Monthly Archive for November, 2008

When apples still grow in November…

 

It would be useless to search for a deeper meaning of the picture and the song ; simply a synapse connection between what my eyes captured yesterday (woot woot ! snow is here… ) and my music library !
This song is part of the Jolly Beggarmen ’40 Irish Drinking Songs’ live compilation : according to the low temperature (-7° Celsius), we’re facing, it’s a proper remedy ! Anyone would help me find some Russian folk collection for colder conditions ?

Gregory Alan Isakov – That Sea, The Gambler

Gregory Alan Isakov

This one takes us back to the beginning of last year. I was already convinced by Isakov’s outstanding lyrical talent after listening to his ‘Rust Coloured Stones’ album and ‘Songs For October’ EP (both saw the light in 2005) but then, due to the new album in the pipe-line, I moved to other artists. When resuming the thread of my posts, the MySpace-friends-clicks and CD-Baby-albums-you-will-love, I found myself facing this Colorado based atypical folk artist  again: this time to discover ‘That Sea, The Gambler’: twelve songs of elegant simplicity recorded in 2007. How sublime they are! Yes, I like these forced rests, when the music leaves you with no other option than to stop all other activities : just listening…
Come and visit my Last.fm page. Take a look at my list of top albums and you’ll get an idea of my efficiency these past weeks, counting the listens to this album !

If like me, you missed this boat, don’t wait another second, no need to stop by the available song below just scroll down the post and leave your mouse click on the Where To Buy link.
If the works of Dostojewski come to your mind when hearing the name Isakov, click the button of the chansonette and subscribe to the ‘Psychology & Families’ magazine.
Third case, you’re a regular visitor of this site and Isakov arouses nothing more nothing less than a wild frozen country : well, have implicit trust, start from the start, song by song, and swim through them. I know Gregory does…

 
 

It doesn’t strike you at first listen? Try it over and over, in the end it will be the musical companion you always wished for…

Artist : Gregory Alan Isakov
Label : none.
Where to buy ? cdbaby.com
More Appetizers : @myspace.com / sonicbids.com
Who else to enjoy : Danny Schmidt, John Craigie

Because I am a big oaf.

It has been a while since I have put a post up on You Crazy Dreamers, I don’t know why either, just busy with life I guess.  But wait.  I must do my best to provide at least some entertainment via recommended music and possible self deprecation.  Of the latter I am quite fond and familiar with.  But let’s concentrate on the former – musical recommendation.

As the title indicates, I am a big oaf – both for not showing myself around these parts and because I am a guy who sits around listening to music and apparently not sharing any of it.  So in stark juxtapose (wow, big words today in this post) to myself, I give you three lovely ladies who bring along with them some great music.

  • ~Firstly, I give you “His Royal Shyness” and the bedroom indie folk track “Sickness unto Death” from the “Songs for your Sister” EP.  $3.00 for the EP – you can not go wrong!
  • ~Secondly, I give you Pam Kapoor (of The Peptides) and her cover of the Aimee Mann track “You Know the Rest” which is actually when Aimee was still known as Til Tuesday!  Great Stuff.
  • ~Thirdly, I give you Geri X and her punk-folk track “The Dance” from the 2005 “Radioactive Drool” album.  Visit Geri X’s website for more great music (and two albums just for giving feedback!).

There you go, have a great Tuesday and don’t say I wasn’t there when you needed me.  I promise to return with more suggestions and possibly more serious posts in the near future!

~Smansmith

 
 
 

Will Cookson – Songs for a Sunday

And what if it was Sunday already?

Well, I dont want to stir your longing for the coming weekend but I should warn you: under no circumstance listen to the following songs when you’re on your job. You’d risk a letter of resignation or even worse the bankruptcy of your entreprise. That is the case already? Go ahead and risk the poetry and the spellbinding melodies of this 30 year old Englishman: Will Cookson. Not too unseasoned, not too smoked, just what’s needed to create a vintage.

