[indie-folk] (2025) James Yorkston - Songs for Nina and Johanna [...
[indie-folk] (2025) James Yorkston - Songs for Nina and Johanna [...
To start this P2P download, you have to install a BitTorrent client like
qBittorrent
Category: Music Total size: 218.70 MBAdded: 2 months ago (2025-08-28 18:37:01)
Share ratio: 5 seeders, 0 leechersInfo Hash: F132DBCC39DADF9B5A56C5FB261272F52F090A2A Last updated: 15 hours ago (2025-11-02 06:08:18) Report This Torrent
â 6.1/10 (10 votes)
Benny & Jolene Watch TrailerJun 06, 2014 âą 1h 28m âą Comedy, Romance
Overview The trials and tribulations of the latest Indie Folk Star - Jolene.
Director: Jamie Adams
Cast: Craig Roberts, Charlotte Ritchie, Rosamund Hanson, Dolly Wells, Laura Patch
Description:
  James Yorkston â Songs for Nina and Johanna (2025)
Review:
A prolific recording artist since 2002, James Yorkston has once again found a new way of presenting his poetic songs. This is to add to his already lengthy list of collaborations that have taken in everyone from the Athletes and the Fence Collective to the Big Eyes Family Players, Kathryn Williams, Jon Thorne, and Suhail Yusuf Khan. The self-styled âlow-rung sangster from the East Neuk oâ Fife, Scotlandâ has also, you could say, found a new opportunity to escape the âfolkâ tag thatâs continued to dog him ever since he once (or twice) recorded an album of traditional songs, worked with the Watersons, and â as an acoustic-guitar player of some renown â supported Bert Jansch on tour. Yorkston is working once more with soft-voiced ex-Cardigans frontwoman Nina Persson â following on from 2023âs highly acclaimed The Great White Sea Eagle. Heâs also recording with Swedish DIY collective the Second Hand Orchestra in Stockholm again, as he did for his previous two albums. On this new project, though, heâs adding to the mix the pure voice of Johanna Söderberg of First Aid Kit. Sheâs agreed to be his Emmylou on four of the ten sensitive and heartfelt songs on Songs for Nina and Johanna. With such a combination of talent, then, how could Yorkston possibly go wrong? Well, essentially, he doesnât. He is, after all, heading up what might conceivably be called a Scottish/Scandinavian supergroup, with all members playing a distinctive role in making music that turns out to be full of intimate charm, wit, and candor. Yorkstonâs the songsmith with the wilting voice and the acoustic guitar. The bemused storyteller is stocked with wry and honest tales of finding love and losing love. Heâs the old warhorse whoâs experienced all the highs and lows of romantic relationships. The roving musician on the road, playing gigs in old churches, hanging in cafĂ©s, recording live sessions, drinking from his flask, birdwatching, bumping into old flames, and just being weighed down by the whole unbearable impermanence of things. Persson and Söderberg, meanwhile, play the part of intensifying his songs with emotional clarity and open expression, sometimes leading on vocals, sometimes in harmony with Yorkston, and sometimes just old-fashioned duetting with him. Thatâs why Daniel Bengtson, producer and multi-instrumentalist for a thousand Swedish acts over the years (including First Aid Kit on 2022âs Palomino), co-produces and plays supremely melodic bass. Not to forget Peter MorĂ©n â of Peter Bjorn and John, and, currently, SunYears â who takes his place on 12-string electric guitar within the Second Hand Orchestra. Heâs there, indeed, amongst a colorful array of omnichord, pump-organ, bass-clarinet, and vibraphone specialists. Yorkston presides over a star-studded ensemble like never before on Songs for Nina and Johanna, then. However, itâs fair to say that his new tunes constitute no radical departure from the Yorkston records â and his persona â of old. The main man isnât about to win a new generation of fans and start competing with Bad Bunny, Taylor Swift, and Drake at the top of the Spotify chart, even if that beloved streaming service is also, of course, Swedish. Instead, he harks back, in his understated way, to lovelorn tracks like âI Awokeâ and âYear of the Leopardâ from 2006, on which he memorably sang with the enigmatic Jenny Gordon (AKA HMS Ginafore). Now, though, he allows his female singing partners to take center stage and sideline his warm yet undoubtedly reedy vocals. Embracing âthe chance to sing with two great Swedish voicesâ, he explains, âI tried not to get in their way, tried to give them space to interpret the songs as they felt.