Whitehorse (album)

Whitehorse is the self-titled album from Whitehorse, a band consisting of Melissa McClelland and Luke Doucet. The album was released on August 30, 2011 in Canada by Six Shooter Records.[1] It was made available for digital download on August 9, 2011.

Whitehorse
Studio album by
Whitehorse
ReleasedAugust 9, 2011 (Digital)
August 30, 2011
GenreIndie rock, country
Length24:18
LabelSix Shooter Records
Whitehorse chronology
Whitehorse
(2011)
The Fate of the World Depends on This Kiss
(2012)

Personnel

  • Melissa McClelland: vocals, acoustic guitar
  • Luke Doucet: vocals, White Falcon (and some other electric guitars), acoustic guitar, bass, pedal steel, piano, organ, banjo
  • Barry Mirochnick: drums, B3 bass and vocals on "Killing Time is Murder", drums on "Emerald Isle" and "Passenger 24"
  • Pat Steward: drums on "Broken" and "I'm On Fire"
  • Doug Elliott: bass on "Broken" and "I'm On Fire"

Track listing

  1. "Eulogy for Whiskers, Part I"
  2. "Killing Time is Murder"
  3. "Emerald Isle"
  4. "Passenger 24"
  5. "Broken"
  6. "I'm On Fire"
  7. "Night Owls"
  8. "Eulogy for Whiskers, Part II"
  • All songs written by Luke Doucet & Melissa McClellend, except "Broken" was written by Luke Doucet, Melissa McClellend & Sean MacDonald; and "I'm On Fire" was written by Bruce Springsteen
gollark: Do you think the electoral college does not do this?
gollark: > Because in Michigan, those particular cities usually decide the votes due to their high population. I'm going to call it "favouring rural people" if they get more voting power than they would if it was proportional to actual population.
gollark: You could also call that a "representative democracy", but I don't think disputing definitions is helpful.
gollark: Are you saying that the electoral college system does *not* favour rural people over city ones, in general?
gollark: There are a lot of groups of people with different needs. Why favour rural people over city people instead of rich people over poor people or [race 1] over [race 2] or Apple users over Android users or whatever? It's arbitrary.

References


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