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Ryan Montbleau at the me & thee coffeehouse - Tall Heights open
me & thee coffeehouse
Marblehead, MA
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Ryan Montbleau at the me & thee coffeehouse - Tall Heights open
Songs for Ryan Montbleau typically need to simmer. In his 10-year career this gifted singer and his limber band have built their catalog the old-fashioned way, by introducing new songs to their live set, then bending and shaping them over dozens of performances before committing a definitive version to the hard drive.

For that and many other reasons, Montbleau's next album, For Higher, is quite literally a departure. Well-established out of his home base in the Northeast, the singer threw himself into New Orleans, where everything is slow-cooked, for a few fast-moving days  and whipped up an instant delicacy.

A few of the cuts on the new album  the playful stomp of "Deadset" or "Head Above Water," freshly peppered with horns  were already part of the Ryan Montbleau Band's ever-growing repertoire. But the majority, including four handpicked cover tunes  stone soul nuggets from Bill Withers, Curtis Mayfield, the late Muscle Shoals guitarist Eddie Hinton and more  came together spontaneously, with little prepwork.

It was a feel thing, with Montbleau putting heads together with fellow music head Ben Ellman of New Orleans flag-bearers Galactic. The singer and songwriter first eased his way into the city when he was invited to contribute songs to Backatown, the breakthrough album of favorite son Trombone Shorty. That went so well, Montbleau co-wrote two more songs for Shorty's recent follow-up, "For True."

When Montbleau sent videos of himself performing the songs, Ellman, who produced "Backatown," was impressed. Why not come down and do a record of your own? he asked.

Almost before he got an answer, Ellman had assembled a band of ringers  keyboard/B3 player Ivan Neville, French Quarter mainstay Anders Osborne on guitar, drummer Simon Lott, and the estimable George Porter, Jr. of the Meters and countless funky sessions on bass. Though Montbleau has released several solo records and three albums credited to his full band, he felt like this was an all-new hurdle he'd have to clear.

"My main issue was, what would I bring in for material?" he recalls, sitting in the kitchen of the spacious home he and several bandmates share in an industrial city north of Boston. "I'd never done a session like that.

"Our band will 'shed songs on the road for years and then record them, and there's strength in that. But there's also strength in putting together these other badasses for a few days."

And his New Orleans band proved, in fact, to be most badass. If Montbleau was initially a bit apprehensive that the sessions might represent just another paycheck for his sidemen, he quickly learned otherwise. "Every single person, kind of to my amazement, got into it," he says. "They listened to every playback, and they were high-fiving each other. They were great."

Staying at Ellman's house while recording the new album, Montbleau spent his downtime cruising the streets of New Orleans on a borrowed vintage bike. "There's clearly no American city like it, at all," he says. "It's deep, dark and beautiful."
Unlike Montbleau's previous recordings, which showcase his own maturing songcraft, the new album draws a lot of its depth and beauty from its cover songs. Perfectly titled is the beatific "Sweet, Nice and High," originally recorded by the forgotten soul supergroup Rhinoceros. On the other end of the moodswing, Mayfield's "Here But I'm Gone," written and recorded for the great singer's last album, after the accident that left him paralyzed, is a shimmering testament to human frailty.

"Sometimes I feel like there are so many songs  who the hell needs another song?" Montbleau asks. But then he'll discover another new inspiration  sitting at the kitchen table sipping tea, there's a vinyl copy of an old Billy Preston album propped on the windowsill behind him  and another lyric or melody will come to him like a visitation. And when the song becomes a reality, and the crowds begin to sing it back to him, well, that's what it's all about.

At 34, he's a late-bloomer who's right on time. Montbleau didn't start singing and playing guitar in earnest until he was in college, at Villanova. Later, working at the House of Blues in Boston, he began playing solo sets there as a warmup act. His band  there's now six of them  came together naturally, over time, planting strong roots in coffeeshops, folk venues and rock clubs before converting audiences on an outdoor festival circuit that now stretches across the country. Through word of mouth and repeat visits, the band has built a devoted following from the Northeast to Chicago, Seattle and Austin. "It's like watching the grass grow," says the easygoing Montbleau.

Far from feeling left out of the New Orleans sessions, his band is already feeding hungrily on the arrangements from the new album in their live sets.

"We've done a good job staying in one direction, just moving forward," says the singer. "We all just really want to get better. I try to instill it in the guys  if we just keep it together, good stuff is gonna continue to happen."

When the crowds are dancing, the band digs deeper in the pocket. But Montbleau, who still performs solo, is constantly looking to strike a balance between the contagious energy of moving bodies and making a closer connection.

"You can still dance and have a good time," he says of his fast-spreading fan base, "but I love when you listen."

http://ryanmontbleauband.com/

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Tall Heights

In the summer of 2010, Tim Harrington and Paul Wright were playing for spare change in Boston's Faneuil Hall Marketplace. In two short years since, Tall Heights has headlined packed listening rooms across New England, toured down to Austin, TX to showcase at South By Southwest Music Festival, and performed alongside national acts like David Wilcox, Ryan Montbleau, and Andrew Belle.

Tall Heights released Rafters, in September 2011, and sold 700 copies in the first 7 days. While many artists in their genre had of late retreated to the wilderness to record, Tall Heights stayed in the city. These five tracks were recorded over a few sweltering months in a small bedroom of their Boston apartment with an SM58 microphone, an iMac, a guitar, a cello and their voices. And, although there was neither cabin nor lake, Rafters spread across their Thoreauvian folk scene like brushfire, with over 4,000 copies sold to date.

With their sophomore release, The Running of the Bulls EP (October, 2012), Tall Heights responded to their fans' growing hunger to download and relive the enchanting, bottomless ambiance of their live performance. Over four days at Q Division Studios in Somerville, MA, Tim and Paul shut their eyes, breathed and performed, recording their most haunting material to date. Thematically, the EP's narrative voice, quiet and bold, continually locates the artist as a vigilant figure on a fast-paced and ever changing landscape. Fittingly so, The Running of the Bulls EP, humble and live, has quickly placed Tall Heights as an ever stronger force on this robust folk scene amongst the nation's most esteemed new artists.

http://www.tallheights.com/

Adresse

me & thee coffeehouse (Afficher)
28 Mugford St
Marblehead, MA 01945
United States
Carte en cours de chargement...

Catégories

Musique > Americana
Musique > Blues
Musique > Musique folk
Musique > Interprète/Auteur

Enfants bienvenus : Oui
Chiens bienvenus : Non
Non-fumeur : Oui
Accessible aux fauteuils roulants : Oui

Contact

Propriétaire : Me and Thee Coffeehouse
Sur BPT depuis : 17 Nov 2010
 
Me And Thee Coffeehouse
www.meandthee.org


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