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2008 WaMu ZooTunes presented by Carter Subaru
at Woodland Park Zoo

Artist Biographies and Video Clips:


Click the date/artist below to read their biography and view a video clip (or just scroll down through all of them):

  • June 24 & 25 - Keb' Mo' / Taj Mahal $28
  • June 29 - Indigo Girls/Coyote Grace $24
  • July 16 - Marc Cohn / Aimee Mann $22
  • July 23 - Andrew Bird $17
                    Josh Ritter
  • July 24 - Emmylou Harris $29.50
                     Jimmy Gaudreau and Moondi Klein
  • July 27 – Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings/Marc Broussard $19
  • August 13 - Boz Scaggs $24
                         David Jacobs-Strain
  • August 21 - Amos Lee $18
                          Lucy Wainright Roche
  • August 27 – The Avett Brothers $18
                                Shawn Mullins

 


Keb' Mo' / Taj Mahal, $28 - June 24 & 25

Keb MoSinger-songwriter and guitarist Keb' Mo's music is a living link to the seminal Delta blues that traveled up the Mississippi River and across the expanse of America—informing all of its musical roots-before evolving into a universally celebrated art form. Born Kevin Moore in South Los Angeles to parents originally from the Deep South, he adopted his better known stage name when he was a young player who became inspired by the force of this essential African-American legacy. In the storied tradition of bluesmen before him including Muddy Waters—formerly McKinley Morganfield—and Taj Mahal, who began his days as Henry St. Clair Fredericks, Moore became known as Keb' Mo'. His acclaimed self-titled 1994 debut album introduced that now famous appellation to the world, and his latest album, 2006's “Suitcase”, brings it to new heights.

View a video clip of  Keb' Mo'

Taj Mahal

Taj MahalYou could call him a singer, multi-instrumentalist, composer, producer, ethnomusicologist, two-time Grammy-winner, world-class musical collaborator, musicians' advocate, world traveler, fisherman, or cigar aficionado. These titles are all accurate, yet none convey the warmth, humor, and soulfulness of Taj and his music.

Taj has been playing his own distinctive brand of music—variously described as Afro-Caribbean blues, folk-world-blues, hula blues, folk-funk, and a host of other hyphenations—for more than 40 years. Caribbean, Hawaiian, African, Latin, and Cuban sounds and rhythms mix with folk, jazz, zydeco, gospel, rock, pop, soul, and R&B, all layered on top of a solid country blues foundation.

What ties it all together is Taj's abiding interest in musical discovery, particularly in tracing many American musical forms back to their roots in Africa and Europe. Following his passion, Taj has spent time in the Caribbean, West Africa, Hawaii, Europe, the South Pacific, Australia, South America, and all over the continental U.S. His music reflects his global perspective, incorporating sounds from everywhere he's lived and traveled.

A self-taught musician, Taj plays more than 20 instruments, including the National Steel and Dobro guitars. His remarkable voice ranges from gruff and gravelly to smooth and sultry. "I have songs in my head from so many languages and people. I know my sound is in the middle of this whole."

View a video clip of  Taj Mahal


Indigo Girls/Coyote Grace, $24 - June 29

Indigo Girls20 years after they began releasing records as Indigo Girls, Amy Ray and Emily Saliers have politely declined the opportunity to mellow with age. You could just say it's just not in their constitution. Devoted environmental and social justice activists and lifelong music-industry mavericks, the Girls have spent their entire career pushing boundaries on a variety of fronts. Why stop now?

Both Saliers and Ray agree that “Despite Our Differences”, the 10th Indigo Girls studio album, is a record defined by change and newness. On the business side of things, it's the first CD they've released since signing a new record deal with Hollywood Records earlier this year. And on the creative side, it's one they made far outside the confines of their established Georgia comfort zone, “Differences” was recorded over a speedy month-and-a-half this spring at veteran producer Mitchell Froom's home studio in Santa Monica, California.

"I think it's remarkable that Amy's life and my life coincided like this," Saliers says, "that we've been able to make music and stay dear friends through all these years." Ray echoes her bandmate. "I remind myself that we've been together for such a long time and that we're lucky to still be together," she laughs.