â So it is that Persson and Söderberg do their thing with quiet intensity on a collection of finely crafted three-to-four-minute songs that, while regrettably leaving no room for the eccentric spoken-word pieces that Yorkston always excelled at (like âWoozy with Ciderâ and âMy Mouth Ainât No Bibleâ), never outstay their welcome. Thatâs especially when Yorkston and the band accompany the singers with daring instrumentation and surprising solos as only they can. It all comes together on âA Moment Longerâ and âLove /Luckâ. Itâs no surprise that these are the first singles off Songs for Nina and Johanna, serving as bold statements of the two Swedish singersâ vocal prowess. In the former, while Yorkston frets about cultivating newfound love in a time of profound uncertainty, Persson is a wonderfully brooding and forlorn presence. âDonât hurry so to catch me,â she warns, âFor Iâve no idea where Iâm going.â She finds sympathetic company in Yorkstonâs delicate fingerpicking, Bengtsonâs lugubrious bass, and a mournful five-string violin solo from Ullis Gyllenberg, before joining her male counterpart on the most tender of hopeful lines. âAnd hereâs a flask of something warm to share / To take the chill away / And thereâs a lifetime of stories here / To chase the blues, chase the blues away.â Söderberg is somewhat sunnier on âLove / Luckâ, a catchier and more upbeat song â just the right side of twee â concerning the remembered feelings of excitement and bafflement that come from discovering a romantic connection. The effortless beauty of her voice makes her the perfect partner to Yorkston on the âthis is just love/luckâ chorus and the âthis is a fire that I recognizeâ refrain. She also, however, has the air of melancholy required of Yorkston to express the inevitable suspicion and doubt at the heart of the track. Look past the exuberant saxophone solo and there it is in her reading of the line: âBut the days are all tiny fragile dolls / Who threaten to fall apart if we look too close.â Itâs perhaps the more overtly desolate numbers on the album, however, that are the most striking. Opener âI Can Changeâ is a huge sigh of a breakup song, built on an intricate Yorkston guitar pattern and a sad mandolin riff, and filled with the haunting power of Perssonâs voice. âOh, what is it you do not see in me?â Nina calls out, before pleading desperately, âI can change, let me change.â Itâs the intimacy of the situation that gets you, but then thereâs âRabbitâ, even more stark. It has Yorkston and Persson depicting the dying embers of a relationship to the mournful sound of piano and violin, and itâs the grim realism of the situation that gets you. When âitâs coffee for breakfast / And you really need to be somewhere.â The sprightly ensemble numbers work a treat as well, though. âOh Light, Oh Lightâ is the sound of an ensemble clearly having a great time (on a Swedish porch?), with Yorkston celebrating a ânewfound glee in meâ and Söderberg egging him on in unusually lairy mode. âLove That Treeâ, too, is pleasingly full of bile and raucousness as we find Yorkston squaring up to post-break-up hangups and recriminations, especially with regard to an ex that he bumps into in London. âYou pop up like some candle flame / And you asked me how I felt I would feel to have the friend I loved the best / To push me away like all the restâ. Persson gamely takes up the position of his ex â or exes â and itâs tremendous fun. Yet, while his two female stars certainly elevate his songs, Yorkston shows that he can still kick it on his own as a singer with his distinguished group. âWhereâs the Time?â is evidence of that, on which he delivers one of his most touching vocals to a lovely Byrdsy jangle â courtesy of MorĂ©n on the 12-string â and a stirring arrangement of violin, drums, saxophone, and simulated wind instruments. In truth, thereâs a remarkable range of tracks on offer on Songs, an album that yields rich rewards â gradually, and with repeated listening. Itâs a heck of a journey, indeed, merely from earnest ballad âOh Sparrow, Up Yoursâ to the foul-mouthed and splenetic âI Spooked the Neighboursâ. Travelling with James Yorkston, Persson, Söderberg, and all their friends, though, itâs a journey entirely devoid of clichĂ©, full of adventure, and impossible to tire of. â PopMatters
 Â
Track List:
01 - I Can Change (feat. Nina Persson)
02 - Oh Light, Oh Light (feat. Johanna Söderberg)
03 - A Moment Longer (feat. Nina Persson)
04 - Love; Luck (feat. Johanna Söderberg)
05 - Where's the Time
06 - Rabbit (feat. Nina Persson)
07 - Love That Tree (feat. Nina Persson)
08 - Oh Sparrow, Up Yours (feat. Johanna Söderberg)
09 - I Spooked the Neighbours (feat. Johanna Söderberg)
10 - With Me, With You (feat. Nina Persson)
Media Report:
Genre: indie-folk
Origin: Scotland, UK
Format: FLAC
Format/Info: Free Lossless Audio Codec
Bit rate mode: Variable
Channel(s): 2 channels
Sampling rate: 44.1 KHz
Bit depth: 16 bits
Compression mode: Lossless
Writing library: libFLAC 1.3.0 (UTC 2013-05-26)
Note: If you like the music, support the artist.