| 
Photo by Dougal Waters
Next performance:
Thursday 27th March
Norwich Arts Centre
Box office: 01603 660352
Listen to HORSES BRAWL's live
performance on
BBC RADIO 3's The
Early Music Show
on SATURDAY 13th OCTOBER 07 at 1pm
Live from The Brighton Early Music Festival
go to tourdates for
more info on the Horses Brawl 'DINDIRIN'
Tour
Click here
to join the Horses Brawl mailing list
Podcast courtesy of Earlysound.com
|
PART
FOLK - PART EARLY - PART TRAINED PRECISION - PART WILD ABANDON
Welcome to the home of Horses Brawl, a groundbreaking contemporary
instrumental duo from East Anglia, UK.
Horses Brawl present an innovative take early music, with roots
in renaissance, medieval, baroque and folk traditions they re-work,
re-compose and explore unconventional techniques.
A masterclass
in turning one instrument into many, Horses Brawl play bowed guitar,
double barrelled recorders and crumhorn solos.
"It's great stuff.....an
early music group to keep an eye on"
BBC RADIO 3
"Foot-tapping folk rhythms and baroque ornamentation".
THE TELEGRAPH
"Highly experimental, technically wonderful....a fantastic
and vibrant performance"
TRADITION Magazine
"Deeply entwined in the sound of medieval and traditional folk,
Horses Brawl are giving a 21st century makeover to the dance music
of the past"
BBC Norfolk
"Horses Brawl's music is vibrant, engaging and completely spellbinding.....I
love it,
one of the most exciting bands around"
Steafan Hannigan
"Hot crumhorn action"
Earlysound.com
"A fascinating progression from formal dance music to semi-improvisation
that
had the packed audience roaring for more"
fROOTs FORUM
Album launch review
"performed with tremendous energy, virtuosity and verve...happy
experiments with sound
colour and technique... there is neither a slavish attempt to imitate
folk styles, nor have the
players taken out shares in the deeply irritating ‘Merrie Englande
Inc’."
SONGLINES Magazine
"There's a lot of sublety and invention in the ways [Horses
Brawl] find to combine the sounds
at their disposal - the delicate arrangement of Douce Dame Jolie
borders on chamber music."
fROOTS
"toe-tappingly jolly to sensually languorous and even to the
strange and almost disturbing"
THE RECORDER MAGAZINE |