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About
the band:
Rock
energy coexists with old-time mountain soul. Spooky backwoods
melodies combine with hip hard-hitting beats. Raw, searing blues
riffs intermingle with high heavenly vocals. Sound
good? Here's the catch:
No electricity. No drums.
Meet Crooked Still, the hot young alternative bluegrass group
on a mission to bend the boundaries of traditional music. The
unlikely combination of banjo, cello, and double-bass drives this
low lonesome band, whose captivating vocals and high-wire solos
have enraptured audiences all over North America and Ireland since
2001.
Four very unique musical personalities merge to form Crooked Still.
Aoife O'Donovan's
refined, sultry vocals float over Rushad
Eggleston's rumbling cello riffs, Dr.
Gregory Liszt's futuristic four-finger banjo rolls and Corey
DiMario's pulsing bass lines. The resulting acoustic fusion
can warp a traditional American tune to the brink of unrecognizability
without sacrificing the authenticity of the original sources.
“It's almost like we're going back and making imaginary
history,'' says Eggleston,
whose versatile cello style has already sparked a revolution among
young cellists. ``What if the 1920s Appalachian musicians could've
heard the music we hear now?''
In the spring of 2001, singer O’Donovan
and bassist DiMario
were classmates at the New
England Conservatory of Music in Boston, MA. Unbeknownst to
them at the time, just across the river in the laboratories of
MIT a young cellist named Rushad
Eggleston from the Berklee
College of Music met every night to jam with Greg
Liszt, then a graduate student and aspiring banjo player.
A serendipitous meeting at a late-night party brought all four
of these musicians together for the first time, and Crooked Still
was born in the summer of that year.
As its members finished school, Crooked Still frequently performed
around Boston, collecting rave
reviews from the local press, notably the Boston Globe, Northeast
Performer, and the Boston Herald. The band’s fan base
grew until it became almost impossible to get into the Cantab
Lounge in Cambridge when Crooked Still took the stage. A trip
to the North American Folk
Alliance in 2004 resulted in invitations to perform at the
Falcon Ridge Folk Festival
and historic Newport Folk
Festival. Hop
High, the debut album from Crooked Still, was released
at the prestigious Falcon
Ridge Folk Festival in July, 2004 and was the top-selling
CD at the festival that year.
Following the success of this first festival appearance, Crooked
Still has appeared at concert halls, nightclubs, coffeehouses,
and festivals in twenty-three states and several different countries.
This grassroots endeavor frequently lands Hop
High among the top ten best-selling CD’s at the
online independent megastore CD
Baby.
Although being an unsigned band has afforded Crooked Still the
maximum creative freedom, when the president of Signature
Sounds Recordings came knocking, Crooked Still listened. With
a roster that includes such diverse acts as indie-rocker Josh
Ritter, contemporary songwriter Lori
McKenna, and old-timey folk jammers The
Mammals, Signature
Sounds was a perfect fit, simultaneously progressive and down-to-earth.
Crooked Still's first nationwide release on Signature Sounds,
Shaken by a Low Sound, hit stores on August 22.
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