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16 Horsepower — Hutterite Mile
Album: Folklore
Avg rating:
6.7

Your rating:
Total ratings: 647









Released: 2002
Length: 3:59
Plays (last 30 days): 0
on from here walkin dreams awake
i think not i think not
the sky comes king blown in every direction
and of no country
i am straw

it is no mystery
i know my way from here

iron sharpens iron
crooked wooden and peacock black
i have your feathers
slung across my back
i'm not the only one
to help you down the hill
my blue knuckles do as they will

it is no mystery
i know my way from here
it is no mystery
i know my way from here

one as precious as the other
they go with me
today i am not a false conscience
a tyrant
angels line my pockets dear
i walk a hutterite mile
look at me this once
put an eye to my step
look and furrow
its only misery its only ankle deep

it is no mystery
i know my way from here
it is no mystery
i know my way from here
Comments (73)add comment
 oppositelock wrote:

This band is now called Wovenhand.  I saw them in concert earlier this year.  Very very cool.



I'd really like to see them live (WovenHand)
same old same old like so many others
My add some Gun Club Bill?
Love this band, love this song!  👍👍
This band is now called Wovenhand.  I saw them in concert earlier this year.  Very very cool.
On this album, there is also a version of the classic song "Sinner Man" which is marvelous.
Nice, deep.  I look forward to more of this album.
Great voice: a cross between Sivert Hoyem and Neil Diamond.
These guys certainly had a very haunting sound; it's a shame they didn't last very long. Fortunately, music lives every time we hear it...
 Rofi wrote:

One of the  most intense songs I know, niot so much for the Lyrics, but his voice in combination with the instruments.

 
Yeah, it's an interesting arrangement - good tension, but he does have a peculiar accent for someone from Colorado.
 crischu wrote:
{#Dancingbanana}
 
thanks cruschu,  just spewed coffee out my nose  : )
 jhorton wrote:
Does anyone have this song in mp3 format? Been looking or it for a couple of years now, but not on iTunes or Amazon!
 
Try this: https://www.mp3searched.net/download/sc/86105339. Good luck.
Does anyone have this song in mp3 format? Been looking or it for a couple of years now, but not on iTunes or Amazon!
You are playing such good music i don't want to leave work.  Did i just write that?
..flippin awwwsomme..  has the precious cadence of a Benjamin Smoke tune and some of the poetic turn. they're in good good company.  i'm so pleased to be here now    {#Good-vibes}
Hutterite |ˈhətəˌrīt|
noun
a member of either an Anabaptist Christian sect established in Moravia in the early 16th century, or a North American community holding similar beliefs and practicing an old-fashioned communal way of life.
adjective
of or relating to Hutterites or their beliefs and practices.
ORIGIN from the name of Jacob Hutter (died 1536), a Moravian Anabaptist, + -ite 1 .

As for the song, dark and menacing; I like it!

One of the  most intense songs I know, niot so much for the Lyrics, but his voice in combination with the instruments.
 Kaw wrote:

Can't agree... In fact they are among the strongest I've heard in the recent decade. The lyrics are about the heavy burden (of sins) that orthodox Christians experience in their personal live. Also their feelings of 'I am nothing' & 'I am crooked' compared to the Lord. In some orthodox Christian churches it is very important to feel those feelings and think about yourself that way, because that is a sign of righteousness. I don't think David Eugene Edwards finds it very important as a dogma, but from this song and other songs I got the feeling his experience of the narrow road of orthodox Christianity is what he sings about. And personally I know this feeling. That's what makes this song so special to me.

 
Thanks for that interpretation, which makes sense even to this atheist as I was brought up as a Catholic (yeah, I know, we all have our crosses to bear :)). Yer man certainly sings with passion and anguish enough to move this godless heart. 8 from the brimming Nottingham jury.
From the title on down, some serious overwriting...
{#Dancingbanana}
On from here walkin dreams awake
I think not i think not
The sky comes king blown in every direction
And of no country
I am straw

It is no mystery
I know my way from here

Iron sharpens iron
Crooked wooden and peacock black
I have your feathers
Slung across my back
I'm not the only one
To help you down the hill
My blue knuckles do as they will

