Music news, reviews, interviews and notes

  HOME ARCHIVES INTERVIEWS REVIEWS WATCH THIS SPACE CONTACT  

Monday, July 06, 2009

Monday's Earful: The Leaves 

By: David Schultz

Since Phish burst out of Vermont, the state has rightfully gained a reputation as a breeding ground for earthy, rootsy bands. Coming from the closeknit group of friends and musicians that includes Grace Potter & The Nocturnals, Blues & Lasers and Jen Crowell, Burlington favorites The Leaves, fronted by the sweet and powerful Aya Inoue, are ready to emerge from the state’s snowy confines onto a larger stage. Fans of Mike Gordon’s Ramble Dove will remember Inoue as one of the collective’s sprightly young singers and anyone who has seen Blues & Lasers will recognize Steve Sharon as one half of the band’s potent double drum assault. On Saving Your Side, their first full-length release, The Leaves live up to the potential they showed on Timid Line, building and expanding on the delicacy of their wonderful 4-song 2008 EP.

A strong, well-rounded album, Saving Your Side finds Sharon, bassist Cory Beard and guitarist Matt Harpster keeping a gratifying slow burn on Inoue’s smoldering songs, earthy sonnets of emotional restlessness and discontent which occupy the space between modernized Grand Ole Opry country, coffeehouse blues and traditional singer-songwriter based folk music. After incorporating Emmylou Harris as a reference point in “Record Player,” Inoue channels her on “Happier I Guess,” a song resounding with a simplicity that manages to convey its ephemeral doubts. Harpster, whose guitar style is not that dissimilar from Scott Tournet’s, punctuates many of the album’s turning points with some fine solos, providing an insistent pulse to “Who I Am” and “Going Home."

Inoue has a strong voice that carries the boldness and resolve of Gillian Welch but trembles with the same fragile twinges that make Jill Sobule such an alluring singer. After an album’s worth of battered hearts and bruised emotions, the album’s finale, “Movin’ On,” which lets Sharon cut loose a bit on the drums, serves as Saving Your Side’s final blow-off. Singing with a feisty growl, you might get the sense that Inoue walks through life plagued by the ghosts of relationships past. Fear not though, in real life the story has a happy end and The Leaves have a great little album on their hands.

You can hear tracks from the new record and check out show dates on their Myspace page.

Labels:


Friday, June 19, 2009

Pawnshop Roses to host "Let it Roll" Festival; World Cafe Tonight 

Taking a cue from moe and their now annually successful moe.down festival, the Pawnshop Roses are co-hosting their first annual "Let it Roll" Festival at Sunnyview Farm in Ghent, NY the weekend of September 18th and 19th.

Sunnyview Farm is a gorgeous 1200 acre farm located in Ghent, NY, which is just over an hour north of Woodstock, that has played host to rock and roll royalty over the years including John Lennon, Willie Nelson and Levon Helm.

So far, confirmed acts include Leroy Justice, Teenage Prayers, The Leaves, Dead River Company and BuzzUniverse. Additional acts and headliners will be announced soon. Tickets available here.

Ghent, NY is conveniently located near Albany (45 minutes), Boston (2.5 hours), NYC (2 hours), Burlington, VT (3 hours 45 minutes) and Philadelphia (4 hrs). The “Let It Roll” Festival is an all-ages even and adults 21 and over can enjoy B.Y.O.B. Food and nonalcoholic concessions stands will also be in place. In addition, ample grassy fields will provide parking for cars, RVs, and buses and plenty of room will be designated for setting up camp to spend the night.

Meanwhile, the Pawnshop Roses headline the World Cafe Live tonight in Philadelphia with special guests Justin Jones and The Morning Pages, starting at 8pm.

Labels: , , , , , ,


Tuesday, January 29, 2008

The Leaves: Timid Line 

By: David Schultz

There are times when analyzing the liner notes of an album can be slightly misleading. When you peer inside the cover of Timid Line, the latest EP by The Leaves, the names Bryan Dondero and Scott Tournet are going to leap out at you and scream Grace Potter & The Nocturnals. Although the two Nocturnals leave their imprint on the disc – Dondero produces and Tournet plays lap steel – it’s singer Aya Inoue that proves to be the true allure of the four song disc.

Inoue & The Leaves are part of the ever-bustling Burlington, Vermont music scene that gave birth to GP&TN and serves as home base for Ramble Dove, Mike Gordon’s honky-tonk collective that gave Inoue her first glimpse of National exposure. Anyone whose familiarity with Inoue comes from her Ramble Dove involvement will be mightily impressed with the range and depth she shows on Timid Line. You can hear an occasional honky-tonk twinge in some of her vocal inflections, especially on the title track, but otherwise Timid Line reveals Inoue to be a master at conveying strength and fragility, certainty and indecision with her delivery as well as her lyrics. It’s a trait borne by any successful singer-songwriters.

The songs on Timid Line seem torn from the inner pages of Inoue’s diary but The Leaves aren’t a vanity project for the feisty yet introspective singer. The music behind her, played by Matt Harpster (guitar), Corey Beard (bass) and Steve Sharon (percussion) with Charles Eller (keyboards) and Nocturnal Tournet (lap steel) also lending a hand, give Timid Line a gravitas along the lines of Gillian Welch or Townes Van Zandt. The EP shows what happens when you pair a talented singer-songwriter with a band that is entirely on the same page with the mood and tone she’s trying to convey. There’s a wonderful smoldering quality to “Yours Truly Charlie,” Harpster’s guitar solo greatly accentuates “Instead” and Tournet’s lap steel brings a mournful reflective quality to “Back.”

Timid Line accomplishes what every debut EP sets out to do: it’s long enough to give you a solid idea of what Inoue and The Leaves are capable of doing while leaving your appetite whetted for more.

Labels:


Earvolution Powered by Blogger

eXTReMe Tracker
eXTReMe Tracker
   
     
 

EARVOLUTION © 2004-2007 All Rights Reserved