagoner's Lad, Folk Song
  8. Mercy-Seat ("From Ev'ry Stormy Wind That Blows"), Folk Hymn
  9. Return Again ("Saviour, Visit Thy Plantation"), Revival Song
  10. Lost Girl, Folk Song
  11. Palmetto ("Shall We Gather at the River"), Folk Hymn
  12. Pleading Savior ("Gently, Lord, O Gently Lead Us"), Folk Hymn
  13. Merrick ("Saviour, Visit Thy Plantation"), Revival Song
  14. Shining Shore, Gospel Song
  15. Saint's Delight ("When I Can Read My Title Clear"), Revival Song
  16. Just Over in the Gloryland, Gospel Song
  17. You Fair and Pretty Ladies, Folk Song
  18. Medley: Parting Friends; Wayfaring Stranger
  19. Green Pastures, Gospel Song

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #5683 in Music
  • Brand: Marshall
  • Released on: 2006-09-12
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: Import
  • Dimensions: .26 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Having left medieval chant and somewhat later polyphony behind and moved, musically, across the Atlantic with their last CD (American Angels), the women of Anonymous 4 are still exploring. For their move up a few centuries, their impeccable tonal purity remains, but a decidedly American twang has been added to some of the folksier, Southern mountain-based tunes and revival songs. It's as accurate and enchanting as everything else they do. Their sense of history, the when and where of the music they perform, manages to avoid academic stuffiness: this music communicates. Hymns, ballads, and revival songs make up Gloryland, and the 4 have added superb instrumentalists--Darol Anger and Mike Marshall on fiddles, mandolins, and guitars--to the mix on about half the selections. Some of the songs are begun in simple solfege* (fa, sol, la, mi, etc.) and then are sung with the actual text. Some are presented as duets or solos, and "I'm on My Journey Home" is sung by all four women; some are simple, others delightfully rich harmonically. Irresistible. --Robert Levine

* Often called "shape-note" singing because the tones were frequently notated in differently shaped symbols for teaching purposes (fa = triangle, sol = circle, etc.).


Customer Reviews

Beautiful, but may not be your cup of tea5
This is another gorgeous set of music from Anonymous 4. However, these ladies do come from the classical rather than the vernacular tradition. If you're very committed to either performing style this album may not appeal to you.

As is often the case when classically trained singers sing gospel or popular songs or broadway, pitch and clarity of tone is more important to these singers than emotional commitment (though that's not absent). If you're from the folk side, you may find the performances too formal, even to the point where "all the tunes sound alike."

From the other side, people from a classical background may find the singer's adoption of some traditional phrasing and pronunciations off-putting (though it many cases it's necessary in order for the lyrics to scan). The same problem exists when singing songs from "Guys and Dolls": Do you correct the grammar or sing the words as written?. The two instrumentalists use a rougher tone than people used to classical music may find acceptable (though early-music enthusiasts will probably feel right at home).

In addition, the four singers don't sound close-miked. Instead, the miking creates a sense of space (as if the group was singing in a church or meeting hall). If you're used to the sound created by placing the microphones close to the singer's lips (more typical in recording modern singers) as opposed to a "cathedral-like" effect (more typical of recording classical choral music) the result can be distancing.

However, when traditions collide something new happens. It's hard to predict if the result will appeal to you (or whether you even feel the combination is worth doing). I thought the result was beautiful: not a folk or gospel/bluegrass album nor an album of medieval chant but it still caught at my heart.

Just to offset the reviewer who suggested that Anonymous 4 don't like this kind of music: On this site, Marsha Genensky commented about Emmylou Harris's Angel Band CD, "This album came out not too very long after I first heard hymn singing in a tiny Primitive Baptist church in rural Arkansas. I was hooked. I'm still hooked." People's initial reaction doesn't fully describe how they grow into new things--something that might be remembered when listening to an album the first few times.

A Revelation5
I purchased this CD after hearing the music contained within performed live in concert at Royce Hall on the UCLA campus. The evening was magical and the performance was enlightening.

By enlightening I refer to the fact that Anonymous 4 has some thing to say on this album about American music; and that is, that there is a thread that connects Medieval European music to early American music. Moreover the thread is religious in origin specifically relating to church choirs plying religious tunes to the faithful through the centuries.

In short this recording is best thought of as a church choir version of local old Appalachian Hymns. Albeit, with the most heavenly voices on the planet. No screechy overweight church sopranos here.

The blend and pitch is exquisite, the choice of tunes thoughtful and the accompaniment perfectly balanced to the voices (in concert it was mentioned that this recording was supposed to be "a cappella music with instruments").

I agree with the reviewer who stated that the use of far-miking is distracting to the recording. This was not the case when the group played in concert nevertheless the women all stood about three to four feet from the microphones.

This music is definitely not African-American spiritual music. A rendering by these musicians of that music would be awful indeed.

Incredible rendition of American sacred songs, by a singer of such music5
I've been a fan of Anonymous 4 for years, and have seen them in concert. I also sing many of the songs included on the CD on a regular basis, for they come from a nineteenth century American, a cappella shaped-note songbook titled The Sacred Harp. Anonymous 4's haunting renditions turn these gritty, sometimes harsh harmonies into ethereal beauties, while taking away none of the intense essence that is Sacred Harp. A southern singer once said to me that Sacred Harp is "heavy metal music for country folk." Well, Anonymous 4 have taken that "heavy metal" and refined it into purest silver tones--silver tones that coat the common-metal core so important to this music, for it was and is music of the common people. If you enjoy shape-note music, early American music, Anonymous 4, or simply crave something different, I highly recommend this CD to you.