Though she admits she's not one for making a big fuss over a milestone like the Indigos' 20th anniversary of record-making, Ray says this new chapter in the band's career does reaffirm the principal that's always driven the duo. "It's all about living in the moment that you're in and trying to make it better than the moment that came before," she explains, pointing for example to the band's ongoing work with Honor the Earth, a Minneapolis-based non-profit dedicated to energy justice within the Native American community. "We just want to keep evolving - there isn't a point where that doesn't apply."

View a video clip of Indio Girls

Coyote Grace

Cayote GraceGirl meets Girl. Girl becomes Boy. Girl and Boy become a band. Meet COYOTE GRACE.

If you want a lesson in organic chemistry, take notes and watch the sparks fly between the acoustic downhome duo known as COYOTE GRACE. This old-timey salt & pepper shaker pair is comprised of Joe Stevens, a transman singer/songwriter from Northern California, backed up by Ingrid Elizabeth on vocals and upright bass, a sassy femme originally hailing from the hills of Southeastern Ohio. The two met while living in Seattle, and have been performing as a duo since December 2004, sharing the stage with bluegrass, old-time, folk rock, jazz, and cabarets alike.

Joe Stevens, who has been writing songs since the age of fifteen, comes from a lineage of studio singers and choral conductors, as well as old time rock & rollers. He received a Bachelor of Music from Cornish College of the Arts in 2004 with a focus on composition, while also composing music for modern dance & avant-garde theater.

Also heavily influenced by choral performance, Ingrid was steeped in the world of musical theater, which armed her with a signature sound of brassy soul. Since relocating to the west coast, Ingrid has been involved with various musical ensembles, from bluegrass to psychedelic rock to choral groups, including eclectic acoustic stringband, Captain Gravel, and prairie bluegrass group, The Mike & Amy Finders Band.

Coyote Grace spent the entire year of 2007 touring the country in their 1978 Chevy RV, promoting their debut studio album. Aptly titled "Boxes & Bags", it features 12 original tracks of acoustic alt-folk sounds, weaving fabrics of upbeat folkgrass, front-porch blues, lovesick serenades, broody funk, and freight train folk rock into a curious tapestry conveying themes of transformation, introspection, and the impermanence of identity.

In 2008, Coyote Grace has plans to release two new albums. The first being a live collection from their year on the road, “The Harvey Tour”, also featuring folk rock singer/songwriter, Courtney Robbins, set to be released in April. Following that will be their highly anticipated second studio release, due out in the fall of 2008.

View a video clip of  Coyote Grace

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Marc Cohn / Aimee Mann, $22 - July 16

Marc Cohn
In the years that preceded the release of his new Decca album “Join the Parade”, Marc Cohn passed through several life-changing events. These events are what enabled him to reconnect with his songwriting muse, and they are in large part, what make “Join the Parade” an artistic, insightful and soulful statement.

Despite his time away from the recording studio, the acclaimed singer/songwriter, winner of the 1991 Grammy Award for Best New Artist, has continued to perform live and his audiences have remained steadfast. The gigs went great until the night of August 7, 2005. That’s when Marc Cohn was shot in the head during a random attempted carjacking after a concert in Denver.

Even though the bullet was lodged near his left temple, Marc never lost consciousness and walked out of the hospital the next day. Three weeks later, while recovering at home in New York, Cohn watched the city of New Orleans destroyed by flooding in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

“ I got home a couple of days after being shot,” said Cohn. “And then Hurricane Katrina hit a few weeks later. I’m in the middle of my own crisis, and now I’m watching all these haunting images on television of thousands of people suffering through a far more horrific event. And then something I never could have predicted happened. It was like my song writing receiver got flipped into the on position. Everywhere I turned, in conversations I overheard, even in get-well emails I was receiving, song ideas started coming. And these songs weren’t polite about their sudden presence either; they insisted on being written.”

Out of all this, and all that came before, comes “Join the Parade”, a recording that is being called Marc’s most accomplished and compelling album to date. Cohn has translated some of his most complex and private emotions into lyrical song-poetry and then set those words to music of remarkable depth, toughness, and complexity. In doing so, Marc has created a work that is certain to touch a universal chord of memory and feeling.