 

Artist : Will Cookson
Label
: Tinpot
Where to buy
? Amazon
More Appetizers
: some b-sides and unreleased songs are available on Will’s site@myspace.com
Who else to enjoy : Andy Whitle

Sarah Siskind and …

Totally absorbed in interviewing M. Brownrigg, Trini forgot to provide us some all-important information concerning the inescapable Bon Iver. Some extra tour dates in Europe accompanied by the talented Sarah Siskind, as well as a video available on YouTube, are sufficient matter to add another layer.

But it would be quite arrogant to mention this in passing and to not go into Ms Siskind’s universe a little more. Chiefly because we count among the fans of this songwriter from North Carolina some big names like  Alison Krauss, Ron Sexsmith and Peter Bradley Adams…

“Sarah Siskind’s music is not easily explained or contained. She’s a singer and songwriter based in Nashville and grounded in Appalachian roots, but one who transcends category with a beguiling fusion of the traditional and the modern. Whether solo, fronting an electric band or in her harmony-laden side project Old Black Kettle, Sarah creates emotionally charged soundscapes that consistently delight and surprise even her long-time fans.”

Four albums to her credit, of which the first one was recorded at age 14, Sarah announced by the end of Summer, the forthcoming release of her next cd, still is in its mastering phase. So, you will have understood I had to be satisfied with the digital version of her latest double EP : ‘Studio . Living Room’. But what a satisfaction indeed!

 

If the original ‘Lovin’s For Fools’ version is of a rare beauty ; both Studio songs and Living Room ones deserved your full attention. Thinking Christmas !

Artist : Sarah Siskind
Label : none
Where to buy : cdbaby.com
More Appetizers : @myspace.com
Tour dates opening for Bon Iver :

  • Decembre 3 Dublin, Ireland
  • Decembre 6 Ghent, Belgium
  • Decembre 7 London, UK

Don Brownrigg – Wander Songs

“Music with spirit. Music akin to roots, folk, blues, and country, Don Brownrigg is a musician’s musician…”

I’d like to take credit for finding this little gem but it was my lovely friend Chad from Canada that sent me this album along with a few others several weeks ago. We both have a love for music and more so a love of finding new talent that we can share with each other. I had Don’s album on my list of “albums to review” and never got around to it. I could kick myself now for not pushing play any sooner. This album is absolutely beautiful. It is a perfect melting pot of folk, blues, and country. He has a voice that stays with you long after the last tune has been sung. Needless to say he had me at the first chord. Thanks Chad and thank you Don for taking the time to do this little interview with us. I asked Don what song he would like for us to share with everyone and he said for me to choose…..ah the daunting task…they are all so good and I have my favorites but don’t just take my word for it, buy the album. (I’m having trouble uploading a song, will post it up later)

YCD: I was reading in your bio a quote that you are “inspired by people and natural things” and that you feel you are “living a generation or two too late”, is that still how you feel today?

Don: Yep, probably even more so! I’ve met a lot more people and have seen a lot more places since that first interview. I like the intimacy of simplicity.

YCD: Do you write your own music? What inspired the song “About Her”? When I first heard this song my heart skipped a beat. I wondered if anyone would ever feel this way about me. It’s truly a beautiful song.

Don: Thanks!
Yes, I write my own music. ‘About Her’ is an old song of mine. It was one of those songs that ‘wrote itself’. It just uses simple phrasing and chord progressions – but that’s all you need to get the right point across – if you are conveying the right mood and saying the right words. The song has connected with a few people on a different level and for that I’m very fortunate.

YCD: I always tell people I have an “A” job and a “Dream” life. Sometimes I feel that we are all in search of that thing that truly makes us happy and fulfilled. Would you say that music is your “dream” life? If you weren’t a song writer what would you be doing now?

