Names You Should Know: Joy Harjo, The Dinallos, Tautologic & The Ladles
Poetry, Americana, Alternative Rock & Folk-Pop
Author:
America borrowed its tradition of having an appointed Poet Laureate (since 1936) from Great Britain. Native American
Joy Harjo is one such individual. She’s also a singer-songwriter-author and with the help of the supremely talented Barrett Martin, has written and produced one of the most unique albums of the year. Harjo’s spoken-word entreaties are thought-provoking. On
I Pray For My Enemies (Sunyata Records), she plays alto sax, percussion, flute and piano. Martin plays guitar, percussion, bass, keyboards and vibes. Mike McCready of Pearl Jam and Black Crow Rich Robinson take the bombastic electric guitar solos. Krist Novoselic of Nirvana strums acoustic. Providing esoteric buzz is Rahim Alhaj on oud and Dave Carter on trumpet. The 16 tracks are a sonic stew. Spoken-word albums have never sounded so good.
With the COVID-19 pandemic cancelling an entire year’s worth of tour dates,
The Ladles decided to turn their only remaining gig of 2020 a three-week summer residency in the quaint town of Springville, New York into their extraordinary and spontaneous new album, ‘Springville Sessions.’ Recorded over the course of four days in an historic former Baptist church, the collection mixes “folk sensibilities” with pop, jazz, choral, and chamber music, creating a “gorgeous” blend fueled by spare, acoustic instrumentation and “brilliant harmRead More
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With the COVID-19 pandemic cancelling an entire year’s worth of tour dates,
The Ladles decided to turn their only remaining gig of 2020 a three-week summer residency in the quaint town of Springville, New York into their extraordinary and spontaneous new album, ‘Springville Sessions.’ Recorded over the course of four days in an historic former Baptist church, the collection mixes “folk sensibilities” with pop, jazz, choral, and chamber music, creating a “gorgeous” blend fueled by spare, acoustic instrumentation and “brilliant harmonies.” When all three voices come together,” writes American Songwriter, “the sound lights up the space like a firefly in the night.”