View a video clip of Marc Cohn

Aimee Mann

Aimee MannFrom her work in the 80’s with MTV favorite Til Tuesday through her acclaimed solo discs “Whatever” and “I’m With Stupid” in the 90s, Aimee Mann has always been at the forefront of contemporary songwriters. The close of the mllennium brought her greatest success, with the simultaneous releases of “Bachelor No. 2” and the soundtrack to the film Magnolia, which garnered nominations for an Oscar, a Golden Globe and three Grammys. After a decade in which her music often took a backseat to corporate mergers and contractual obligations, the message was clear: Aimee Mann is here to stay.

From “Voices Carry” to the Oscar-nominated “Save Me,” Mann has always been known for her clever, literate, and dryly witty takes on emotional sabotage and self-destruction. Though happily married to Michael Penn (with whom she has toured extensively in a double-billed “Acoustic Vaudeville”), her fascination continues with “the freaks who could never love anyone.” With a songcraft often compared with the Beatles and Badfinger, Mann frequently pairs the bleakest of poetry with soaring, infectious melodies.

In 2006 Mann released what might be considered her most daring album yet with the critically acclaimed The Forgotten Arm. In a natural progression of her literary writing, the album is a concept album that follows the story of two lovers who meet at the Virginia State Fair. The main character is a boxer who is sent off to fight in the Viet Nam war, the CD explores the themes of love, war, drugs and ultimately recovery and redemption.

Look for Aimee’s 7th solo release, “Smilers”, coming in Spring 2008.

View a video clip of Aimee Mann

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Andrew Bird $17 - July 23
        Josh Ritter

Leo KottkeChicago-based multi-instrumentalist and lyricist Andrew Bird picked up his first violin at the age of 4. Actually, it was a Cracker Jack box with a ruler taped to it, and the first of his many Suzuki music lessons involved simply bowing to the teacher and going home. He spent his formative years soaking up classical repertoire completely by ear, so when it came time for a restless teen-ager to make the jump to Hungarian Gypsy music, early jazz, country blues, south Indian etc., it wasn't such a giant leap. It's fitting that now, though classically trained, he has instead opted to play his violin in a most unconventional manner, accompanying himself on glockenspiel and guitar, adding singing and whistling to the equation, and becoming a pop songwriter in the process.

Since beginning his recording career, Andrew has released nine albums: six studio albums, both solo and with his former group the Bowl of Fire, and three live albums. 2007’s “Armchair Apocrypha” brings the tally to ten. It is an album that sums up where Andrew's career has taken him, yet is very much of his artistic present.

Though Andrew's voice has been compared to such eminent company as Jeff Buckley, Thom Yorke, and Rufus Wainwright, like those performers, it has a quality all its own. He also adds to the mix his unnatural whistling ability, rendering him capable of adding organically generated yet otherworldly, Theremin-like sounds to the mix.

View a video clip of Andrew Bird

Josh RitterJosh Ritter

“The Historical Conquests of Josh Ritter” catches the Idaho musician in the midst of a radical transformation. While last year’s “The Animal Years” had Ritter thinking about the state of the nation, his latest offering finds him pining for Joan of Arc, Calamity Jane and Florence Nightingale, all of whom seem to be stuck together in the belly of a whale, a la Jonah. He also manages to squeeze in a few admiring words about ladies’ underwear—and that’s well before Ritter, backed by drums, bass and organ and cacophony, arrives at a rollicking chorus you might be able sing along with if you’re quick enough to get all the words.

While “The Animal Years” was a meticulously crafted and stately paean, for “Conquests” the artist radically revamped his working methods and his sound. “I needed to be somebody different,” the singer says. “The air of gravitas around me was getting oppressive. For some reason it seemed like there was a premium being placed on earnestness and that can be pretty stifling. There was a lot of talk about true love and righteous indignation. I wanted to write about gunslingers and missile silos.”

Given the new lyrical and musical trails that he is blazing, “The Historical Conquests of Josh Ritter” proves that one can still cross any number of Rubicons all the while not taking themselves too seriously. Historic indeed.

View a video clip of Josh Ritter

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Emmylou Harris $29.50 - July 24
          Jimmy Gaudreau and Moondi Klein

Emmylou HarrisEmmylou Harris has been hailed as a major figure in several of America’s most important musical movements of the past three decades. A steadfast supporter of roots music and a skilled interpreter of compelling songs, she also has been associated with a diverse array of admiring collaborators.

