|
Event
David Berkeley Returns to the Casa Phoenix
Fantastic news just in: David Berkeley, "the best of the young American songwriters," is coming back to play a second concert at the Casa Phoenix, on Thursday January 30 at 6:30. His last concert for us was spellbinding - this is an absolute don't miss event. David will play songs from his brand new album, the Fire in My Head, as well as many other brilliant songs of his own writerly composition. As always there will be light food and drink, and as always please buy your tickets right here.
"I went out to the hazel wood because a fire was in my head." W.B. Yeats
Itinerant songsmith and author David Berkeley went out into the sagebrush and cactus of New Mexico and found his head was similarly ablaze. Indeed Berkeley's head has been ablaze for some time now, writing songs capable of both breaking and mending the heart.
Berkeley is a New Jersey native, but in the past decade, he's lived in Brooklyn, Atlanta, Berkeley and Corsica. Santa Fe is now home, where he lives with this wife and two young sons. Within months of arriving and still overwhelmed by the palette of reds and browns, the endless open sky, and the frightening lack of water in his new high desert surroundings, Berkeley wrote and recorded his most haunting and personal songs to date.
"The best of the young American songwriters, a voice full of feeling and a big, big heart. And the balls to say what he thinks." Boston Phoenix
The result is The Fire in My Head (Straw Man), Berkeley's fifth studio album, recorded in two days at Jono Manson's ramshackle studio in the wilds above town. All the songs were performed live by Berkeley's trio (David on vocals, guitar, percussion and bass; Bill Titus on guitar, keys, organ, drums; and Jordan Katz on trumpet and banjo).
Berkeley's doleful baritone and vulnerable falsetto, called "lustrous and melancholy" by the New York Times, is up front in the mix, showcasing his profoundly elegiac lyrics. Indeed, Berkeley cites Yeats and Melville among his greatest influences. For his unique way with words, the San Francisco Chronicle dubbed Berkeley "a musical poet." He seems even more reflective and more mature than usual in this collection, though, confronting themes of aging, mortality, and the enduring and redemptive power of love.
"Dashing singer-songwriter David Berkeley delivers his warm, thoughtful songs, along with a reliably hilarious line in onstage banter." Time Out New York
|
|
|
LocationCasa Phoenix (View)
1307 Corcoran St NW
Washington, DC 20009
United States
Categories
Kid Friendly: Yes! |
Dog Friendly: No |
Non-Smoking: Yes! |
Wheelchair Accessible: No |
|
Contact
|