Bring Me The Workhorse

August 22, 2006 · Print This Article

Release date: August 22, 2006
Photo by Sarah Small
Art by David Stith

Available through Asthmatic Kitty / iTunes / Amazon.

Bring Me The Workhorse courageously gathers all the essential elements of classical and pop to create an album that breaks down the barriers of both worlds. These songs are simultaneously gentle and urgent, evoking moments of tremendous joy and sorrow with the magnitude of Italian opera and the modesty of a Japanese haiku.

Under Shara’s gaze, ordinary objects begin to have supernatural meanings. A robin’s nest, a grocery list, a glass bottle come to represent love, mortality, and the overwhelming need to “freak out” every once in a while. Shara is not afraid to use superlatives. But she also considers the benefits of self-control. This is most evident in the carefulness of her arrangements. Earthy drums and bass guitar are augmented by celeste, music boxes, prepared piano, and a string quartet; each song is scrupulously composed and arranged by Shara herself.

Shara’s songwriting reconciles the high art of opera with the low-brow of the folk song by compounding them into a form that is both as sublime as it is pragmatic. The music is set in transcendent landscapes familiar to Wagner’s operas, but it is also planted firmly in the materials of everyday life: dirt, tree branches, bird feathers and thrown away charms. Strings and chimes beckon mysterious apparitions, but Shara’s tone of voice is dead serious.

Almost every song pivots around a moment of crisis, distilling stories to their most distressing points of contact: a phone call, an injured horse, a dragonfly caught in a spider’s web. Shara doesn’t share all the information — just the stuff that matters. The effect is a sensational compression of time, in which an entire event is summarized in a single note. This, of course, is the essence of opera. But My Brightest Diamond is much more than musical theater.

1. Something of an End
2. Golden Star
3. Gone Away|
4. Dragonfly
5. Freak Out
6. We Were Sparkling
7. Disappear
8. The Robin’s Jar
9. Magic Rabbit
10. The Good & The Bad Guy
11. Workhorse

Comments

3 Responses to “Bring Me The Workhorse”

  1. Alexandre Spiacci on June 21st, 2008 8:53 am

    Hey, im from Brazil, and me and my girlfriend,
    we DO LOVE MBD,

    i, really wanted to see you hereeeee
    came ,

    you can stay here,

  2. Lynnea Cove on October 27th, 2008 6:27 pm

    I just saw you this evening at The Space in CT. You are amazing!!!!!! I bought a pair of your hand-made hand warmers. I can’t wait for it to become cold enough to wear them because when it does I’m rarely going to take them off.

    I just wanted to say what I wish that I had been able to tell you in person but was too in awe to say. Your beautiful voice has helped me through some hard times as well as has been the beat to some really good times. I love your music.

    Thank you for all that you do! I’m really looking forward to seeing you again!

  3. Stecy Sharon on January 18th, 2011 12:07 pm

    Listening to your music is like entering a world of mysteries and adventures, it’s like discovering new emotions and rediscovering lost ones. I’m thankful for your voice, music and artistic capacities.

    Hopefully, we will see you in Zurich soon again.

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