ALBUM REVIEW: The Haunted Windchimes
THE HAUNTED WINDCHIMES
Honey-Moonshine
Blank Tape Records
Maybe I was just bored, or perhaps it was an instinctual lust for  alcohol, but the old-timey drawing of a jug of moonshine on the Haunted  Windchime’s debut, Honey-Moonshine, drew me right in. Society tells me:  don’t’ judge a book by its cover, but fuck ‘em. It looked awesome, so I  gave it a spin. The Haunted Windchimes, I soon discovered, are a rootsy  folk band that raise the hairs on my arms with their bewitching  harmonies. Sassy female timbres blur into male-led verses, creating a  sound that sways from the holy to the demonic. You can hear a bit of a  raspy Andrew Bird in the male vocalist (Inaiah), and a bit of Dolly  Parton and Lilly Allen in the females (Chela and Desirae). These three  voices snap together like LEGO bricks and remind me of a combo of Fleet  Foxes and Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young. The Windchimes hypnotize while  remaining springy and fun. Inaiah, Chela and Desirae sing cliché lyrics  dealing with love, heartbreak and loneliness, but somehow they do not  suffer from this. Non-political lyrics are digestible and make it easier  to cozy up to the album. However, with the densely political finisher  “A Ballad of Human Progress,” The Windchimes show they can go from  Vanilla Ice to Public Enemy at the drop of a dime. It is a refreshing  folky burst of anger. The instrumentation is pretty much constant  throughout— banjo, guitar, violin, upright bass and the occasional  harmonica. No, there isn’t any jug blowing here… but there is one snazzy  kazoo solo (“Waitin on a Train”). Listening to Honey-Moonshine reminded  me of sitting in a log cabin somewhere in New York with a couple of  friends, passing around a large jug of whiskey. It was a great random  find (thanks to the album art) and is certainly worth a listen while the  weather is still hot. 
– MATTHEW HENGEVELD, Phawker.com
 
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