It is no mystery
I know my way from here
It is no mystery
I know my way from here

One as precious as the other
They go with me
Today i am not a false conscience
A tyrant
Angels line my pockets dear
I walk a hutterite mile
Look at me this once
Put an eye to my step
Look and furrow
Its only misery it's only ankle deep

It is no mystery
I know my way from here
It is no mystery
I know my way from here
Please let this be over - it's terrible.
 A beautifully bleak album. Mirland is right; this is a masterpiece.
awful
Haunting. Cabin by the lake. Rain just starting. Deathly quiet. All alone. Wind's kicking up. Storm on the horizon. Darkness is looming. Going inside - NOW!
 Spliff wrote:
Good vibe to the music - lyrics are weak.
 
Can't agree... In fact they are among the strongest I've heard in the recent decade. The lyrics are about the heavy burden (of sins) that orthodox Christians experience in their personal live. Also their feelings of 'I am nothing' & 'I am crooked' compared to the Lord. In some orthodox Christian churches it is very important to feel those feelings and think about yourself that way, because that is a sign of righteousness. I don't think David Eugene Edwards finds it very important as a dogma, but from this song and other songs I got the feeling his experience of the narrow road of orthodox Christianity is what he sings about. And personally I know this feeling. That's what makes this song so special to me.
Cool track.
 vandal wrote:

The Hutterites are an amazing people. . . as is this song.

 
i was just thinking about the Shakers last night.

One of my absolute fave tracks from this masterpiece album. Needs to be played loud though.
The name Sixteen Horsepower, reminds me of the Canadian indie band 13 Engines. Their album Conquistador (released in 1995) is very good, but unfortunately they broke up soon after it's release. I may try to upload a song from them when I get a chance.

I guess my inclinations are toward the meloncholy and literate songs like these. Great song and very much a big bite of a sandwich.

They plays often in France .... very cool music but sometimes sad universe ...

Quite good !


...this is quite cool...

The Hutterites are an amazing people. . . as is this song.

