I ate a whole one, which was too much, panicked, and exited the session in my car. I know that was a dangerous mistake, and I’m very grateful I didn’t hurt anybody. At one point in the night, I came to the intersection of Trinity Lane and Dickerson Pike (Hwy 41) and when the light turned green I did not remember where I was going. I pulled over to gather myself, and luckily made it home without incident. This song came out of some clarity while remembering that harrowing experience many years later.
from Tim E. in Tennessee.
Tim Easton - Find Your Way Black Mesa / Sonic RendezVous
|
Tracks: Everything You’re Afraid Of Here For You Jacqueline Little Brother Bangin’ Drum (Inside My Mind) Arkansas Twisted Heart Dishwasher’s Blues What Will It Take? By The End Of The Night |
Few poets follow their own arrow as devotedly as Tim Easton, whose songwriting career has woven in and out of folk music and rock ‘n’ roll (and Americana before it was really called that), of erstwhile bands and solo songwriting, of his birthplace of America and all the other places he’s called home. Whether surviving as a busker in Paris and Prague, living and working on both US coasts, touring relentlessly through remote Alaska or recording with some of the most famous sidemen in rock history, Easton has followed his inspiration to every point on the map.
Produced at Neighborhood Recorders in Victoria, BC, by Leroy Stagger (longtime collaborator and one-third of folk supergroup Easton Stagger Phillips), the album zigs and zags through the geography so intrinsic to Easton’s storytelling. This makes the so-called “one-of-a-kindland” topography of Victoria the perfect setting for the new tracks on “Find Your Way,” explorations of turmoil and resolution, of troubled relationships viewed from the outside and within. Easton calls the songs “feature films inside three-minute chunks of music.”
Geen opmerkingen:
Een reactie posten