Howe Gelb "Listener"

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  • #3615  | PERMALINK

    dock

    Registriert seit: 09.07.2002

    Beiträge: 4,485

    Howe’s new solo album is now all completed, and is set for release in March 2003 – in his own words…. ‚well the new record is called “ the listener “ and i could have made it sound better, but i don’t think anyone else will know that ….and it surely won’t sell any more or less records because of it

    but i did drive myself nuts trying to finish it up and get it as best as i could during these last few weeks…..working way too long into the night just trying to fix things like tone and balance

    sometimes it worked

    but the sequence the songs are in give the great illusion that it all works

    and i am very happy with it….‘
    Howe is also on a new Kris Kristofferson tribute – „“Nothing Left to Lose“, for details – http://www.incidentalmusic.com/artists/var…lose/index.html
    along with Calexico and Grandaddy.

    What’s comin‘ up in the future….. possibly a new Blacky Ranchette, a ‚loud‘ piano/guitar album, ‚gecko pipe‘ and a new ‚down home‘ album…. sounds

    Quelle http://www.giantsand.com

    --

    Highlights von Rolling-Stone.de
    Werbung
    #793309  | PERMALINK

    dock

    Registriert seit: 09.07.2002

    Beiträge: 4,485

    Das neue Album trägt den Titel Listener und erscheint am 22.3.03 auf CD & Vinyl

    --

    #793311  | PERMALINK

    dock

    Registriert seit: 09.07.2002

    Beiträge: 4,485

    Album erscheint am 18.3

    Am Dienstag isses soweit :) :) :) :twisted: :twisted: :twisted: :sauf: :gitarre:

    --

    #793313  | PERMALINK

    dock

    Registriert seit: 09.07.2002

    Beiträge: 4,485

    Sorry erscheint in Deutschland erst am 24. März !!!

    Description:“See the sky a broil and the color of blood orange. Hear the crackin’ singe of the front metal screen door hinge. Loving like lovers that know they’re going to hang. Sweating bullets and reloading over and over again…Rain is only a rumor, over before it has begun.“ -From the song Blood Orange

    Welcome to the mind of Howe Gelb. These lyrics taken from Blood Orange the tenth track on Howe’s new cd, The Listener, are a peek at yet another stirring image from Howe, who has for more than two decades painted with a canvas of music and words. While both often times seemed to defy any sequential logic, it’s hard to argue with a career that through it’s many incarnations- Band of Blacky Ranchette, Giant Sand, OP8, to name but few-has remained vibrant and vital, always taking chances along the way. The Listener is no different. It focuses on Howe’s recent sojourn to Denmark where he lived for half of 2002 and recorded the bulk of The Listener. Making the journey so that he could be with his wife as she prepared to give birth to their second child offered Howe the opportunity to create away from his usual supporting cast in Tucson. Home, however, was never that far away, just a flip of a letter as noted above. It would be to Tucson he would return, yet the effects of this new location and the events surrounding why he was there had a profound effect on him, his music, his words and possibly now you — The Listener.

    The Listener begins with the piano based instrumental „Glisten“ and leads into the piano driven „Felonius“. Both aptly titled as „Glisten“ does just that as it shines through your speakers, and in „Felonius“ Howe addresses head on the idea he’s stealing „Lou Reed licks“ on a piano. These songs set a tone for the rest of the record. One of lazy days and late nights, where rebirth comes not in church, but in small doses of recording with new friends and old acquaintances. In the smell of freshly baked bread and a fine house wine, in the touch of the piano and the sound of cowboy boots on cobblestones, Howe best describes the free wheeling life in Denmark:

    Getting out of the clutter of my home in the wide open spaces of Tucson, allowed the brain to get wide open in small spaces of Aarhus, Denmark. Life became simple. No daily driving. No summer swelter. Daily routine consisted of just walking around with my three year old son down the crooked lil roads like it was America in the 50’s…settling in about the same time every day…Having a baby helps the focus of diggin‘ in…soon a piano appeared there to plunder.

    It should be noted that Howe’s shift from guitar to piano in regards to composing is nothing new. Much of the last few Giant Sand and Howe solo releases featured piano and Howe also released a record of unaccompanied piano pieces (Lull Some Piano) two years ago on his own Ow Om label. When asked about the transition Howe sums it up like this:

    The piano was always my earth instrument. The guitar was the space vehicle. When I was younger I was bored with the earth and wanted to travel as far out as I could. These days, the earth is more fascinating than ever.

