Posts Tagged ‘Folk’

Musicians from the film “Winter’s Bone” – UPDATED!

Sunday, May 22nd, 2011

Coming to a town near you, music from the film Winter’s Bone! The musicians who appeared in the film and on its soundtrackMarideth SiscoBlackberry WinterBo BrownVan ColbertDennis CriderTedi MayLinda Stofffel, are on the road bringing Ozark mountain music to the city folk. Over the next month & change they’ll be criss-crossing North America, hitting everywhere from Nashville, TN to Vancouver, BC and all points in between. Described ever so cutely as O Brother Where Art Thou? for the suicidal” by The Onion’s A.V. Club, this is classic Americana straight from the horse’s mouth. Be there.

6/2 Seattle, WA – The Triple Door – 7PM
6/3 Vancouver, BC – Waldorf Cabaret – 8PM
6/4 Portland, OR – Aladdin Theatre – 7PM
6/6 San Francisco, CA – Great American Music Hall – 8PM
6/7 Los Angeles, CA – Masonic Lodge @ Hollywood Forever – 8PM
6/8 Phoenix, AZ – Mesa Arts Center / Piper Theatre – 7PM
6/10 Austin, TX – St. David’s Episcopal Church – 8PM
6/11 Dallas, TX – The Loft – 8:30PM
6/25 Little Rock, AR – Juanita’s Cantina Ballroom – 8:30PM
6/26 Nashville, TN – The End
6/27 Atlanta, GA – The Earl – 8:30PM
6/28 Chapel Hill, NC – Cat’s Cradle – 7PM
6/29 Washington, DC – Rock and Roll Hotel – 7PM
6/30 Philadelphia, PA – World Café Live – 7PM
7/1 Boston, MA – T.T. The Bear’s – 8:30PM
7/2 New York, NY – Highline – 6:00PM
7/3 Cleveland, OH – Beachland Ballroom – 7:30PM
7/5 Columbus, OH – Rumba Cafe – 8:00PM
7/6 Chicago, IL – Lincoln Hall
7/7 Minneapolis, MN – Cedar Cultural Center – 7:00PM
7/8 Kansas City, MO – Crosstown Station – 8:00PM
7/9 St. Louis, MO – Off Broadway Nightclub – 8:00PM

Michael Chapman Tour Dates with Meg Baird, Kurt Vile, Bonnie “Prince” Billy

Thursday, June 7th, 2012

Below are the dates for Michael Chapman’s current US tour! Check him out in a city near you. We’ll be at the Largo tonight, can’t wait!

June 7: Los Angeles, CA
W/ Kurt Vile
Largo @ The Coronet
366 North La Cienega Boulevard
Los Angeles, CA 90048

June 8: Pioneertown, CA
W/ Kurt Vile
Pappy & Harriets
53688 Pioneertown Road
Pioneertown, CA 92268

June 11: San Francisco, CA
W/ Meg Baird
LOCATION TBA

June 12: Durham, NC
W/ Black Twig Pickers
Pinhook
117 West Main Street
Durham, NC 27701

June 14: Blacksburg, VA
W/ Black Twig Pickers
Gillies
153 College Ave.
Blacksburg, VA 24060

June 15: Williamsburg, WV
Badlands Bluegrass Festival
The Poor Farm Festival Grounds

June 16: Newport, VA
W/ Black Twig Pickers
Newport Jamboree @ Newport Community Park
642 Blue Grass Trail
Newport, VA 24128

June 18: Brooklyn, NY
Steve Gunn Residency- Special Guest
Zebulon Cafe
258 Wythe Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 11211

June 19: WFMU
Brian Turner Show
Live On Air Session

June 21: Easthampton, MA
W/ Steve Gunn, MV & EE, & special guests
Flywheel
43 Main St. (located in the Old Town Hall)
Easthampton, MA

June 22: Brooklyn, NY
W/ Mike Wexler & special guests
Union Pool
484 Union Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 11211

June 24: Philadelphia, PA
W/ Bonnie Prince Billy
Trocadero
1003 Arch Street
Philadelphia, PA 19107

Snock ‘N Roll: Adventures With Michael Hurley

Thursday, June 21st, 2012

This is a great story! Marc Isreal, a free lovin’ puppeteer, was hitchhiking from his home in Massachusetts to Woodstock to deliver a shipment of home brewed Kombucha. The first person who picked him up just happened to be Michael Hurley (AKA Snock). Watch this short documentary and live vicariously through Marc!

