Digital Digging: Foreign Folk

May 1st, 2009

digital digging big Digital Digging: Foreign Folk

By: Michael Madavi

With more and more foreign folk bands popping up these days, it’s nice to see a positive American influence offshore for a change! One of the red, white, and blue’s greatest contributions to the global music scene has to be that classic bluegrass folk sound we love so much. Part gospel, part blues, folk music is about as old as recorded music itself. While Americans might have pioneered our own version of the genre, recent years have seen the rise of quality and successful folk bands from other countries. Here’s a few favorites from our catalog:

250004 72 Digital Digging: Foreign FolkThe Audreys
download icon Digital Digging: Foreign Folk “Paradise City” (mp3)
from “When the Flood Comes”
(The Audreys)
UPC: 0602517778153
icon landing page Digital Digging: Foreign Folk More On This Album

These guys deserve some serious respect as they’re a two-time ARIA (the Australian Grammy Award) winner for the Best Blues and Roots Album. They began as a duo comprised of the lovely Taasha Coates (voice, piano, ukulele) and Tristan Goodall (guitars, banjo) who, after dropping out of university in Adelaide, moved to Melbourne where they played original pop songs and slowed-down versions of 1980s songs. The two soon found a love of bluegrass oriented folk music and formed the Audreys with three other members to round out their sound. The result was definitely successful as both their releases to date have received enormous critical praise and earned them their shiny, invaluable ARIAs. This feels a lot like the Cranberries!

cp thinbar Digital Digging: Foreign Folk

210518 72 Digital Digging: Foreign FolkMoriarty
download icon Digital Digging: Foreign Folk “Jimmy” (mp3)
from “Gee whiz but this is a lonesome town”
(Naive)
UPC: 3298498121117
icon landing page Digital Digging: Foreign Folk More On This Album

Formed in Paris as the century turned, Moriarty saw five young musicians adopt each other and write songs like novels or short movies. The group has a sound all their own created by a voice drunk on honey, upright bass, suitcase drums, acoustic and electric guitars and a harmonica. Their sound floats between folk, country, blues and cabaret set somewhere around Dallas in the 1930′s, the Russian Taïga and Paris. An infectious melody is carried by the luminous Rosemary, supported by unsettling lyrics and oozing train-like beats. Very narrative in structure, her sweet and homegrown voice tells tales of strange occurrences and characters from a world that Moriarty creates as they see fit. Very unique and moving.

cp thinbar Digital Digging: Foreign Folk

265814 72 Digital Digging: Foreign FolkSunparlour Players
download icon Digital Digging: Foreign Folk “North” (mp3)
from “Wave North”
(Outside Music)
UPC: 623339904827 
icon landing page Digital Digging: Foreign Folk More On This Album

Ok, so Canada isn’t that far off, but the group’s name is a nod not to a sun room, but in fact to the Sunparlour district of Canada  - the southernmost mainland of their home country. Formed a little over three years ago, the band has two EPs and one previous full length release to their credit: 2005′s solely-independent EP release Mersea , 2006′s live EP Alive at the Tranzac and 2007′s critically acclaimed Hymns for the Happy. The now three-piece multi-instrumental band of front man Andrew Penner, and co-conspirators Dennis Van Dine and Michael “Rosie” Rosenthal  have recorded their new album Wave North to imminent success. METRO really nails the album’s sound on the head, calling it “…the Arcade Fire with more banjo.” Full of epic builds and destined for enthusiastic crowds singing along, this record is a great contribution from our friendly neighbors to the north, eh.

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