Through the Bitter Frost and Snow
Through the Bitter Frost & Snow is a holiday album by Irish folk singer, Susan McKeown and American jazz double-bassist, Lindsey Horner. The album was released through 1-800-Prime-CD and Broadcast Music, Inc. on October 14, 1997. Produced by David Seitz, McKeown and Horner, Through the Bitter Frost & Snow features guest appearances from Jeff Berman, Michelle Kinney, Pete McCann, and Carol Sharar.
Through the Bitter Frost & Snow was met with critical acclaim from various media outlets, including AllMusic, Rhythm, the Los Angeles Times, and The Washington Post, among others. While promoting the album, McKeown and Horner performed their version of Auld Lang Syne on the New Year’s Eve broadcast of NPR’s All Things Considered.
Critical reception
Through the Bitter Frost & Snow was met with critical praise from various media outlets. Rick Anderson, in a review for AllMusic, wroteMike Boehm of the Los Angeles Times called the album “absorbing” noting “McKeown offers a rare combination of gifts: a mastery of traditional Celtic and British folk music dating to medieval times and the ability to draw on a wide range of contemporary influences in her often excellent original folk-pop songwriting. On Through the Bitter Frost and Snow, McKeown’s grounding in the old anchors and flavors her explorations of the new.”
Martin Keller of Rhythm was equally enthusiastic, writing "McKeown and Horner have managed to create a highly distinctive record of wintry exploration that mixes traditional British Isles folk singing and jazz phrasing while embracing familiar fare such as "Coventry Carol," "Auld Lang Syne", and "Green Grow'th the Holly." No stranger to melancholy, the record will have a disquieting affect. But it will also please and intrigue with its bittersweet sadness and ironic arrangements for anyone willing to acquire such a beguiling taste of the dark month of Christmas."
Richard Harrington of The Washington Post was similarly effusive, stating "McKeown, a mesmerizing Irish vocalist, and multi-instrumentalist Horner explore the physical, emotional and spiritual chill of winter, occasionally letting in some rays of hope. The title track, "When All the Songs Were Sad" and "Song of Forgetting" are all somber meditations and even the familiar cello-driven "Coventry Carol" reinforces its root as a pavane for the children of Bethlehem slaughtered by Herod's soldiers. Darkly beautiful stuff."
Personnel
Primary Artists
- Susan McKeown – vocals, composer, arranger, producer
- Lindsey Horner – bass, electric bass, bass clarinet, guitar, harmonium, whistle, producer
Musicians
- Jeff Berman – drums
- Michelle Kinney – cello
- Pete McCann – electric guitar
- Carol Sharar – viola
Technical
- Robert Burns – composer
- David Seitz – producer, engineer
- Ray Martin – engineer, mixing
- Reaann Zschokke – assistant engineer