((i))
 start >>

Languages:
english

Search:

with images
with audio
with video
Publish >>

Feature
archive >>
 


Newswire
archive >>
 

Topics:

mission statement >>   moderation >>   support >>   mailing lists >>   how to participate >>

Kimya Dawson At Pabst Theater 15apr 8pm

marco, 17.02.2008 10:50


Kimya's playing at the Pabst this spring!
 http://www.pabsttheater.org/kimyadawson

Has anyone heard yet if Utah Phillips is playing this Mayday like the last few?


Kimya's playing at the Pabst this spring!
 http://www.pabsttheater.org/kimyadawson

Here's what Pabst's website has to say about Kimya:

With the breakout success of the JUNO soundtrack, Kimya Dawson has gone from being a hero in the uber-underground "anti-folk" scene with her former band "The Moldy Peaches" to becoming the unlikely centerpiece of one of this year's most unlikely & endearing success stories.

Dawson's irresistible do-it-yourself style that has an almost child-like stream of consciousness quality to it, won over audiences this year with songs that topically run the gamut from IM-ing to teenage love to the Konami code.

It's no wonder when you think about it though... they're simplistic, unorthodox, easy to relate to & strangely heartwarming.... making JUNO & Kimya Dawson two of our favorite unlikely success stories of the year!

Singer/songwriter Kimya Dawson is best known as part of the New York City anti-folk outfit the Moldy Peaches. In 2002, Dawson released her debut solo album, I'm Sorry That Sometimes I'm Mean, a collection of spare tunes sung to an acoustic guitar and Dawson's voice, which breaks with hurt over tales of abuse and longing.

The 30-year-old songwriter was born and raised in Bedford Hills, NY, where her parents run a day-care center from their home. Dawson and fellow Moldy Peach Adam Green met in 1995 at a record store in Mt. Kisco, NY, where she worked. For the next four years, Dawson moved back and forth between New York and Washington, but she and Green had become friends and began writing songs together. In 1999, Green followed Dawson to Washington, where they formed the Moldy Peaches. After a year, Green returned to New York, with Dawson following later. Eventually, the Moldy Peaches -- Dawson, Green, drummer Strictly Beats, bassist Steve Mertens, and guitarists Jack Dishel and Toby Goodshank -- began playing the anti-folk circuit.

In 2001, they released their self-titled debut to critical acclaim. All the songs were co-written and sung by Dawson and Green. The band toured in the States as well as Europe. Dawson contributed backing vocals to Ben Kweller's 2002 debut solo album, Sha, Sha. Later that same year, the Moldy Peaches began a hiatus of indefinite length when both Dawson and Green's (Garfield) solo albums were released. I'm Sorry That Sometimes I'm Mean was well received by critics and Dawson embarked on a tour of Europe and the United States. In 2004, Dawson released two more albums of material culled from her bedroom sessions: Knock-Knock Who? and My Cute Fiend Sweet Princess. Later that year, Hidden Vagenda arrived on K Records. Dawson resurfaced in 2006 with the Kimya Dawson/Matty Pop Chart EP and Remember That I Love You full-length.





  Download this article in pdf format >>
  Add this article to your pdf newsletter selection >>
  Checkout and Download your PDF-newsletter selection >>

  Email this article to someone >>

  Make a quick comment on this article >>

UTAH STATUS
17.02.2008 - 13:07
Quoting from a recent communication I received from a Madison Wobbly, "...Utah Phillips has stopped performing due to his heart problem – and he is refusing to apply for a heart transplant."
Benefits are being held for Utah around the country, with events in the works for Madison and Milwaukee. Details will be posted as they become available.
MILWOB>
e-mail:: gergun1@wi.rr.com


onmilwaukee on kimya dawson
26.05.2008 - 09:58
According to Dawson, the last time she played Milwaukee was at a basement show at which the MPD showed up to shut it down, comparing the tiny folk show to the Great White inferno / stampede. The officer acted as a soothsayer, predicting, "You're all going to die!"

[ref]=[ http://www.onmadison.com/music/articles/kimyadawson.html]
marco>