Lefty

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Viewing 15 posts - 1,216 through 1,230 (of 1,435 total)
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  • in reply to: What the hell happened to country music? #34920
    Lefty
    Participant

    http://www.miamiherald.com/986/story/483277.html

    in reply to: In heavy rotation… #32157
    Lefty
    Participant

    The Raconteurs – “Consolers of the Lonely”

    Two-word review: “Terrifyingly tuneful.” (Boston Globe)
    And that’s a good thing!

    in reply to: kathleen edwards #35580
    Lefty
    Participant

    http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080403/ENT04/804030319/1039/ENT

    in reply to: Lucinda in Greenfield, Mass. #35627
    Lefty
    Participant

    Well, Greenfield is only 249 miles away…
    Wouldn’t mind seeing Mavis either…
    Thanks for the heads-up, Tim!

    in reply to: kathleen edwards #35578
    Lefty
    Participant

    http://crawdaddy.wolfgangsvault.com/Article.aspx?id=6430

    in reply to: In heavy rotation… #32156
    Lefty
    Participant

    Carbon/Silicon – “The Last Post”

    http://www.kansascity.com/entertainment/music/story/547307.html

    in reply to: when lucinda came into my life #35333
    Lefty
    Participant

    http://www.healingmusic.org/

    Be well, Sister.

    in reply to: Lucinda’s Greatest Hits… #35613
    Lefty
    Participant

    You could just label this “Volume I,” Parker, and then start compiling the follow-up… 🙂

    in reply to: kathleen edwards #35577
    Lefty
    Participant

    Arresting Storyteller
    Kathleen Edwards creates captivating tales on new CD

    By Tom Huntington Arts Correspondent
    Barre Montpelier Times Argus, 03/21/08

    After taking a much-needed break from touring and taking her time to create the compelling material on her mesmerizing new CD, “Asking for Flowers,” Kathleen Edwards is readier than ever to deliver her captivating compositions and distinctive vocals on a massive three-month tour that finds her returning to the Green Mountain State.

    “I’m ready to work, and I’ve had so much time off that it really gave me some great perspective,” said Edwards, 29, recently in Country Standard Time magazine – which called “Asking for Flowers” “her delicately driven masterpiece.”

    “I have such a second wind, I feel like I’m 20 again, and I’m excited to go out on the road,” she said. “I have a better understanding of how hard I have to work and how much energy I’m looking forward to putting into it.”

    On Monday, March 31, the recently begun North American trek makes a stop at Higher Ground’s intimate Showcase Lounge, where the Canadian country-rock standout will be joined by her rootsy band and Toronto singer-songwriter Justin Rutledge, who opens the early all-ages show.

    Rutledge was recently nominated for a Juno award (the Canadian equivalent of the Grammy) in the “Roots and Traditional Album of the Year: Solo” category for his CD, “The Devil on a Bench in Stanley Park.”

    Dubbed “the next Lucinda Williams” by PopMatters, Edwards is an arresting roots-rock siren with breathy vocals and unblinking lyrics who “lures you in with melodic song-stories about hard-bitten lives, then holds you there with her gorgeously sweet voice,” said the Boston Globe recently, calling her “an artist at her peak.”

    Edwards made her area debut at the original Higher Ground in 2003, at the end of an extensive tour in support of her widely lauded debut album, “Failer.” Featuring a vintage analog sound and standout singles such as the bittersweet ballad “Six O’Clock News” and the gorgeously elegant “Hockey Skates,” “Failer” earned her accolades as “a rare talent” (No Depression) and “an authentic music phenomenon” (Boston Globe).

    Following another lengthy tour behind her solid 2005 follow-up, “Back to Me,” the unassuming Ottawa native decided to take a much-needed break from the road and refocus herself, both as a songwriter and musician.

    The result is easily her best work to date. “Asking for Flowers,” released earlier this month, is a stunning set of captivating narratives and accomplished compositions that seals Edwards’ status as one of the finest roots-rock singer-songwriters around.

    Featuring an all-star cast of studio session veterans such as roots-music secret-weapon guitarist Greg Leisz and keyboardist Benmont Tench (Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers), the CD serves up a couple of instant country-rock classics: “The Cheapest Key,” a rollicking rocker that features some wicked harmonica work by fellow Canadian Paul Reddick; and the loping “I Make the Dough, You Get the Glory,” which soars on the strength of Edwards’ witty lyrics and Leisz’s tasty pedal steel work.

    More subtle standouts include the spellbinding title track, the urgent and poignant “Oil Man’s War,” and the Neil Young and Crazy Horse-invoking moodiness of “Run” and the beautifully melancholy seven-minute closer, “Goodnight, California” (imagine a more subdued take on the Crazy Horse classic, “Like a Hurricane”).

    “I wanted to write songs that tell a story – be it mine or someone else’s – with honesty and integrity,” says Edwards in her press materials. “These songs came from a very true place in my heart, perhaps the reason they took so long to write.”

    in reply to: Lucinda sings Dylan #35588
    Lefty
    Participant

    If only, Tim, if only…
    🙂

    in reply to: Lucinda sings Dylan #35586
    Lefty
    Participant

    Didn’t know that about SXSW, I-Job.
    I do think that’s a great Dylan song for Lucinda, imho.

    in reply to: Lucinda sings Dylan #35584
    Lefty
    Participant

    Meet Me in the Morning
    First Release: Blood on the Tracks (1975)

    Meet me in the morning, 56th and Wabasha
    Meet me in the morning, 56th and Wabasha
    Honey, we could be in Kansas
    By time the snow begins to thaw.

    They say the darkest hour is right before the dawn
    They say the darkest hour is right before the dawn
    But you wouldn’t know it by me
    Every day’s been darkness since you been gone.

    Little rooster crowin’, there must be something on his mind
    Little rooster crowin’, there must be something on his mind
    Well, I feel just like that rooster
    Honey, ya treat me so unkind.

    The birds are flyin’ low babe, honey I feel so exposed
    Well, the birds are flyin’ low babe, honey I feel so exposed
    Well now, I ain’t got any matches
    And the station doors are closed.

    Well, I struggled through barbed wire, felt the hail fall from above
    Well, I struggled through barbed wire, felt the hail fall from above
    Well, you know I even outran the hound dogs
    Honey, you know I’ve earned your love.

    Look at the sun sinkin’ like a ship
    Look at the sun sinkin’ like a ship
    Ain’t that just like my heart, babe
    When you kissed my lips?

    Copyright © 1974 Ram’s Horn Music

    in reply to: Lucinda sings Dylan #35581
    Lefty
    Participant

    Thanks for that link, Tim.

    Hey, Lu, how ’bout doing “Meet Me in the Morning” ❓ 8)

    in reply to: ANOTHER Q FOR IJ – re: NY & LA shows #35545
    Lefty
    Participant

    Hey! Not everyone said that! 😉

    in reply to: In heavy rotation… #32154
    Lefty
    Participant

    Dead Confederate – “Dead Confederate” (EP)
    This ain’t your daddy’s southern rock anymore…
    8)

Viewing 15 posts - 1,216 through 1,230 (of 1,435 total)