| Johnathon
Ford went to Bloomington, IN to work on some remixes of an out-of-print
Unwed Sailor 7”, The Magic Hedge, in the spring of
2005 with Dan Burton (Early Day Miners, Ativin). The two had previously
worked together on the first Unwed Sailor full-length, The Faithful
Anchor, and the Stateless collaboration between Unwed
Sailor and Burton’s Early Day Miners. There were good vibes
in the Burton basement studio and the remixes were quickly engulfed
by the goal to finish the new full-length, The White Ox.
Ford’s bass, guitar, keyboard, and percussion parts were joined
by Burton‘s guitars, extra bass from Phillip Blackwell (Questions
in Dialect), and drummer Matt Griffin (Early Day Miners) to mix
up their medicine drawing on ambient production influences from
Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois (with whom Dan Burton had interned).
Back in Seattle, Ford later enlisted the help of Kevin Barrans (Rosie
Thomas, Damien Jurado) to add pennywhistle and accordion parts which
were recorded by Josh Myers, who recorded Jeremy Enigk's forthcoming
World Waits album.
The White
Ox continues on from where The Marionette and the Music
Box left off with "Shadows" echoing those staccato
melodies, but channeling them through a dark dream of ambient effects.
Here, Ford and Burton are challenging their audience, the fans who
loved the upbeat melodies of The Faithful Anchor and were
charmed by the sweet fairy-tale aspects of Marionette.
The White Ox is brooding, washed in the night air darkness
to which "Shadows" alludes. Surprisingly, for the traditionally
instrumental Unwed Sailor, both "Gila" and "Numbers"
feature Burton's vocals, with Ford's murmuring falsetto providing
the haunting background for "Gila's" almost gothic melody.
Johnathon
Ford grew up in Oklahoma and there are hints of Native American
imagery in the album's themes and spacious sensation and "Night
Diamond's" shimmering countermelody evoking nocturnal sounds
in open country, culminating in "Pelican's" airy, birdlike
pennywhistle melodies. These music elements all connect to the cover
images of both the Circles ep and The White Ox album.
UK artist James Marsh was enlisted for the cover artwork for both.
His distinct mystical images have also graced the album
covers of every one of legendary band Talk Talk’s releases.
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