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BILLIE BOTTLE'S TEMPLE OF SHIBBOLETH

Billie Bottle

Canterbury Scene


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Billie Bottle Billie Bottle's Temple Of Shibboleth album cover
4.48 | 4 ratings | 2 reviews | 25% 5 stars

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Studio Album, released in 2023

Songs / Tracks Listing

1. In the Temple (4:42)
2. Cantus (5:35)
3. The Wash (5:06)
4. Ironing Days (5:19)
5. The Melting (0:31)
6. The Mending (9:43)
7. The Brewing (1:44)
8. The Mead (5:48)
9. Black Swan (5:16)
10. The Harvest (0:35)
11. The Wolf (6:58)
12. The Rest (7:28)

Total Time 58:45

Line-up / Musicians

- Billie Bottle / vocals, piano, synth bass, bass guitar, Hammond organ, organ, electric pianos, keyboards, Mellotron, drum programming, programming, swanee whistle, vibraslap
- Viv Goodwin-Darke / flutes, vocals, cello, iron, crumhorn
- Roz Harding / alto saxophone, vocals, tenor recorder, kettle, wind chimes
- Anna Batson / bassoon, voice, crumhorn, hoover
- Emma Holbrook / drums, cymbals, percussion, pandeiro, vocals

With:
- Richard Sinclair / bass guitar (4)
- Martine Waltier / vocals
- Rowan Porteous / trumpets
- Greg Hancock / backwards vocals
- Hugh Nankivell / viola
- Geoff Bartholomew / Lyra-8 virtual synth, vocal howls
- Otis Jarman-Pinto / vocal howls
- Vita Jarman-Pinto / vocal howls
- Amy Howard / soprano saxophone
- Ivo Stimpson / backwards spoken word
- Kimwei McCarthy / penny whistle
- Lyndon Forster / handpans
- George Shilling / drum programming
- Valborga / bleating
- Wyverne / calling
- Lupinus / howling
- Shibboleth / whinnying

Releases information

CD/LP Bottledom 01 (UK, March 31, 2023)

Thanks to Mirakaze for the addition
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BILLIE BOTTLE Billie Bottle's Temple Of Shibboleth ratings distribution


4.48
(4 ratings)
Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music(25%)
25%
Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection(75%)
75%
Good, but non-essential (0%)
0%
Collectors/fans only (0%)
0%
Poor. Only for completionists (0%)
0%

BILLIE BOTTLE Billie Bottle's Temple Of Shibboleth reviews


Showing all collaborators reviews and last reviews preview | Show all reviews/ratings

Collaborators/Experts Reviews

Review by BrufordFreak
COLLABORATOR Honorary Collaborator
5 stars From Devonshire, Billie has been making her presence felt since the late Naughties working with the likes of David Sinclair, Mike and Kate Westbrook as well as several versions of her own as a bandleader. Her affinity and allegiance for Canterbury Style music is without question yet she continually rides an edge that could fall into pop, jazz, indie, or even folk traditions.

1. "In the Temple" (4:42) opens rather straightforward piano-support but then turns electro pop with drum and percussion machine giving Billie's voice and music a very ROSIE VELA-like sound and feel. (8.75/10)

2. "Cantus" (5:35) though the music here is quite pleasant, the lead vocal and its lyric feel a little too adult contemporary or even religious oriented. It reminds me of Heather Findlay's 2016 breakout MANTRA VEGA album, The Illusion's Reckoning. (8.75/10)

3. "The Wash" (5:06) a song containing and expressing far more Canterbury quirk, humor, and musical sound and inclinations than any of the preceding songs--reminding me of Kavus Torabi's work. Now this is more of what I was hoping for. I love the "Northettes"-like b vox and crumhorns. (8.875/10)

4. "Ironing Days" (5:19) an absolutely beautiful female vocalist (Perhaps Viv Goodwin-Darke?) steps into the lead over this EVERYTHING BUT THE GIRL-like jazz-pop song. Everything about this gently flowing song washes over me, into me, feeds me and melts my soul into a state of blissful detachment. (9.75/10)

5. "The Melting" (0:31) piano, cymbals, horns and reeds, and toms basically warming up and/or detuning with one another.

