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SINGSONGPR NEWS: ACOUSTIC ROOTS |
Lori McKenna
New Album: Pieces Of Me
Release Date. Available Now
Distributed By Proper Distribution
American roots often take hold where you least
expect them. "Mars", the opening cut off of Lori McKenna's new album, Pieces
of Me (Acoustic Roots), finds her celebrating everything from the mundane
(the hole wearing through the fabric of her couch) to the fantastic, as she
ponders the reflection of Mars in her son's eyes and listens to him promise
that "I'm gonna get there someday." It's the kind of moment captured that
songwriters, filmmakers, and storytellers can only hope to stumble upon,
but for McKenna, it's just one of the many striking images torn directly
from the rich fabric of her daily life - images that mark the arrival of
a powerful new American voice.
McKenna, a thirty one year-old mother of four,
isn't from South Carolina, Texas, Southern Mississippi, Nashville, or even
Southern California. Lori was born and raised in Stoughton on the South Shore
of Massachusetts, just a stone's throw from where she now lives, writes,
and raises her kids; McKenna is an exceptional example of how some songwriters
just naturally seem to find their way to the homespun sound of a strummed
acoustic guitar, an honest voice and a touch of twang. While McKenna grew
up listening to the radio music of her day - the Cure's "Just Like Heaven"
remains one of her favorite songs to cover - the music she penned at her
kitchen table, after the kids had been sent off to school, has drawn more
immediate comparisons. Described as "a more buzz-worthy sister to Australian
newcomer Kasey Chambers", Lori has also garnered comparisons to artists ranging
from Natalie Maines (Dixie Chicks) and Patty Griffin, to Nanci Griffith,
and Alanis Morissette.
While she'll tell you that hers was a musical
family, there was nothing in her upbringing to suggest the magic she unleashed
on Paper Wings & Halo, the 1998 self-released CD that quickly placed
her among the elite of New England's teeming singer-songwriter scene. On
the strength of Paper Wings, Lori had local station WUMB FM name her New
Artist of the Year and the Boston Globe place her record in their year end
Top Ten picks; the stand-out among many more familiar names and seasoned
stars. The following year, she won a Boston Music Award for Outstanding
Contemporary Folk Act, appeared at the prestigious Newport Folk Festival,
and was chosen to play on Lilith Fair. For many people, their introduction
to McKenna may have been the song "Fireflies", which was featured on the
much acclaimed Respond benefit CD (Signature Sounds), including Billboard's
Album of the Year honors.
Paper Wings and Halo also found McKenna many
fans, selling over 9,000 copies off the stage, web, and at local record stores.
This "gem-hard brassy voiced songstress" (Boston Herald) still managed to
tout her guitar to over 90 shows a year and be invited for choice opening
slots at theaters all over New England with Richard Thompson, Shawn Colvin,
David Wilcox, John Mayer, Cheryl Wheeler, Stacey Earle and others. This past
August Lori's love of music and performing had her taking the stage at a
rock club six days before giving birth to her fourth child.
Paper Wings, with all its hard-won beauty and
simplicity, proved to be only a beginning. Pieces of Me, her second album
is where this promise is realised. With the production help of Crit Harmon
(Martin Sexton, Mary Guthier) and a seasoned group of players, including
drummer Billy Beard (Patty Griffin, Kim Richey), bassist Mike Rivard (Morphine,
Jonatha Brooke), guitarist David Goodrich (Rose Polenzani, Peter Mulvey),
McKenna has fleshed out the arrangements and given her songs the back-bone
and strength they have long called out for. Friends and guests that include
Richard Shindell, Ellis Paul, Jennifer Kimball, Kris Delmhorst, and Meghan
Toohey join with fiddle and mandolin to round out the upbeat mix, as on "God
Will Thank You," an ode to faith with a few of McKenna's characteristic lyrical
twists up its sleeve: "I heard about Adam and Eve, but I still believe she
never got a fair trial."
Pieces Of Me marks the gift of a "harrowingly
intimate" songwriter with the eye for detail of a Lucinda Williams or Roseanne
Cash, a searing voice with an urgency that hasn't the time to be pretty and
gutsy songs that aren't afraid to draw deeply from the well of the everyday
life.
McKenna's songs are by turns wry and biting,
tender and gentle, but always stirringly honest. In "Never Die Young", a
song penned for her mother, who died when she was six years-old, McKenna
writes: "I am the one who will never die young, I am a martyr and I cannot
hide. But I'm not a winner, I'm just brilliantly bitter. I'm sealed by my
skin, but broken inside."
[For further information and review copies please
contact Pat Tynan]
Pat Tynan Media
Office: +44(0)1895 636935
Mobile: 07985 400297
An associate of SingSong Entertainment
Publicity
http://www.singsongpr.biz/
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