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June 4th, 2009

Leaves of Life + Bonus Rant

leavesoflifepress

Define ‘folk’ as you will. The term, with its divergent meanings and connotations and applications, has lost its ability to capture a contemporary “genre” in the strictest sense of the word. But as an essence, a philosophy, an outlook, it is still vital. It is still alive when musicians (or anybody, for that matter) share their songs or their stories or themselves with one another. Folk is about sublimating the human condition into art, plain and simple. And though the traveling bards may be working at Guitar Center and the hootenannies relegated to places that serve $6 Pabst, the urge to share, to trade, and to express keeps the folk tradition alive. Compilations are, perhaps, the closest thing the digital realm has to embodying the folk ethos. The artists join hands, so to speak, and share one, maybe two songs apiece. It’s like being around a campfire or in Washington Square Park, minus the whole live human thing. Any reader of this blog knows that compilations have been vital in the transmission of contemporary folk and psych music and, to me, it makes perfect, natural sense. Folk was never about headliners, it was about equal billing.

Curated by Buck Curran of Arborea, Leaves of Life will be released June 23rd on Borne Recordings. All proceeds benefit the UN’s Food Aid Agency, World Food Programme, and human rights advocacy monitors, Not On Our Watch. There will also be a digital version of the album with Bonus Tracks by Jozef Van Wissem, Plains, Denise Dill, and Laurent Brondel, so be sure to pick up a copy and hear some great songs.

[ First Listen ] Silver Summit – “Oaks”

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Leaves of Life Track List
1. Alela Diane with Mariee Sioux, “The Cuckoo”
2. Rio en Medio and Israel Cilio, “Mary”
3. Fern Knight, “Our Mountain the Mother”
4. Marissa Nadler and Black Hole Infinity, “Dead Wives Club”
5. Devendra Banhart, “Hotel St. Sebastian (demo)”
6. Arborea, “Son of the Moon, Daughter of the Sun”
7. Micah Blue Smaldone, “The Clearing”
8. Larkin Grimm, “The Butcher”
9. Mi and Lau, “The Funeral, The Pray”
10. Mica Jones, “Best Life”
11. Starless and Bible Black, “All the Finest Beams”
12. Cursillistas, “Mothers Taught”
13. Silver Summit, “Oaks”
14. Big Blood, “Sick With Information”
15. Eric Carbonara, “Sundown at Parakeet Park”
16. David Garland, “Splinter Heart”
17. Magic Leaves, “Lasso Reason”
18. Citay, “Little Kingdom”
19. Ora Cogan featuring Anni Rossi, “My Belle”

=tyler=

May 6th, 2009

Arborea Debuts Video for 'Black Mountain Road'

Video directed by Francesco Paolo Paladino

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November 17th, 2008

Arborea curates African Relief Project / World Food Program Benefit CD

Our good friends Buck and Shanti Curran of Arborea are putting together an incredible benefit CD for the African Relief Project and World Food Program… this is NOT to be missed. Incredible lineup, all around.

From Buck:

“Hi everybody, Shanti and I have been busy organizing and curating a compilation cd of some of our very favorite folks.  The tentative release date for the comp is March 21st, 2009 and  will be released on our label Borne Recordings/Acuarela (U.S. distribution through Darla Records). All proceeds are going to be donated to World Food Program (United Nations agency) to help with special and Very important relief operations and emergencies in places such as Darfur region of Sudan,Uganda, and the Congo. The confirmed lineup is – Marissa Nadler & Black Hole Infinity, Devendra Banhart, Mi and Lau, Fern Knight, Rio en Medio, Larkin Grimm, Arborea, Alela Diane, Mica Jones, Big Blood, Micah Blue Smaldone, Cursillistas, Magic Leaves, The Plains, Starless and Bible Black, David Garland, Ora Cogan, Eric Carbonara,  Jozef Van Wissem, and Silver Summit. Also, our friend Lyndsay recently introduced us to an intense and beautiful film called War Dance, about 3 children from the Acholi tribe in Uganda.  Music is a very important part of their lives.”