6. "The Mending" (9:43) a brilliant suite of light, melodic jazzy themes. I love the soundscape, the aid-back yet technical proficiency of all of the instruments as well as the lead female vocals. (18.75/20)

7. "The Brewing" (1:44) a heady, breathy sax warm up for the next song.

8. "The Mead" (5:48) more highly melodic spacious music uniquely blending multiple musical styles. Such great music-- stuff that could've very well come from the likes of GILLI SMYTH, ANNETTE PEACOCK, HANNAH MOULE, or JULIA HOLTER. (9.5/10)

9. "Black Swan" (5:16) a disco beat! A song that sounds a bit like something from STEELY DAN's Gaucho or ROSIE VELA's Zazu (both produced by Gary Katz)--though there are also TREVOR HORN and even SWING OUT SISTER elements as well. Quite melodic and earwormy despite also being quirky. (9.25/10)

10. "The Harvest" (0:35) all-female choral arrangement with piano accompaniment. (4.5/5)

11. "The Wolf" (6:58) full-on Canterbury both in instrumental sound choices as well as melody lines and odd, shifting time signatures used. Really clever, fun lyrics as well. I love how the mood can remain light and even humorous even in the eerie section of little-girl-backwards-speak and crazed, dissonance. (13.5/15)

12. "The Rest" (7:28) this pretty straightforward lounge jazz song in which Billie returns to the odd "shibboleth" theme is my least favorite song on the album. (12.5/15)

Were it not for the rather inchoate "shibboleth" theme that Billie latched onto and expresses outwardly in the opening and closing songs, this would be a glowing collection of jazz-pop sometimes-Canterbury infused songs that I'd shout out as a masterpiece

A-/4.5 stars; a near-masterpiece of creative, fun progressive rock music coming from a worshipper of Canterbury Style music and musicians.

Review by Mellotron Storm
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars "Temple Of Shibboleth" is the latest offering from Billie Bottle where she somehow combines the mundane week of being a housewife with song titles like "The Wash", "Ironing Days", "The Mending", "The Brewing" and ending with "Rest" with mythology of all things. The lyrics are top shelf, so impressive and the instrumental work continues to impress as it did on "The Other Side" but even better here. Her previous record "The Other Side" was one I couldn't get into mainly because of the lyrics that dealt with British politics plus this new one just seems so much more mature. I mean there's no f-bombs dropping from the sky like on that previous record along with the sarcasm I rarely got.

Billie Bottle's debut from 2010 included guest appearances from David Sinclair and Jimmy Hasting while here we get Richard Sinclair playing bass on one track. They are an all female five piece this time around. Billie, Viv and Roz are back but we get a new drummer and a bassoon player. What? On a Canterbury album? Yes this album unlike the previous one has that Canterbury sound with distorted organ and keys at times. Billie's vocals seem even better here. Again sophisticated jazzy pop tunes for the most part but man she can develope a song which I noticed on her last album as well. Intelligent music folks in spades both the lyrics and music. Mellotron too!

So I have a top five which includes the opener "In The Temple" opening with flute before vocals and piano take over. Beautiful music really as the tempo picks up with beats and more. Harmonies too and it turns experimental late. "Cantus" is the next song on the album and also a top five. This song sort of encapsulates the whole album especially the lyrics. I like when things open up after 2 minutes as well as the sax and bassoon during that late instrumental section, and how uplifting it is 5 minutes in with the mellotron. "Ironing Days" has Richard Sinclair on it but man Billie sounds amazing vocally on here. Light and jazzy with harmonies early as bass, beats and atmosphere join in. Canterbury organ on this one and I like the sax late followed by atmosphere.

"The Mead" is another top five, just a gorgeous sound to it to start.There's even a seductive "I'm a little teapot" section. Oh check out the bassoon 3 minutes in. Lastly "The Wolf" a song about baking and stuff and yes I'm a baker so I can relate a little. And that distorted organ to start! We got trumpets, bassoon, flute and even an experimental section. I'm not sure how "The Mending" didn't make my top five but it needs a mention for being the longest at almost 10 minutes and some really good arrangements here. So intense before 3 minutes as mending can be. I also have to mention "The Wash" for making doing the laundry sound almost adult rated.

Holding it at 4 stars for now but this really impressed me. Under an hour too. About a dozen guests helping out on this one.

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