Don: I am living my dream as my career. In a lot of ways, it is work and a job like any other – but there is not enough time in the day when you live your career. I’ve worked lots of jobs but that’s behind now. I’m lucky that I’ve discovered this thing that I can put all of my energy into and I can’t wait to wake up in the morning to work on it. I’d like for everyone to find that thing in their life. It’s tough. Discovery of that one thing in your life means you must take risks and just go for some things….step into the uncomfortable and un-ordinary, something you want to try, something different you need to do, etc. I hope more people do that. If I weren’t a song writer, I’d probably be something really practical, like a chiropractor or a carpenter.

YCD: What songs are you inspired by or cannot live without at the moment, yours or someone else’s?

Don: I am living in a city (Halifax) that’s known throughout the country as being a musical hotbed. I’m fortunate enough to be a part of this thriving community and I am inspired by the talent, vigor, and hard work of the musicians here. I’ve gotten to work on albums by Benn Ross, Rich Aucoin, Jesse Dangerously, Caledonia, and Tanya Davis. Each one of those acts aren’t anything like each other and aren’t similar to my music and that’s what makes this community beautiful and healthy. The support system rather than any sort of competition in independent music allows a person to be so comfortable in what they’re doing because they have such a support system in their colleagues – we know we have our friends there to help out in any way, be it professionally or personally.

YCD: Who has been the biggest influence in your musical career?

Don: Tough question. I’ve always been a very practical person so when I was getting more and more serious about music as a career, my parents could have been more weary but they weren’t at all. They urged me to follow through with this music thing – to do what I wanted – to work hard – to see how it goes, at least. In the early stages, I wasn’t really telling people who knew me that I was playing music, that it was my dream, that I needed it. Their support from the get-go meant a lot.

Also, a little dark and morbid as it may seem. I’ve had a few people in my life die well before their supposed ‘time’. Also, I’ve never thought I was to live very long and I’ve always had this dream to make music. So I guess having those people’s time end so quickly propelled me in a certain way. Make my time count for me, ‘go for it’, why not?

YCD: With all the changes and uncertainties going on in the music industry today, what inspires you to keep doing what you’re doing and why?

Don: I’m not sure. It is tough and a struggle in a lot of ways. Songwriters love and need the drama, don’t we? Like I mentioned earlier, if you’re living your dream as your career, a lot of the tough times can be absorbed easily. There are incredible highs and stifling lows. Each step is uncertain but once you’re confident the music you’re making is establishing a connection, it is worth it. The community of professional musicians I’ve surrounded myself with inspire me to continue. Fans inspire me to continue.

YCD: Wander Songs was released in 2007, is there anything new you are working on now?

Don: Yep, I’m still writing for another short while. In early 2009, I’ll start organizing for recording again. It’s a big process but I’m soon ready again. For now, I’m glad to be jumping in on other acts’ recording projects and shows when I can. I started off as a side-guy so I still have that. I also love to sing back-up and I’m doing more and more of that, on a more behind the scenes/supportive level. I need to support those people as they are supporting me.

YCD: For those readers who haven’t heard of you or your music before what would best describe your music?

Don: Organic, low-key, and created by one young unconfident fellow with a few good friends.

YCD: Thank you for your time. We are looking forward to sharing your music with everyone. I love your album it has such a timeless feel to it. I’m sure it will quickly become a favorite of our readers.

Don: Thanks a ton for having me!

Buy CD Baby
Official Website
MySpace
Sonicbids

 

The Garden – Et, Colby inventa myTunes…

Of all the available ways of expressing ourselves, Colby Stead singled out nakedness. His songs are barely dressed, merely a few guitar notes. At times they are warmed up by a female echo, sometimes by a moving cello or the breath of an accordion. In this way, he serves up an appetizing variety of ‘crudités’ for curious minds.

Today, by creating Mytunes, M. Stead offers us the possibility to crunch the apple once again: a collection of songs and spoken word you can download for ‘What’s it worth’.

Among these gems we discover his two latest albums ‘No’ and ‘So it goes’ in full, a set of home recordings, concerts and readings and others unreleased pearls like this one :

 

Artiste : Colby Stead
Label : Thoughtfull
Where to tune ? http://colbystead.com




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