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Event
Quiet Life & Cotton Jones
Quiet Life started playing together in the Spring, on that first good day of the year, when the sun's finally in its place and birds make sense and you are back on your porch, or your roof, or your lawn, and you're not by yourself. With roots on the Jersey Shore, sparks flew when they met further north in New London, where New England meets the Sound. From there, they ran down a dream to the California coast, all the way to San Luis Obispo, and then fled the Promised Land for the northern charm of Portland, Oregon.
Just a pair of brothers and a few good friends in a van that runs on waste veggie oil. Somebody hits the stereo. "Where're the keys?" "Watch the road." "Turn it up." As a band, they caught a break that night snow fell on the stretch of highway between Nashville & Memphis, when the cars bundled up like an endless string of red Christmas lights. They've toured with Dr. Dog, Alabama Shakes, The Lumineers and played with your time, your heart and your women. They take advice in dingy backstage green rooms from road weary veterans like Ray Wylie Hubbard and Hayes Carll. There was one show, when the floor was bouncing, and the ice was spinning, and somebody screamed, "THIS." Then there was the 3-hour set at some backwoods lodge in northern Alaska, all originals except one Neil cover. Anyhow, that's how I remember it.
Wild Pack is the first new record in two years from an American band that knows the road better than you know your own cell phone. From Portland to Asbury Park to the California coast. Remember to check your mirrors. Cut the wheel. Flash your brights at the big rigs and let 'em pass.
by A.B. Slater, merch guy
Wild Pack is Quiet Life's follow up to 2011's Big Green. Big Green was called both "loose and affectionate" and "rambunctious" by critics, and hailed as one of the best independent releases of 2011.
Wild Pack was produced by Adam Selzer (M Ward, Blind Pilot, Decemberists, etc.) in Portland, Oregon and was mastered by Joe Gastwirt (Grateful Dead, Bob Dylan, etc.).
For the making of Wild Pack, they enlisted the help of notable Portland musicians such as Dave Depper (Fruit Bats, Menomena), Nathan Junior (M Ward, Dandy Warhols), Laurel Simmons (Alela Diane, Indians), etc., to create a record that both embodies the spirit of their live show and also utilizes modern sound engineering pleasantries such as fuzzed-out Leslie-simulated pedal-steel guitar pedals and twangy modified vintage amplifiers. In the end it remains true to the aesthetics of roots rock and roll.
The music of Cotton Jones speaks of transition: the passage from one form, state of mind, style or place to another. Songs become doorways to the past, or windows that open on some unnamed future, where innocence can still exist and perfection is thrown to the wind.
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LocationVintage Wine Bar and Restaurant (View)
1790 Market ST.
Redding, CA 96001
United States
Categories
Minimum Age: 0 |
Kid Friendly: Yes! |
Non-Smoking: Yes! |
Wheelchair Accessible: Yes! |
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