Woven Hand

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David Eugene Edwards and Ordy Garrison.
I am nothing without His ghost within...
—"The Good Hand"

The Spiritual Successor of the renowned goth-country band 16 Horsepower.

Back in the early 00's, as the members of 16HP started drifting apart, primary songwriter David Eugene Edwards continued writing and recording music by himself because he had no other means of putting food on the table. 16HP's last years had seen the band shifting from country-rock to more of a dark folk sound; DEE's new music project, dubbed Woven Hand, continued this shift, and carried the music into even stranger territories, drawing influence from Post Rock, Industrial, Native American percussion, and Medieval European songwriting.

The early Woven Hand albums were essentially solo affairs, with David Eugene Edwards providing vocals, guitar, banjolo[1], bass, drums, keyboards, hurdy-gurdy, and bandoneon with a minimum of guest musicians. However, Woven Hand has since grown to become a full band, with Ordy Garrison on drums and Pascal Humbert (another 16 Horsepower alum) on bass.

Also of note is that Wim Vandekeybus, head of the Ultima Vez Dance Co. in Belgium, is a friend of David Eugene Edwards and has commissioned soundtracks by Woven Hand for two productions: Blush and Puur.

Discography:
  • Woven Hand (2002)
  • Blush Music / Blush (Original Score) (2003)
  • Consider the Birds (2003)
  • Mosaic (2006)
  • Puur (2006) Has yet to be released outside Europe.
  • Ten Stones (2008)
  • The Threshingfloor (2010)
    • Black of the Ink (2011) A book with lyrics and illustrations by DEE, and an accompanying 6 song retrospective CD.
  • Live at Roepaen (2012)

Woven Hand provides examples of the following tropes:
  • Drone of Dread: Many tracks have drones playing behind the melody to add an air of menace (see "Winter Shaker"). Sometimes DEE inverts this and uses drones to convey a peaceful mood (see the hidden track from Ten Stones).
  • Epic Rocking: Half the songs on Blush Music.
    • Ending Fatigue: The longest track, "Animalitos (Ain't No Sunshine)" clocks in at 14 minutes and has four fakeout endings.
  • Hidden Track:
    • On Mosaic, the last song on the track list is followed by a minute of silence and then a short unlisted song, "Shun".
    • Ten Stones has an untitled drone song immediately following the last listed song.
  • I Am the Band
  • Indecipherable Lyrics: "His Loyal Love".
  • Neoclassical Punk Zydeco Rockabilly
  • Nice Hat: The ten-gallon hat with feathers that DEE wore on the Threshingfloor tour.
  • Pop Star Composer: Did we mention that Blush Music and Puur are goth-industrial-folk soundtracks for a Belgian ballet company?
  • Rearrange the Song: Most of Blush Music and Puur.
  • Scatting: DEE will frequently speak in tongues at live shows while transitioning between songs (it sounds a bit like fake Russian). He incorporated this into "Slota Prow" and to a lesser extent "The Threshingfloor".
  • Spell My Name with an "S": They were credited as "Woven Hand" on the first two albums, then as "Wovenhand" on every album since.
  • Something Completely Different: Several albums have exactly one song that's significantly more upbeat than the rest. Mosaic has "Bible and Bird"; Ten Stones has a cover version of Antonio Carlos Jobim's "Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars"; The Threshingfloor has "Denver City".
  1. a hybrid instrument: the neck and strings of a banjo on the body of a mandolin