Snock ‘N Roll: Adventures With Michael Hurley (Complete Documentary Short) from Marc Israel on Vimeo.

Free Basin’ Fridays – Diana Darby “I V (Intravenous)” LP Giveaway!

Friday, June 22nd, 2012

TGIFBF! It’s Free Basin’ Friday! This week we couldn’t be more stoked to give away a LP copy of Diana Darby’s IV

Diana Darby’s I V (intravenous) is a brand new album of songs that have passed through seven years of fire in a real life, retaining what Pitchfork called “minimal, whispered rendition(s)” of “powerfully fatalistic evaluations of hope.”

I V follows in the footsteps of three critically acclaimed releases and continues Darby’s unique ability to create beautiful and scary confessional tapestries, full of “fine lyrics and stellar arrangements” (Pop Matters). It is sure to reconnect Darby to her loving cult — and entrance an entirely new crowd of noir-folk fans with her deceptively lovely songcraft.

Though living in Nashville for the past several years, Darby returned to New York in 2011 to record new songs inspired by a staggering amount of deeply challenging circumstances. Her guitar and vocal tracks were cut live from ferociously focused single takes. Additional instruments and harmonies were added back home. The result is a nuanced, intense, gorgeous full-length album with top-notch studio players (Viktor Krauss, Dan Dugmore, and David Henry) adding to Diana’s vision.

The rare combination of chillingly evocative musicianship, coupled with Diana’s voice and words has produced a fourth album that is anunforgettable psychotropic journey.

Leave a comment below with your name and email (kept private) for your chance to win! Winner will be announced next Friday.

Hiss Golden Messenger’s “Haw” | Country Soul Greatness from Paradise Of Bachelors | Pre-order Now!

Monday, March 25th, 2013

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Haw is the name of a river, a modest tributary of the Cape Fear, flowing rocky and swift through 110 miles of Piedmont North Carolina, wending Southeasterly past abandoned and repurposed textile mills, rickety hippie homesteads, and red-clay farmland fringed with pine forests. Green corn in the fields/River running like a wheel. Haw is also one of a few names for a small Siouan tribe that once resided in the eponymous river’s valley and may have alternately known themselves as the Saxapahaw or Sissipahaw. After battling British settlers in the bloody Yamasee War of 1715-17, the Haw disappear from the colonial historical record. Their river remains, rolling on.

“Haw!” how a muleskinner moves a mule to the left. “Haw,” half a laugh.

Haw, herein, is an album of eleven songs about family, faith, and an ill-prophesied future, an artifact almost as archaic, lovely and seldom heard today as directional commands for beasts of burden. M.C. Taylor, who wrote these songs, once lived hard by the Haw with his wife Abigail and their son Elijah—Well I come from the bottom of the river Haw, he sings—but he doesn’t live there anymore. Having followed the slipstream to the relative bustle of nearby Durham, North Carolina, he has composed a new clutch of tunes that conjure the half-remembered dreams of peace promised by our pasts.

When pitted against rampant prognostications of a gathering American darkness in years to come, those easy domestic dreams falter and flicker and perhaps collapse. But if nostalgia is a potion that casts a crooked smoke, these smoky Southern blues suggest that fatalism frames the future. What will be will be enough. Don’t study on the ways of tomorrow. If we allow our yesterdays—our youth—to fade too far into the glow of malleable memory and doddering fondness, our tomorrows will surely assume a dire and bleak fixity. And so we sing out: Goodbye blackened abattoir/Hello, yellow dawn. It takes a worried man to sing such a worried song: Sara Carter knew that, and many other fellow travelers too.

