dowload
recent press for "We Belong to the Gold Coast" in .pdf format
Acclaimed musician/producer/songwriter Steve Dawson will release
2 new albums of his work in 2008; “Waiting For The Lights
To Come Up” and “Telescope”.
“I decided to record two albums at once this year. It wasn’t
what I set out to do originally. I was getting ready to make a record
that would feature a new batch of songs that I had been writing,
but at the same time, I was learning the pedal steel guitar, and
had been writing ensemble-based music that would feature that instrument.”
Rather than waiting and recording them separately, Dawson decided
to put together a crack band and spend a few days in the studio
getting the majority of both albums done at once. The idea was to
create two completely different projects that tied together sonically
and that shared a similar energy. “I thought it would be interesting
to have them both done in the same space at the same time, and by
the same people.”
The musicians are players with whom he’s been making a lot
of records over the last few years. The band comprises Keith Lowe
(Bill Frisell, Fiona Apple) on bass, Chris Gestrin (Randy Bachman,
K-OS) on keyboards, and Scott Amendola (T.J. Kirk, Bill Frisell,
Madeline Peyroux) on drums.
“With musicians of this caliber, I knew that most of the
magic would be happening quickly on early takes, even before the
band was too comfortable with the new material.” Dawson and
the band set up shop in The Factory Studios in Vancouver and proceeded
to record the bulk of the two records in about 5 days. Dawson took
the tracks back to his Henhouse Studio to add overdubs, textures
and sound manipulation. The result is a wonderful and arresting
pair of new releases — “Waiting For the Lights To Come
Up” and “Telescope”.
Waiting For the Lights To Come Up
“This album was a natural progression for me. I toured quite
a bit when my last album, ‘We Belong to the Gold Coast’
came out in 2005. I did a lot of solo shows in Canada and Europe,
and in that time I started writing new songs that I could perform
on my own as well as with the band”. While Steve’s hypnotic
fingerstyle guitar is still at the heart of the new material, it’s
the songs that are most prevalent on this recording. The evocative
lyrics and textural guitars paint an unforgettable picture in songs
like “Room To Room” and “Dry As Our Luck”,
the twang of the baritone guitar underlies the forboding of “At
Arms Length”, and Steve picked up his old $50 Silvertone guitar
for the searing slide that takes us on a chaotic trip in “Fire
Somewhere”.
Dawson continues to explore the traditional side as well, always
with a contemporary flair, or something to pull it slightly off
in a new direction. He dusts off the Mississippi Sheiks’ “Somebody’s
Got To Help You” and burns it down with the band in tow. “Hard
To Get Gertie” and “Swinging In A Hammock” offer
a take on vintage Hawaiian music, although the addition of drums,
pump organ, and several electric guitars skew the context just enough.
Dawson is channeling his influences here, from the Band and the
Beach Boys to Bix Beiderbecke and Roy Smeck, but he has found a
unique voice within it all that has truly begun to surface.
The bulk of the new songs were written in a small period of time
in between Steve’s touring and recording projects. Dawson’s
production work has become sought-after for his multi-instrumental
abilities and intricacies, while keeping live performance at the
root of most of his projects. Jim Byrnes, Kelly Joe Phelps, Jenny
Whiteley, Old Man Luedecke, Ndidi Onukwulu, and Shuyler Jansen are
just a few of the many artists who have sought out Dawson in the
last few years to produce, record and develop their music, and his
instrumental abilities have appeared on over 75 albums and onstage
with renowned artists like Long John Baldry, Bob Brozman, Geoff
Muldaur, Oh Susanna, Justin Rutledge, and many others. Dawson has
been named Producer of the Year at the Western Canadian Music Awards
and twice at the Canadian Folk Music Awards. He has produced 7 Juno
nominated albums, and has 4 Juno Awards for albums that he has produced
or in which he has been a featured musician. Dawson’s unique
production style, paired with his desire to create and experiment
with sound has brought him to the forefront of the field.
With this wealth of experience, Dawson has taken his recording
experience to new heights with “Waiting For The Lights To
Come Up”. Slide guitars, pump organs, pedal steel, wurlitzers,
and baritone guitars all dance and sway through Dawson’s strongest
material to date.
contact here
|