Pages

Monday, May 11, 2026

Swarme of Beese and the beautifully sweeping folk dance and falling stars of "Orchard of Dreams"

 

"with a napsack and a vision / and a bucket and a spade / he planted seeds of bitter apples / that he scattered as he prayed..."


The beautifully sweeping folk dance and falling stars of "Orchard of Dreams" by Austin Texas based Swarme of Beese, pulls you into it's sepia toned hypnagogic state easily, effortlessly as you gladly succumb to beautiful sonic biomorphism. Encased in a sort of historical folk patina, ""Orchard of Dreams" is a perfect folk song, the thoughtful cadence / acoustic sway rolls in a circular way, feeling like a melancholy hymnal, maybe psychically connected to an amalgam of Dylan's "Knocking on Heaven's Door" and Neil Young's "Helpless". Guitjo player Lynne Adele's lead vocal countenance is both earthy and ethereal, an earthbound angel who has seen things and Stephen Canner's acoustic guitar carries such melodic weight with Stefan Keydel's fiddle, the falling stars I mentioned before. 

LINER NOTES (excerpted / bracketed) :

About the song:

[...is a tribute to the visionary American folk hero known as “Johnny Appleseed” (John Chapman, 1774—1845), who as a dedicated follower of mystical theologian Emanuel Swedenborg spent his life planting apple orchards for making hard cider throughout the American frontier.]

About the album "Orchard of Dreams":

[The band’s fourth album — eight tracks that weave together historical & contemporary themes through poetic storytelling, ethereal vocal harmonies, & atmospheric instrumental arrangements. Four songs are newly written by the group’s songwriting duo Lynne Adele & Stephen Canner, together with Ms. Adele’s bittersweet reframing of Canner’s “Distant Father” from a woman’s perspective, & three traditional ballads — the first time the trio has deviated from recording original material to explore some of their early folk influences. Highlights include the title track, a tribute to the American folk hero & visionary plantsman known as Johnny Appleseed; the cinematic “Wreck of the Elizabeth,” inspired by the tragic death of the trailblazing Transcendentalist writer Margaret Fuller; “The Shallow River,” a heartfelt anthem reflecting on the humanitarian crisis facing immigrants & asylum seekers; & an unsettling interpretation of the 19th-century American dystopian folk ballad “State of Arkansas.”]


-Robb Donker Curtius






THE FACTS AS WE KNOW THEM


https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100068893428853

https://open.spotify.com/artist/12a134jTe0qfX3lwoUpp0G

https://swarmeofbeese.bandcamp.com/album/fruits-of-the-golden-land

https://www.swarmeofbeese.com


The band began its life as acoustic Americana trio The Victor Mourning, formed in Austin in 2008 by songwriter/frontman Stephen Canner, with Lynne Adele on harmony vocals & guitjo, and Stefan Keydel on fiddle. Following the release of A Handful of Locusts in 2010, bandmates Canner and Adele embarked upon a self-imposed exile in Southern Appalachia, returning to Texas seven years later with plans to record a long-delayed second album.

When the project was interrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic, Canner and Adele found themselves rearranging, reworking, and for the first time, co-writing songs. Subtle layers of instrumental texture and hints of psychedelic folk were woven into the minor keys and stripped-down underpinnings of the band’s hillbilly noir aesthetic, creating a mutant folk sound with a strong American gothic undercurrent. A source close to the band has described it as “hillbillies who got lost on their way to the moonshine still and stumbled upon some mushrooms.” To reflect this metamorphosis, a rebranding was in order.

Around this time, Adele, an avid genealogist, discovered the Last Will and Testament of her 10th great-grandfather Matthew Woodruff of Farmington, Connecticut, who died in 1682. The final item in the document, listed as an addendum to the handwritten inventory of his assets, was a “swarme of beese” valued at 10 shillings. This humble item, a beehive, so teeming with life and potential, yet initially overlooked and then remembered only as an afterthought, holds all sorts of rich visual, folkloric, and literary associations, and has long been symbolic of the fruits of united effort. The pre-standardized, 17th-century spelling added to its charm, and inspired the band’s name change.





Swarme of Beese, Austin Texas, psychedelic folk, psych rock, freak folk, grunge tinged, grunge, rustic, southern blues rock, folk indie, timeless, 4th album "Orchard of Dreams",

No comments:

Post a Comment