Seanan McGuire : Stars Fall Home

Stars Fall Home

by Seanan McGuire

© Copyright-Seanan McGuire

This richly-produced album of folky, quirky, lyric-based filk possess a lot of unexpected twists, turns, and occasional chainsaws.

  Title Price
clip 1. Follow Me Down
clip 2. Paper Moon
clip 3. This Is My Town
clip 4. Dorothy
clip 5. River Lies
clip 6. Four-Color Love
clip 7. In This Sea
clip 8. Sycamore Tree
clip 9. Take Advantage of Me
clip 10. Country Song
clip 11. Downhome Aphrodite
clip 12. Continental Divide
clip 13. Evil Laugh
clip 14. Earthquake Weather
clip 15. Still Catch the Tide
clip 16. Pretty Little Dead Girl

Album Info

  • Genre: Folk: Folk-Rock
  • Release Date: 2007

Album Notes

Despite being located primarily in Northern California, Seanan manages to be seen all over North America, thus proving that she really has no concept of what it means to stay home. She got into filk music in her teens, and never bothered to get out of it, although she continued cheerfully expanding her interests, doing such silly things as "selling several novels" and "starting a podcast." It is widely believed that she doesn't actually sleep, or that she is, in fact, an alien plant person from a small planet near Betelgeuse.

As a singer and songwriter, Seanan takes inspiration in everything she can find, from horror movies and comic books to folklore and that weird plant that's doing its damnedest to pull down the wall in her back garden. In 2006, she decided to produce an album, and promptly drafted friends from all over the world to assist her in this endeavor. (Seriously. Tracks for this album were recorded everywhere from California to the United Kingdom. It's awesome.) The result was released in 2007, and fully remastered, remixed, and even substantially re-rerecorded in 2013, with all new material and a whole new sound.

In her spare time, Seanan works as a QA analyst, writes buckets of poetry, and drives her agent batty by providing a constant stream of new novels to deal with. Again, she doesn't sleep. She is, however, planning to eventually conquer the planet. Because it would be fun.

Reviews

Fantastic
                                
If you buy one cd today, it should be this one. With a variety of styles and consistantly amazing music, this cd is made to bring enjoyment. The lyrics will capture you and the music will move you. There's no way I could pick a personal favourite on this album, it's all fantastic.
                                
To suggest that Seanan McGuire is prolific is to hint that the sea is a trifle wide or that the Grand Canyon is slightly scenic. She eats, sleeps, and breathes words, and churns out stories, poems and songs as easily as walking. And she walks a lot. Until recently, however, the best way to hear one of her many songs was to follow her discreetly through the streets of San Francisco, listening for her dulcet tones wandering purposefully to and fro at a brisk walk. It finally occurred to her that if enough people adopted this strategy, the sidewalks were going to get awfully crowded, so she recorded a CD of her music that you can listen to anywhere. And it was well worth the wait. Stars Fall Home is actually McGuire's second album. The first, Pretty Little Dead Girl, was an fortunate accident: a live recording that was good enough to turn into a CD. Being a live show, it featured simpler arrangements suited for the live stage, relying mostly on a single guitar and McGuire's own lyric voice. In the studio, however, she was free to be more ambitious, and that ambition shows in the lush, complex musical arrangements. A few of the songs from the live album are reprised here. The centrepiece of the album once again is the incredible "Sycamore Tree", a tale of love and loss with a three-part vocal intertwine that sounds impossible. "River Lies", a song that was possibly one of the weaker songs on the live album, is astoundingly poignant; Steve Macdonald's vocals inject a real sense of ache into the duet, while Gwen Knighton's harp runs beneath the pair like running water. And "Pretty Little Dead Girl", a doo-wop ghost story, is still far more fun than it has any right to be. Most of this album is new material, though, and it starts high and never lets you down. The gentle gait of Kristoph Klover's guitar in "Paper Moon" sets a perfect foundation for Amy McNally's astounding fiddle , and a vocal that manages to be both reassuring and defiant at the same time. "Dorothy" is a song inspired by the comic book of the same name, which in turn was inspired by L. Frank Baum's The Wizard of Oz, and covers some ground that wasn't touched on in the original novels. Here, again, the musical arrangement provides perfect support for the desperate, searching vocals. And "Four Color Love", a sultry torch song with an extended comic book metaphor you'll just have to hear to believe, features a bluesy Jeff Bohnhoff guitar solo that sounds like it wandered into the studio from a Pink Floyd session. Love, loss, and separation are frequent themes in the songs on this album, and nowhere is that more pointed than the single cover McGuire chose to include, Talis Kimberly's haunting selkie song, "Still Catch the Tide". You can almost hear the waves crashing in the background as she plaintively sings "I never thought that I could hold you forever / Always knew deep down you'd have to go home." In her own "Follow Me Down", which leads off the album, she sings of two lovers kept apart by their own intrinsic nature. And of course, again, there's the masterful "Sycamore Tree", a track so amazing that I'm going to break my own rules and mention it twice. "Sarah Tapper loves Harry Marshall / That's a lie, and that's a fact / But I left those words in another lifetime" she sings bravely, but she cannot hide the longing loneliness that edges her words. The story is timeless and universal, and this recording trades some of the raw urgency of the live album for tightly layered harmonies that draw you in and effortlessly wind their way around you. Not all the songs are heartfelt songs of loss, though. "Country Song" is a delightful tribute to the recent James Gunn camp horror flick Slither, with a singable chorus that will get stuck in your head whether you like it or not. And I've always had a soft spot for the dinosaur romp "Evil Laugh", ever since I first heard it the day Seanan called me and left it on my answering machine in lieu of a message. Here, it is rendered a surf-rock song that rocks the Palaeolithic Era as it has never been rocked before. Get this album. You will not be disappointed.
Absolutely marvelous
                                
Wonderful album. Witty and beautiful lyrics accompanied by awesome musicians. My personal favourites are "Dorothy", "Four-Color Love" and "Downhome aphrodite" & "Country Song", That isn't to say I don't love the others, but listing all of them would be cheating.
                                
I cannot speak highly enough of this album. From the 60s girl group inspired Pretty Little Dead girl to the comic book torch song Four-Color Love, the songs are entertaining, diverse, and catchy.