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It takes courage to release the security of the familiar and
embrace change. After five years of touring and establishing
themselves as "the most important folk group to emerge from Boston
since the early 60's"(Boston Globe), Crooked Still announced that
cellist Rushad Eggleston would leave the group in November of 2007.
The solid foundation they built as a group earned them invitations
from huge events like the historic Newport and Telluride Festivals
and numerous rave reviews from publications like USA Today and
Interview Magazine. Crooked Still was now on the cusp of a new
musical chapter.
The quintet became five with the addition of fiddler Brittany Haas
and cellist Tristan Clarridge. Lead vocalist Aoife O'Donovan told No
Depression magazine, "When you're in a quartet, and one of your
members who's been a huge creative part of your sound decides to
leave, it definitely crosses your mind to just not do it. But we had
spent five years building a name for ourselves. And if you look at
almost every band that's successful, there's been line-up changes."
If the first album from the new line-up is any indication, success
for this young band will be explosive. Crooked Still continues to
perform one of the most compelling forms of alternative bluegrass
and string band music today.
The new five-member band converged to mingle their creative
processes at Allaire, a studio in upstate New York, with producer
Eric Merrill for Still Crooked. The album, to be released on the
Signature Sounds on June 24, 2008, balances unknown traditional
material with three new tunes from the band, along with "Did You
Sleep Well?" by fellow old time musician Nathan Taylor and a
Mississippi John Hurt standard. The entire album was recorded "live"
in one big room, with everyone playing together. Merrill captured
most songs in one or two takes. "I was outside in the hallway,
because my voice is so quiet," O'Donovan says. "Recording live, you
don't have an option to overdub; that always makes a better album."
With Haas and Clarridge, the band has proven themselves to be even
more adventurous, breathing their cosmic fire into old songs. "When
Rushad left, we wanted to move in new directions," O'Donovan says.
"Brittany adds another female presence to the band; I can hear my
voice in her fiddling. Tristan has a refined cello tone, with a
powerful, restrained energy. They bring a fresh outlook to the
arrangements that keeps the music exciting."
"We rehearsed for a few days before we recorded," Clarridge says.
"We'd listen to a source recording, strip the songs to the bone and
build an arrangement incorporating everyone's ideas. It's fun to see
how many directions you can take a song." Everyone brought material
for consideration. "As we worked on the songs, we realized there was
a lot of loss and mortality in the lyrics," banjo player Greg Liszt
adds. "You can't make a folk album without delving into what's
happening now and we were surprised at how current the songs
sounded. On 'Captain, Captain' a woman asks what happened to her
lover and the Captain replies 'he dropped down dead in the gulf.'
It's a 400-year-old line, but it gives you chills."
Still Crooked is an ensemble effort of inspired music making that
moves the bands' impossible to pigeonhole style in new directions
while honoring their folk roots. "It's hard to pin down our music,"
bass player Corey DiMario says. "We play improvised old time music,
bluegrass, folk and our own songs within the broad context of a
string band. Like a lot of today's bands, we have modern and
traditional influences that confuse the boundaries. We want to keep
blurring those lines to make something all our own."
Crooked Still's genre-bending sound is the combination of five
distinctive talents who are not content to limit themselves to any
one project or style of music. While Crooked Still is the main band
for these talented players, all are involved in other projects.
Each individual contribution is enriched by the multidimensionality
of their creative wellspring. Together, they have uncovered new
facets of brilliance on Still Crooked. The genesis of the group
continues to evolve. Much like moonshine distilled in the apparatus
that inspired their name, Crooked Still is still fermenting. And the
music on Still Crooked is undeniably intoxicating.
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Artist's Web Site
Hear an mp3 clip from Crooked Still
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Presented In Conjunction With Landshark Entertainment
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