Click above for a clip of War Dance!

=tyler=

October 8th, 2008

Time of Rivers Festival this weekend!

The Time of Rivers Festival, set in the beautiful city of Portland, Maine, focuses on exploratory stringed instrumental soloists with an emphasis on the guitar. There are however a few ensembles who round things out a bit and hopefully complement the other musicians. Last year’s inaugural festival was a huge success with locals and visitors from all over due to the the diversity of the players and the various approaches to their instruments.

Tickets for the evening shows are $15 advance, $18 at the festival. Passes for all three evening shows are $35 in advance and $45 at the festival. Buy them here.

Tickets for the afternoon shows are $5 and available first-come, first-serve at the door only.

Friday, Oct 10
Doors open at 5:30pm, music startst at 6:00pm, 40 minute sets
Fursaxa, Joshua Burkett, Harris Newman, MV & EE, Ilyas Ahmed, Paul Metzger and Fire on Fire

Saturday, Oct. 11
12:00pm, 30 minute sets
tickets available at the door only, first come first serve.
Rafi Bookstaber, Visitations, Marcia Bassett, Steve Gunn

Saturday, Oct. 11
Doors open at 6:30pm, music startst at 7:00pm, 45+ minute sets
Cian Nugent, Ben Reynolds, George Stavis, Jack Rose, Michael Chapman, Micah Blue Smaldone

Sunday, Oct. 12
12:00pm, 35 minute sets
Cursillistas, James Beaudreau, Marc Orleans, Alexander Turnquist

Sunday, Oct. 12 at SPACE
Record fair (see below)

Sunday, Oct. 12 at SPACE
Doors open at 6:30pm, music startst at 7:00pm, 30 and 45+ minute sets
Arborea, Edward Gibbs, Carter Thornton, Glenn Jones, Tetuzi Akiyama, Jozef van Wissem

=tyler=

July 2nd, 2008

Arborea + Bonus Rant!

Nature has become a novel concept.  Being disconnected from technology is far more frightening to the average consumer than isolation from the simple, fluid mechanics of sun, rain, wind, growth, decomposition, and yes…death. The majesty of nature has always been its mystery. But the concept of the unknown, of the unknowable, is the antithesis of the human need to define. A patriarchal, individualistic, ego-centric system was erected by a society of opportunists who knew that nature’s model of lucid linearity stood in the way of their rigid desire for control, for power, for dominion over the mystery of death. Many see technology as our attempt to artificially synthesize ‘oneness’ or, to use fancier terminology, universal interconnectivity.  It’s a hollow cohesion. The digital universe, it seems, has replaced visceral human experience. Why remember something when it can be summoned in seconds? Why go somewhere when someone else has taken pictures of it? Please do not mistake my words for Luddite rhetoric.  Hypocrisy is not my strong suit. I, too, am caged by technology and can only idealize the wonders of a world without it.

Arborea forges the ever-illusive middle path. Though rooted in traditional folk melodies and instrumentation, the duo’s subtle use of modern production techniques paints a landscape of both stunning simplicity and painful melancholy. Shanti Curran’s voice, steeped in the frost of a late autumn, pierces the droning guitar and banjo melodies with aching efficacy.  For all its bucolic beauty, Arborea’s new self-titled record’s atmospherics sometimes outshine its songwriting.  Their vision, though rooted in the tradition of centuries past, glows with both an acceptance and admonition of the artificiality of our times.

[download] “Black Mountain Road” from Arborea

=tyler=

June 4th, 2008

Fern Knight / Arborea live on WFMU

Irene Trudel of WFMU (Jersey City, NJ) put on a great live in-studio set from Fern Knight and Arborea.

Fern Knight setlist: Silver Fox, Loch Na Fooey, Synge’s Chair, Epitaph (King Crimson), Magpie Suite.

Arborea setlist: Song for Obol, Beirut, Seadrift, Redbird, Forewarned.

[download] Fern Knight & Arborea (Performances start at 1:16:20)

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