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Posts Tagged ‘Dave Carroll’

Low: Free Live EP

FORTHCOMING ALBUM C’MON FEATURES
WILCO’S NELS CLINE AND TRAMPLED BY
TURTLES’ DAVE CARROLL


Low: Live at Eindhoven

Low are sharing a new live
EP, available for free download. Click here to grab it.
Live at Eindhoven was recorded at St. Catherina Church in the
Netherlands city on January 22, 2009. The band was joined by a full choir, organ and percussion for the
performance.

Low’s forthcoming album C’mon is out early next year on Sub Pop Records and features Wilco guitarist Nels Cline, and
Trampled by Turtles banjo player
Dave Carroll. After recent runs in Europe and Australia, Low end 2010 with a Christmas tour starting this
week in Seattle. In related Low news, Robert
Plant
was recently nominated for a Grammy for Best Solo Rock Vocal Performance for his cover of Low’s “Silver
Rider”, from his new album Band of Joy.

Live at Eindhoven EP:

01 Monkey

02 Silver Rider
03 July

04 Laser Beam

Low
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Trampled By Turtles: New Album

TRAMPLED BY TURTLES TO RELEASE PALOMINO APRIL 13

Trampled By Turtles

With four self-released albums to their credit and a word-of-mouth reputation that draws legions of die hard fans to their live shows, northern roots music outfit Trampled By Turtles are set to release Palomino, their first album through Thirty Tigers/RED, on April 13.

With a sound that’s a bracing hybrid of classic American songwriting, bluegrass and folk, this is forceful acoustic music from the land of ice and snow – of dark winters, isolation and numbing cold – delivered at breakneck pace with the fervor of religion.

The five members of what would become Trampled by Turtles formed in 2003 in Duluth, Minnesota. While they never set out to be a bluegrass band, the band employs the same time-honored tools of the trade – guitar, acoustic bass, banjo, mandolin and fiddle – as their grass-fed country cousins. But their soul-deep differences in influences, attitude and attack, from their quicksilver, deadly accurate picking to their lonesome, hauntingly spare ballads, make for a very different musical beast indeed.

Crisply produced by TxT lead singer, guitarist and primary songwriter Dave Simonett, Palomino leads off with a pair of plaintive, up-tempo ballads. “Wait So Long” offers gorgeous, high lonesome harmonies by bassist Tim Saxhaug and banjoist Dave Carroll, while “Victory” is a lament about persevering through loneliness and heartbreak, with Simonett singing “all of us lonely… it ain’t a sin; want something better than the shape we’re in…” and urging the listener to carry on, with the words “and the stars they whisper blessings babe, as you walk by.”

Simonett strikes gold yet again with “New Orleans,” a wistful time-tripper that evokes a dreamy 19th-century reverie. With the fare-thee-well track “Again,” the album’s closer, he and the boys deliver a bruised-but-unbowed fireside lament of longing and loss that will stick with you and brings to mind Uncle Tupelo and Jay Farrar‘s solo albums. It’s a song that yearns for another chance and begs for another listen, a song that blends the band’s virtuosity with the emotionalism that connects them with their audiences.

Trampled By Turtles hits the road in early February; dates available here.

Read JamBase’s recent review of their 1/22 show at The Independent here.


US singer pens revenge ode to airline

Dave Carroll couldn’t get compensation for damage to his guitar – until he named and shamed the airline in a YouTube video

Next time an airline loses or breaks your luggage, try shaming them with a song and a video. That’s what a little-known Canadian country and western singer did after he claimed that his Taylor acoustic guitar had been damaged by baggage handlers at Chicago’s O’Hare airport last year.

United Breaks Guitars has become a YouTube sensation and provided Dave Carroll with the biggest hit of his career. The song – which chronicles his vain year-long attempt to win compensation from United – has had almost 4m hits on YouTube and fans have been clamouring for the song at gigs where his band, Sons of Maxwell, has performed.

Once the video appeared and became a YouTube hit, United sat up and took notice. It offered to pay the cost of repairing his guitar and flight vouchers worth $1,200 (£700) but he told the airline to donate the sum to charity. “They definitely want this to go away,” he said.

Sales of Sons of Maxwell’s eight albums and Carroll’s solo disc have increased from “one or two a day online to probably hundreds,” he says, thanks to the viral smash. Other airlines have offered him free trips to experience their customer service and Bob Taylor of Taylor Guitars personally telephoned, offering two guitars of Carroll’s choice and props to use in a second video.

Yes, Carroll plans two more songs about his experience with United. The second song is about Ms Irlweg, the “unflappable” customer service rep at United who said last December that the “matter was closed.” Carroll says the song will not be unkind to her. The third song in the trilogy, which will be about the outcome, is not yet written.

United, which has seen its share price tumble, could have spared itself this public relations humiliation if it had followed its own policy on customer service. United’s website says: “In the air and on the ground, online and on the telephone, our customers have the right to expect – to demand – respect, courtesy, fairness and honesty from the airline they have selected for travel.”

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