Haw proposes a manifestly mature sense of anxiety and acute but unspectacular workaday pain, mapping a spiritual inscape pricklier and more unknowable than the places explored on Poor Moon (2011), the previous Hiss Golden Messenger record of all new material. Sonically, the arrangements – by turns lush with strings and saxophones and as kitchen-table direct as Bad Debt (2010) – belie the compositions’ Biblical claws with a longing for pastoral comfort, the ease of fellowship, and more minutes than they can contain. I do not go by the Book of Days. These prayers from Babylon posit that we are, all of us, ruled by the distant thunder of memory and ingrown or inherited gospel. The best we can do is to await the next storm with joy and devotion. Some call that faith. I’m trying to learn to love my conqueror.

Taylor’s writing and singing here achieve a tenebrous clarity, invoking—and occasionally challenging—a intermingling cast of prophetic characters both sacred and profane: Daniel, Elijah, the Apostles, and the Son of Man, sure, but also the Peacock Fiddle Band, Mississippi John Hurt, and by implication, Lew Welch, Waylon Jennings, Michael Hurley, and our friend Jefferson Currie II. Say whatever prayer you want: to Jehovah or Yahowah, or Red Rose Nantahala. More than ever before, the supporting players of Hiss Golden Messenger feature as tellers of the tale. Each episode earns a meticulously turned ensemble statement.

In the band’s current incarnation, rhythm section stalwarts Terry Lonergan (drums) and Taylor’s longtime musical brother Scott Hirsch (bass, guitar, and production) are joined by Durham multi-instrumentalist Phil Cook of Megafaun, Black Twig Pickers banjoist Nathan Bowles of Blacksburg, and on Telecaster, Nashville’s own, William Tyler. Bobby Crow (saxophone), Matt Cunitz (keys), Gordon Hartin (steel guitar), Joseph DeCosimo (fiddle), Sonia Turner (vocals), and Mark Paulson of the Bowerbirds (strings) also crew, navigating Haw’s shoals of trouble and delight. Lyrically and musically multifarious and freshly urgent, Haw represents Hiss Golden Messenger’s most ambitious and challenging work yet.

In the end, the record, like the full tilt river, takes us through the gates and past all the creatures with their forkèd tongues (though the serpent is kind, compared to man.) But we needn’t follow it all the way to Cape Fear. Instead, cleave you to the rock; keep the sloughs astern. Row. Here comes Easter Sunday. There’ll be Cheerwine and chicken bog, red drum and Red Horse Bread. Got so drunk on brandywine/The scales fell away. And that’s worth at least half a laugh.

So: haw! Selah!

Paradise Of Bachelors present Hiss Golden Messenger’s new LP Haw. Preorder now from LightInTheAttic.net!

  • The eagerly anticipated, full-length, full-band follow-up to the critically acclaimed 2011 album Poor Moon (PoB-02)
  • Available on virgin vinyl, in a deluxe, limited edition of 2000, as well as on CD and digital formats
  • Vinyl edition features matte, tip-on jacket, full-color inner sleeve, and digital download coupon
  • CD housed in heavy 24 pt matte gatefold wallet

 

Scott Key – “This Forest and the Sea” | Lion Productions | 180-G LP

Tuesday, May 28th, 2013

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Scott Key - This Forest and the Sea
LION116 (LP)
ORDER NOW!

Out now on Lion Productions, Scott Key’s This Forest and the Sea, an excellent 1976 private press acoustic album, self-recorded at various places in Colorado. From start to finish, this album is filled with beautiful finger style acoustic guitar, plus some atonal bottleneck slide, string scrapes and drones (at times, very Ry Cooder / Paris, Texas about six years before that soundtrack existed). Although almost completely instrumental, what lyrics there are tend towards the dark and the satiric. The obvious points of comparison are John Fahey and Leo Kottke, although Scott Key certainly has his own presence and style, differences in tone and color and attack, which he attributes to his background in rock bands.

