He calls himself an âitinerant musician and musical disaster relief specialist.â He's performed with the likes of Chuck Berry, Leonard Bernstein, Bette Midler, Herbie Hancock, Steely Dan and, yes, even the New York Yankees, where he reigns as the stadium's weekend organist.
Ed Alstrom was the winner of the Solo/Duo category in the recent New Jersey IBC competition. He attended Westminster Choir College studying classical organ, then veered off into every imaginable kind of music. He started out playing organ, then piano, guitar and bass, and has been active on all of these in the New York area with many name acts. He realized a childhood dream in 2004 when he became Organist at YANKEE STADIUM, and heâs still there. Ed has released 4 CDs under his own name, the most recent being a blues-centric collection of all originals called âFlee Though None Pursueâ. |
The album is also filled with the wit and wisdom of Alstrom's masterful songwriting, with an often-otherworldly lyricism devoted to his eloquent storytelling in the eighteen original tracks. The title cut illustrates that internal and external dilemma: âSo i remain marooned with this insanely troubled mind / And try to map a future while I run from what's behind / But what's behind me is not there, so what is there left for me to do? / Face eternity uncertain and keep fleeing though none pursue.â
Other themes surface as a question in the sprightly opener, âBe Nice,â with Alstrom asking âI wonder what it might be like / If folks would just be nice.â As if in response to Little Milton's classic âThe Blues Is Alright,â Alstrom takes a more introspective view with the organ-fueled âThe Blues Ain't All Rightâ â âNobody's blues are unimportant / Nobody's misery is trite / Nobodyâs served right by sufferinâ - and the blues ainât never all right.â A slashing slide guitar highlights the melancholy vocal of a deep âSlow Bluesâ â âMisery has found you - and you just canât be free / Until you hear these slow slow blues, and then youâre in mighty good company.â
The bouncy shuffle of âThe Truthâ serves as counterpoint to its message: âOn the road to truth you take, thereâs only two mistakes: donât go all the way or donât even start.â The hypnotic rhythm of âSickâ is reminiscent of the classic Doc Pomus song âLonely Avenueâ by Ray Charles but adds its own lyrical strength: âSick of livinâ and dyinâ all at the same time / Sick of tryinâ / Sick of cryinâ / Sick of this saga thatâs nobodyâs drag but mine.â
âAlways Nearâ is a gorgeous, melodic love song with jazzy overtones and lyrics by Kay
Murcer: âHold my memory, make some new ones, take me on where you go.â âThe Record Peopleâ is a bit of honky-tonk piano behind a whimsical complaint about the music business: âThe record people came tonight; they came to dig my grave.â The uptempo âSometimesâ floats along, followed by the witty take of âScrewedâ â âBeinâ a foolâs too expensive - Iâm gonna stop gettinâ screwed.â A bit of optimism shows up in.
The easy swinging âGreat Notchâ describes a favorite watering hole where âYou can decompress or just plain debauch.â Then âFruitcakeâ rolls in with some New Orleans piano, dedicated to a loopy girlfriend. âYours Is a Placeâ is a delicate love song: âI long to live my lifetimes at your place.â More rollicking piano leads into âSuccess,â which, alas, âjust canât be achieved.â The âCrossfireâ of love is a bittersweet ode to lost romance. âI Drunk You Driveâ rocks hard with the message of its title. The closer, âDon't Cry at My Funeral,â is a spiritually uplifting conclusion to an album overflowing with thoughtful lyrics: âDonât cry for me, Iâm happy, Iâm free / And I wonât be cryinâ for you.â
With Flee Though None Pursue, Ed Alstrom has created a magical lyrical journey crafted with lively, imaginative storytelling that draws you in with his word wizardry and carries you along on his instrumental genius. You are hereby invited along for the joyous ride.
Jim White (a former music writer for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette & now writes the Blues Roadhouse)
Tracklist: 1. Be Nice! (4:21)1. Be Nice! (4:21)2. Blues Ain't Alright (3:36)3. Slow Blues (4:24)_4. Flee Though None Pursue (6:45)5. The Truth (4:12)6. Sick (3:41)7. Always Near (3:23)8. The Record People (4:13)9Âť Sometimes (2:50)10. Screwed (6:02) ' â11. H-O-P-E-L-E-S-S (4:0T12. Great Notch (4:16)13. Fruitcake (4:01) -14. ?5urs Is A Place (4?17) ^15. Success (Was Not To Be Had) (4:08)16. Crossfire Of Love (4:45)17. I Drunk, You Drive (2:43)18. Don't Cry At My Funeral (5:38) |
BIOGRAPHY
Ed Alstrom has had a rich and diverse musical career. Sure, heâs a bluesman, but heâs also been a church organist and choir director, guitarist at a temple, conductor of a mandolin orchestra, Broadway pit musician, winner of a Backstage Bistro Award and a MAC Award nomination on the NY Cabaret Circuit, radio DJ, and keyboard designer for
Casio. Ed has performed with Bette Midler, Chuck Berry, Leonard Bernstein, Herbie
Hancock, Odetta, Dion, Darlene Love, Ronnie Spector, Steely Dan, Blood Sweat and Tears, Jimmy Vivino, Robert Hill, Rob Paparozzi, Hubert Sumlin, John Sebastian, and other notables.
WEBLINKS
- OS: www.edalstrom.com
- FB: www.facebook.com/ealstrom
- FOCUS TRACKS : 2. Blues Ainât Alright, 5. The Truth, 8. The Record People, 1. Be Nice,
- 10. Screwed, 12. Great Notch .
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