Woodpigeon Covers:
Abba, Bjork, Pink Floyd, Gordon Lightfoot, Magnetic Fields and more!





Exploring the boundaries of folk is a challenge these days, not hardly because the word “folk” is so often abused by a growing bevy of slash-using promotors and artists trying to lay claim to the term and, by proxy, to the authenticity of its community and heritage - even as they offer up music which provides little in the way of respite or even recognizable folk characteristics for the weary folkophile.

Oh, sure, there’s elements of folk music in much of what passes by the modern blogwatcher. The influence of the sixties post-revivalists, for example, is evident in a large swath of the Contemporary Indiepop and Indie Rock world, from Sara McLachlan to Sara Bareilles, from Beck to Ben Harper, from Death Cab to Wilco; we’ve included songs by some of these artists before here on Cover Lay Down, and I expect that they’ll come up again.

But that’s primarily because there’s elements of folk in modern popular music, period. Writ large, it’s in the air. But as the 16-bar 3-chord song structure does not make Rock and Roll a subtype of the blues, neither is the occasional historical lens, a moralistic story lyric, or the inclusion of an acoustic stringed instrument sufficient to suddenly make a given band’s output a form of folk.


It is much rarer to find a band that does not use the term “folk”, yet comes across as obviously within the tradition. Such is Woodpigeon, an ersatz karass based around the guitar, voice, and songwriting of Mark Hamilton, a typically bearded indie lad whose website’s tongue-in-cheek philosophical statements include the ideas that “everything starts off as a rock opera” and “girl voices are instruments. Boy voices are sex objects.”

Nominally an indie pop collective, Woodpigeon’s sound is nevertheless delicately acoustic, and the group is prone to confessional narrative, if framed within definitively post-modern lyrics. Despite its size, the instrumentation is more bare-bones than bombastic, with participants in a given song often contributing little more than a subtle vocal or string drone layer. Though its studio work, most especially in brand-new release Die Stadt Muzikanten, often utilizes the echoey indiepop production values and brushbeats so typical of the genre, both off-record and on-, the group’s music is nonetheless environmentally-grounded and subtly constructed, less beat-oriented than lyrically and melodically driven. And though some of their choices for coverage speak to a clear love of Swedish popsong, others - including two Gordon Lightfoot covers, and a lovely recent take on Mother, Pink Floyd’s only political “folktune” - underscore their connection to the folkworld.

Calgary-based Woodpigeon is an oft-cited favorite of fellow Canadian and indie-lover Chromewaves; we owe Frank a great debt for sharing so much of their work over the past year or three, a good bit of which has included lo-fi off-album covers originally shared on the band’s website. He doesn’t call them folk, either, but I think you’ll hear what I do in this lovely collection.



Regular readers, take note: the vast majority of the above covers are available free on Woodpigeon’s website, making the usual track-by-track album listing essentially moot. For much, much more, head on over, download at will, and bookmark the site for upcoming new web-releases and dispatches.

Of course, Woodpigeon’s in-studio work is richer by far, and worth the bills. Purchase older LPs Songbook and Treasury Library Canada, plus a plethora of EPs, at your leisure, and definitely pick up Woodpigeon’s newest Die Stadt Muzikanten, which dropped just last week. Coverlovers, especially, should keep an ear open for new track Woodpigeon Vs. Eagleowl (Strength In Numbers), which uses Tom Petty’s I Won’t Back Down as a perfect springboard for the quintessential post-millennial indie grungepop number.


Cover Lay Down posts new features and coverfolk sets every Wednesday and Sunday, plus the occasional otherday. Coming soon: the mailbag is bursting with great new artists; we feast upon the best covers in the bunch.

Category: Woodpigeon, indiefolk

8 Responses to “Woodpigeon Covers:
Abba, Bjork, Pink Floyd, Gordon Lightfoot, Magnetic Fields and more!

  1. Dainon

    I wish I had something more profound to say about this post, but I have just been taken by this songs, one after the other. Thank you so much for sharing these and giving me a new band to obsess about for the next spell. You’ve done a good thing here.

  2. Trawlin’ The Blogroll « It All Started With Carbon Monoxide

    [...] Cover Lay Down: Woodpigeon Covers (Abba, Bjork, Pink Floyd, Gordon Lightfoot, Magnetic Fields and more!) [...]

  3. garnet

    downloaded all the tracks all are excellent. few are not so good but not bad

    musiklot.com/blog/

  4. Marchbanks

    “ersatz karass” has a word of its own: “granfalloon”.

  5. boyhowdy

    I actually considered that, Marchbanks, but found that grandfalloon has an element of spiritual falsehood implied in it that I didn’t feel was an accurate reflection here. Quite the opposite, in fact - this is a VERY authentic karass…

  6. Audiogramme du dimanche 7 fĂ©vrier 2010 « Audiogrammes – 96.2 FM

    [...] 11. The Strange Boys – Heard You Want to Beat Me Up 12. Woodpigeon / Louise Hull – Say say say (Paul McCartney/Michael Jackson cover) 13. The Magnetic Fields – From A Sinking Boat 14. Laura Veirs – July Flame 15. Vampire [...]

  7. Woodpigeon Covers: Abba, Bjork, Pink Floyd, Gordon Lightfoot … « Twitter Trending Topics @actofrage

    [...] Woodpigeon Covers: Abba, Bjork, Pink Floyd, Gordon Lightfoot … Tags: bevy, indie rock world, indiepop, revivalists, sara bareilles, stringed instrument Share this post! [...]

  8. Family Tree

    First time at your blog. I like it - keep writing. Thanks.


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