Overall, there is a brooding, loner folk/psych feel, most evident on the phenomenal, effects-heavy, almost 11-minute long title track, ‘This Forest and the Sea.’ “I was coming to terms with what it mean to exist… and saw the world in pure black and white—there was no room for grey,” Key said. “I saw an American Culture devoid of any understanding of its place in the universe, how we learn nothing save what we see on television, how our existence is tainted by intellectual laziness, and how our gift of life is defiled by the taking of it.” This deluxe 180-gram vinyl LP edition of This Forest and the Sea comes with an insert which sports engaging, funny, and insightful notes by Key, photos, plus the text to poem that inspired the title track; as a nod to the forest. A very rare album that seems to have flown under almost everyone’s radar—although thankfully not Doug McGowan’s (Yoga Records), who sent this our way. One record collector said to us, and we now say to you: “Have a listen because this rates up there with classics by Bob Desper, Perry Leopold, Robbie Basho, and Phil Yost, with dark moods similar to John Fahey and Nick Drake.”

>> Limited edition pressing of 500!!!

To stream a taste of Scott Key’s This Forest and the Sea, and to order a copy visit LightInTheAttic.net!

Michael Hurley | 1971’s Armchair Boogie and Hi Fi Snock Uptown | Out Now!

Tuesday, June 11th, 2013

MH

Back in 2011 we reissued three albums from folk singer, guitarist and artist Michael Hurley: 1975’s Have Moicy (LITA 061), 1976’s Long Journey (LITA062) and 1980’s Snockgrass (LITA 063). Now, our imprint Future Days Recordings is back to revisit some of Hurley’s earliest solo works with the reissue of Armchair Boogie (FDR 603) and Hi Fi Snock Uptown (FDR 604).

MichaelHurley

Michael Hurley is a singularly unusual musician and artist. Born in 1941 in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, Hurley moved to New York in the early ‘60s, where he began making his name on the subversive Greenwich Village folk scene before contracting mono and spending years in and out of hospital. Back in health, he was discovered by blues and jazz historian Frederick Ramsey III and subsequently championed by boyhood friend Jesse Colin Young, he recorded his debut album, 1964’s First Songs for Folkways, on the same reel-to-reel machine that taped Lead Belly’s Last Sessions. Its songs were borrowed by Holy Modal Rounders and The Youngbloods, the latter signing Hurley to their Raccoon imprint and releasing his next two albums. The singer-songwriter came into his own recording those warm, eccentric records, colored as they are by fantastic characters, charming Americana and homemade blues.

Hurley’s 1971 album Armchair Boggie was recorded with Jesse Colin Young and featured 14 songs about love and strange things – werewolves (‘Werewolf’), institutionalized English gentry (‘English Nobleman’) and aquatic birds (‘Penguin’). Credited to Michael Hurley and pals, Young is among the friends who appear. Largely acoustic, it features little more than the sound of Hurley’s guitar and voice and the occasional mouth trumpet.

Hi Fi Snock Uptown, produced by “Banana” and Joe Bauer saw Hurley amplifying some of Armchair Boogie’s willfully esoteric qualities and delivering an album that explores the full range of his sound, from blues to country and folk to playful sounds – like his crow impressions on ‘Old Black Crow’. As ‘Twilight Zone’ neatly puts it, “everything is weird”. It also features some of his most loved songs such as ‘Water Train’, ‘Eyes, Eyes’ and the gorgeous traveling track ‘Blue Driver’.

Both Armchair Boggie and Hi Fi Snock Uptown are highly sought-after albums sounding better than they ever have, complete with Hurley’s own, unmistakable sleeve art. The albums are housed in a deluxe, gatefold, tip-on jacket.

  • First ever CD reissue
  • Remastered by J.J. Golden (Golden Mastering) from the original master tapes
  • Deluxe Stoughton gatefold CD “tip-on” jacket
  • Includes 36 page reproduction of original cartoon book by Hurley (*Armchair Boggie only)