Founded in 2004 by sisters Rachel and Becky Unthank, the duo expanded to a quartet with the addition of pianist Belinda O'Hooley and viola player Jackie Oates. Operating as Rachel Unthank the Winterset, their 2005 debut LP, Cruel Sister, garnered significant attention from the U.K. press. However, it was 2007's The Bairns that catapulted them to cult stardom. The record was nominated for a prestigious Mercury Prize (alongside the likes of Radiohead) and attracted devout praise by everyone from Antony of Antony the Johnsons to Robert Wyatt, both of whom the group would cover in their later incarnation.
With a slightly different lineup in place -- one that featured Rachel's husband, pianist Adrian McNally, as well as fiddler Niopha Keegan and guitarist Chris Price -- they began operating under the Unthanks moniker and released their debut album, Here's the Tender Coming. Garnering heavy praise in Europe, it was named one of 2009's best releases by Mojo, the Guardian, and Uncut. After touring heavily in support of the album, the Unthanks returned to Rachel and Adrian McNally's Northumberland home to record another batch of songs. Marrying the trad-folk predilections of previous outings with a more contemporary approach, the resulting Last was issued in 2011 and earned similar acclaim. The following year saw the release of the group's first live recordings: Diversions, Vol. 1: The Songs of Robert Wyatt and Antony the Johnsons: Live from the Union Chapel, London, Diversions, Vol.2: The Unthanks with Brighouse and Rastrick Brass Band, and Diversions, Vol. 3: Songs from the Shipyards.
The acclaimed Mount the Air, the outfit's first studio album in four years, arrived in early 2015 and continued to mine both the past and the present for inspiration. 2017 marked a return to the group's Diversions series with The Songs and Poems of Molly Drake, which saw the band delivering a set of recordings that chronicled the works of the mother of British folk icon Nick Drake. In February 2019, the Unthanks issued an ambitious trilogy of short albums that they coined "medium players." Titled Lines, Vols. 1–3, the set covered the 1968 trawler disaster in Kingston upon Hull (Lines Part One: Lillian Bilocca), the First World War (Lines Part Two: World War One), and the poetry of Emily Brontë (Lines Part Three: Emily Brontë). In 2022, the band released Sorrows Away, their first non-project effort since 2015's Mount the Air. Comprised of eight traditional songs and two originals, the LP included a stirring rendition of Gordon Bok's "Bay of Fundy." ~ James Christopher Monger, Rovi
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Magpie |
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Starless |
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Mount the Air |