    When it came time for recording Howe called on a cast of people he had recently befriended through a weekly series of shows he was doing at a local café, including a local band he fell for called Under Byen (recently hailed by Rolling Stone/David Fricke as his „favorite new band and record of this year“). Two other musicians there, Thoger T. Lund and Peter Dombernowsky, played a large role in the development of the record and Howe credits them with giving him a „feeling of solid spring that I have not felt in the last five years or so.“ He goes on to note that „there is a springboard woven within the confines of their instrumentation, and the fresh vibe is extremely conducive.“ The record also features two stunning vocal turns by Henriette Sennenvaldt (Under Byen) and Marie Frank. Henriette haunts the slight salsa-vibe of „Torque“ with a Bjork-like offering, while Marie takes lead on „Blood Orange“ with a Williams (Victoria/Lucinda) twang. It was all done over the few months time and money allowed; remember there was a baby on the way.
    At the end of 2002 Howe returned home to Tucson where he would „severely funnel and tweak“ the almost finished record. Calling in a cast of usual collaborators, among them Sophie Albertsen Gelb, John Convertino, Joey Burns and Nick Luca, along with some new ones, Brett and Rennie of Handsome Family, the roots of The Listener found the soil it needed to grow. A cohesive recording was brought together from disparate locations and a few seasons. The resulting album flows seamlessly, it is a tale without interruption. It’s a technique Howe’s not only mastered, but prefers.

    I think that recording in one place during a relative short amount of time is restrictive. Although I don’t mind it, having done it ad nauseum, I have allowed a more natural methodology to occur; recording throughout the year where ever you happen to be…the biggest challenge is not losing all the stuff you have recorded along the year. It becomes more entertaining this way. A healthy allowance of gamble. The ultimate residue is variation and therein the comfort lies.

    The comfort therein of The Listener is that as the title implies it was crafted by Howe with you in mind. Instead of getting the feeling you’re outside listening in, Howe brings you into the songs with him for what is easily one of his most personal records yet, thus the Howe Home moniker. Howe is spelled like Home, but upside down, which in Howe’s words „is a fair description of what it feels like usually.“ Through the years you’ve gotten to know Howe’s music quite well, it’s about time he invited you in.

    Tracklist:
    1. Glisten
    2. Felonious
    3. Jason’s List
    4. Cowboy Boots
    5. Torque
    6. Piango
    7. Lying There
    8. B 4 U (Do Do
    Do)
    9. The Nashville
    Sound
    10. Blood Orange
    11. Moons of
    Impulse
    12. Now I Lay Me
    Down
    13. Lemmy N
    Emmy

    Quelle
    www.thrilljockey.com

    --

    #793315  | PERMALINK

    derbuschmann

    Registriert seit: 08.07.2002

    Beiträge: 3,195

    Bin gerade beim ersten Durchhören. Wunderschöne Songs drauf.
    Sehr, sehr schöne Stimmung.
    Überhaupt nicht zerfahren.

    Erstmal
    Volker

    --

    Die meiste Zeit geht dadurch verloren, dass man nicht zu Ende denkt. Alfred Herrhausen (1930-89)
    #793317  | PERMALINK

    derbuschmann

    Registriert seit: 08.07.2002

    Beiträge: 3,195

    Hörproben hier:

    http://www.sa-wa-ro.com/HoweGelb-Pages/how…thelistener.htm

    Gruß Volker

    --

    Die meiste Zeit geht dadurch verloren, dass man nicht zu Ende denkt. Alfred Herrhausen (1930-89)
    #793319  | PERMALINK

    deleted_user

    Registriert seit: 20.06.2016

    Beiträge: 7,399

    Bin gerade beim ersten Durchhören. Wunderschöne Songs drauf.
    Sehr, sehr schöne Stimmung.
    Überhaupt nicht zerfahren.

    Ausführliche Rezension? :D

    --

    #793321  | PERMALINK

    derbuschmann

    Registriert seit: 08.07.2002

    Beiträge: 3,195

    Nur ein erster Eindruck. Wollte sagen wie angetan ich bin.

    Gruß Volker

    --

    Die meiste Zeit geht dadurch verloren, dass man nicht zu Ende denkt. Alfred Herrhausen (1930-89)
    #793323  | PERMALINK

    soulster

    Registriert seit: 08.07.2002

    Beiträge: 3,955

    ich mache mal so langsam nen thread unter ’neue platten‘ auf. auch wenn ich immer noch nicht (nach zwei wochen oder so) so viel dazu zu sagen weiss. vielleicht ja jemand anders.

    --

    but I did not.
    #793325  | PERMALINK

    dougsahm
    Moderator

    Registriert seit: 26.08.2002

    Beiträge: 17,863

    „Langsam“ ist schon ziemlich langsam ….

    Wollte nur mal erwähnen, dass diese Howe Gelb ohne Überbrückungsgefrickel zwischen den Tracks auskommt. Top Album. Must Have.

    Ja, bin auch langsam. Gestern zum ersten Mal gehört.

    (Zusätzlicher Thread muss gar nicht mehr sein)

    --

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