I'm wondering if there is any particular meaning to the band's name. Did the first %something% of historical significance have 16 horsepower? The reason I'm wondering is that there is a Soul Coughing song called 16 Horses (on the x-files movie soundtrack). Coincidence?
drifter wrote:
Hey! Play some fun music... TMBG or somethin'.
Fun includes fun-ky.
Hey! Play some fun music... TMBG or somethin'.
This is just awful.
Hutterite communities are also notable (to demographers) for having had the highest average birth rates ever recorded for any society--well over 10 children per woman back in the 1950s and 60s. And there we were, worried about the population bomb in Asia and Africa... fuh2 wrote:
I toured a Hutterite communal farm once. They unlike the Amish use modern equipment. They usually do so well they end up buying up all the surrounding farms. Very interesting place. Great song, 9.
Sing, don't bleat.
drife wrote:
This must be the "I'm committing suicide" set. PG's "Growing Up", followed by this droning, morose song.
You say it like it's a bad thing. I'm diggin' it. But I'm droning and morose too, so ymmv.
Fantastic, textural instrumentation.
first time i've heard this on here. seen the video..incredible.
This must be the "I'm committing suicide" set. PG's "Growing Up", followed by this droning, morose song.
MM_Prague wrote:
Quite good, but the Nick Cave influence can be very clearly heard and felt...
And the Neil Young influence.
I agree with all of the comments below!
I thought I was depressed!
MM_Prague wrote:
Quite good, but the Nick Cave influence can be very clearly heard and felt...
Which is a good thing. Right?
Nice music. Good lyrics. I liked the part about his blue knuckles.
Quite good, but the Nick Cave influence can be very clearly heard and felt...
More 16 horsepower pleeeeeeaaaaasee !!!!!! I saw them twice and they were fantastic.
there is an article in the june 06 national geographic about a hutterite colony in montana
I toured a Hutterite communal farm once. They unlike the Amish use modern equipment. They usually do so well they end up buying up all the surrounding farms. Very interesting place. Great song, 9.
Wikipedia article: The Hutterites practice total community of goods: all property is owned by the church, and provisions for individual members and their families come from the common resources. This practice is based largely on Hutterite interpretation of passages in chapters 2, 4, and 5 of Acts, which speak of the believers "having all things in common". Hutterite communities, called "colonies", are all rural; many depend largely on farming for their income. Often, they own large tracts of land and use top-of-the-line farm implements. Some also run state-of-the-art hog, chicken, or turkey barns. Hutterites are also venturing into the manufacturing sector. Each colony consists of ten to twenty families, with a population of 60–150. Approximately half of a colony's members are chosen (usually by lot) to "branch off" and form a new colony, when the colony's leadership determines that branching off is economically and spiritually viable. Although Hutterites attempt to remove themselves from the outside world (in the world, but not of the world), many Hutterite homes have computers and radios; a minority of communities (mostly, liberal Schmiedleut colonies) has some sort of filtered Internet access. Traditionally, Hutterite children leave school at 15 years of age to fulfill their adult roles in the colony. This practice is still strictly maintained by the Lehrerleut and most of the Dariusleut colonies. However, some young Hutterites, especially among the Schmiedeleut in Manitoba, have graduated from high school and have gone on to attend university; many become teachers for their colonies. Brandon University in Brandon, Manitoba, offers a Hutterite Education Program (BUHEP) to Hutterite high-school graduates for a portion of the Schmiedeleut. Just as the Amish and Mennonites often use Pennsylvania German, the Hutterites have preserved a distinct dialect of German known as Hutterite German.
this has a lower rating than I'd imagine.. this is really good stuff!
Pure genius!
see the latest album
I saw 16HP a few years ago, and it was one of the most intense concert going experiences I've ever had. I've never seen or heard anyone do what David Eugene Edwards was doing with his accordian. I am saddened by their breaking up, but David is still making good music with his Woven Hand project. Check it out if you like 16HP.
camden_hampden wrote:
16HP is no more as of this year citing "spiritual differences". Enjoy what they did produce, because it was special and there will likely never be anything like it again (not that I'd want anyone to try).
wow, that is sad. we can only hope they go on individually to create more interesting and unique music. as for "woven hand", I've never heard of them, but will try (elsewhere, I guess) to check them out.
zjank wrote:
Just this morning I uploaded a Woven Hand song to the LRC, I hope it will find its way to the regular playlist.
Well, that was wishfull thinking, it got sorried without even being played on the LRC.
I live in Holland and I've seen them play countless times, I lost track, probably somewhere between 10 and 15 times and I never get bored of their shows. They are fantastic live. What a shame that they split up earlier this year... Fortunately we still have Woven Hand, I'm going to see them this Friday and I'm looking forward to that very much. Just this morning I uploaded a Woven Hand song to the LRC, I hope it will find its way to the regular playlist.
camden_hampden wrote:
16HP is no more as of this year citing "spiritual differences". Enjoy what they did produce, because it was special and there will likely never be anything like it again (not that I'd want anyone to try).
agree!
16HP is no more as of this year citing "spiritual differences". Enjoy what they did produce, because it was special and there will likely never be anything like it again (not that I'd want anyone to try).
damn fine stuff... adding this one to the wishlist.
For a second I thought it was some Jack White/Leonard Cohen team-up. This is interesting and I like it.
This isn't their best work, but that doesn't matter, it's still good. The Smashing Pumpkins are my favorite band but 16HP comes in close second.
9-volt wrote:
whoa... i saw these guys open up for morphine sometime around '95. thoroughly impressive, and i've wondered what happened to them ever since. thanks bill.
Strange you haven't seen them since '95, seems to me they're always touring. I live in Sweden and think I've seen them 3 times here in Scandinavia since 2002. Do catch 'em if you have the chance, awesome live act. Highly recommend David Eugene Edward's other project Woven Hand too. /M
reminds me slightly of Joseph Arthur.
Powerful, haunting.
I apppreciate and enjoy these guys, despite their Old Testament Christianity orientation of lyrics.
Hut·ter·ite n. A member of an Anabaptist sect originating in Moravia and now living communally in parts of Canada and the northwest United States.
whoa... i saw these guys open up for morphine sometime around '95. thoroughly impressive, and i've wondered what happened to them ever since. thanks bill.
Good vibe to the music - lyrics are weak.