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Event
Gospel Machine + J.E. Sunde
$10 in advance/$12 at the door 10:30pm doors/11pm showtime
Gospel Machine:
They call it "garage gospel." Gospel Machine takes the soul of '60s Motown and puts it in the hands of a garage band. Rooted in the protest music of the Civil Rights Era, Your Holy Ghost directs its attention to contemporary struggles of race, gender, and war. Gospel Machine is a Minneapolis quintet who use soul, R&B, and gospel music to craft songs that cry out for a better day, songs that point to redemption from the struggle.
Lead singer Jayanthi Kyle (Romantica, Black Audience) is a curator of African-American folk songs and spirituals and has been singing around the Twin Cities for over a decade. When she and songwriter, Wes Burdine, started to play together, they brought in Wes's bandmates from the indie rock outfit, The Small Cities, to give their music the urgency of garage rock.
Gospel Machine released their debut album, Your Holy Ghost, on October 2, 2015. Recorded mostly live one weekend at Blacktop Studio, it captures the raw energy of a Gospel Machine live performance. Featuring members of The Brass Messengers & Jon Davis (Dosh, Ghostband) on horns. Mixed by Alex Hall (J.D. McPherson)
J.E. Sunde:
Ten years ago I started a band with my brother Jason and our good friend Jesse Edgington called The Daredevil Christopher Wright. We were living in and around Eau Claire, WI and found ourselves learning to write and perform in what turned out to be a fertile community of like-minded musicians and creative types. From 2009 through 2012 we worked at it full time, touring across the U.S., Canada and Europe, trying to make a proper go of it. At the end of touring our second full-length record, we realized that a change was in order. Jobs were to be had and the prospect of being in one place and investing in a community again looked rather good. So we decided to put the band on hiatus and try a different balance of things for a while.
Over the years of writing with Daredevil I had gathered a fair amount of songs that for various reason the band hadn't used. I would pick up a solo show now and again when we weren't touring and found myself performing songs from that collection. The notion of one day taking some time to try my hand at a solo project entered my mind and when the band decided to take a break, I thought it would be an opportune moment to give it a go. Inspired by the sounds of the 60s and 70s, and musicians like Nina Simone and Leonard Cohen, I started writing and arranging. Most of the material was drawn from that back catalog of tunes that had been patiently waiting. I decided not to shy away from the shadow of my influences but to draw from familiar sounds and tweak them enough to create something that would hopefully feel comfortable but not entirely derivative. With that loose framework in mind, I followed a pretty intuitive creative process; grabbing onto what felt good and trusting that that would lead to something interesting.
In April 2013 I headed to Honeytone Studios in southeastern Wisconsin to start tracking the record. The engineers and partners in the studio, Patrick Boland, Marty Brueggemann and Mark Zbikowski, have created this beautiful space and came at the project with an energy and respect that was really humbling.
I had decided for creative, and economic, reasons that I wanted to perform as much of the album myself as I could. I knew however, that achieving the drumming that I was hoping for would be well beyond my meager abilities and so I enlisted the help of my friend Shane Leonard (Kalispell, Field Report) to take on the drumming and percussion duties. I can't overstate how great a job Shane did. He took my two dimensional drum ideas and brought them to a wholly other place. And the sounds that the guys were able to capture were really exciting. I had at that point been writing and arranging for 5 months on my own, and so it felt amazing to bring people into the process and hear these ideas become enfleshed. Shane did the drumming and Marty stepped in on bass for a tune and offered up an organ solo on another, otherwise I performed everything else. It was a fun challenge to take on but it made for exhausting tracking sessions. In the end we tracked the record in 13 days over three months, finishing up at the end of July. In August I brought the tracks to Patick Stolley in Davenport, IA. We had met several years before when he recorded Daredevil for a Daytrotter session. We got on quite well and after knowing each other for a few years, he recorded the second Daredevil full length. Through that experience I really came to trust his esthetic sense and his technical abilities. So early on I knew that I wanted him to mix the solo record. Later he took on the mastering duties as well.
Somewhere in there I decided to call the record Shapes That Kiss The Lips Of God. It's a line from a tune on the record that's a description of birds migrating south.
In the end I think the album is something of a chronicle of the last ten years for me. Not that I can call it strictly autobiographical, but there is a sense about it as I listen that it seems to chart the tones and themes that had significance in that stretch of my life. Perhaps there's some closure in that. It's interesting, that thought hadn't struck me until just now as I write this. I hope you like the record.
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LocationIcehouse (View)
2528 Nicollet Avenue South
Minneapolis, MN 55404
United States
Categories
Minimum Age: 21 |
Kid Friendly: No |
Dog Friendly: No |
Non-Smoking: Yes! |
Wheelchair Accessible: Yes! |
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