Justin Ringle's project has moved from acoustic folk to atmospheric textures while keeping his songwriting central.
If you're new to Horse Feathers, start with "Curs In The Weeds" and "A Burden", they capture that early, stripped-down quality that first defined the band. Then check out something like "Pacific Bray" to hear where the sound has drifted.
Horse Feathers matters because they've carved out a specific space in modern folk music that feels both intimate and evolving. Songs like "Curs In The Weeds" show how Ringle's voice and acoustic arrangements can carry emotional weight without grand gestures. Their shift toward atmospheric and electronic touches on later records suggests a band unwilling to stay in one lane, even within a quiet format.
The band started with the 2005 album Words Are Dead, which established their folk-leaning sound. Later records like Tundra and Interiors introduced more experimental textures while maintaining Ringle's songwriting as the anchor. The lineup has included musicians like Heather McIntosh on violin and Joey Glynn on bass, adding layers to the arrangements over time.
Keep it compact: a lyric you come back to, a live memory, or the part of the catalog you would point someone toward first.
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