Harris’ contributions to country-rock, the bluegrass revival, folk music, and the Americana movement are widely lauded, and in recent years she also has carved out a sound that is uniquely her own. Her 1995 “Wrecking Ball” was a watershed album for her, combining several world-music elements with acoustic instruments, driving percussion, and a folk/roots flavor. 2000’s “Red Dirt Girl”, which was praised as a showcase for Emmylou Harris’s songwriting talent.

Harris cites Bruce Springsteen’s 1982 Nebraska as a turning point and an inspiration. At the time, she was feeling artistically “tired” and wanted to challenge herself in a new direction. The result was her acclaimed, self-penned album, “The Ballad of Sally Rose”.

Between 2000 and the present, she appeared on the “O Brother Where Art Thou” soundtrack, collaborated with the Chieftains on their “Down the Old Plank Road” album and TV special, performed concerts on behalf of a Landmine Free World, penned liner notes for a Dolly Parton tribute CD, recorded a duet with Rodney Crowell for a Louvin Brothers tribute CD, performed on the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band’s “Will the Circle Be Unbroken III” CD, and sang backup on albums for Sheryl Crow, Tracy Chapman, the Dixie Chicks, Patty Griffin, Patty Loveless, Delbert McClinton, Jim Lauderdale, Pam Tillis, and Nanci Griffith, among others.

Billboard magazine honored Emmylou Harris with its prestigious Century Award in 1999. At the time, she was lauded as a “truly venturesome, genre-transcending pathfinder” who being given the award “to acknowledge the uncommon excellence of (her) still-unfolding body of work.”

View a video clip of Emmylou Harris

Jimmy Gaudreau and Moondi KleinJimmy Gaudreau and Moondi Klein

Jimmy Gaudreau - Jimmy has long been regarded as one of the top bluegrass performers in the world. Since getting the call in 1969 to move to the Washington, DC, area from his native Rhode Island and join the legendary Country Gentlemen, he has performed with a veritable Who's Who of bluegrass bands and earned a reputation as a mandolin maverick with a sound and a style all his own.

In addition to two stints with the Country Gentlemen, Jimmy has also performed with JD Crowe and the New South, with The Tony Rice Unit (for 9 years), and with his own bands Country Store, Spectrum (with Bela Fleck), Chesapeake, and Auldridge, Bennett & Gaudreau.

In 2005, Jimmy was inducted into the Society for the Preservation of Bluegrass Music in America's "Hall of Greats" and featured in a Mandolin Magazine cover story.

Moondi Klein - While on a trip to The Carter Fold in southwest Virginia with his dad, Moondi Klein, born in Manhattan, got his first taste of mountain music and hasn't looked back since. He learned to play the guitar and banjo, and after studying music in college, moved to the Washington, D.C. area and helped form Rock Creek. Later he replaced John Starling as lead singer with The Seldom Scene and eventually went on help form the band Chesapeake, whose three albums released on the Sugar Hill label have gained critical acclaim. Moondi's music can be classified as reggae-, rock-, Celtic- and county-influenced bluegrass

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Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings/Marc Broussard, $19 - July 27

Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings“You’ve got to feel it,” is the first thing that comes from the mouth of seasoned soul singer Sharon Jones when asked what makes great music. “You’ve got to feeel it! In your bones, your heart, in everything and everywhere!” And if you’ve ever been to a Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings show, you know you can’t but help feel their music. From the rumble and grumble of thick funk jerking you to the dancefloor, to the soaring soul guaranteed to make you sigh, one thing is for sure: Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings are legitimate heavy-hitters.

Ms. Jones’s funk pedigree can be traced to her hometown of Augusta, Georgia, the same town that birthed the Godfather of Soul himself: James Brown. Like Mr. Brown and countless soul singers before her, Sharon honed her vocal chops in the church. It didn’t take long for the young Sharon to be encouraged to take the spirit from the gospel and apply it to a more secular setting. This setting was realized when as a teenager she moved with her family to Brooklyn, NY and soon found herself saturated with the pulse of funk and disco. Little time passed before she became a staple within the studios, doing often uncredited back-up work for gospel, soul, disco and blues artists.

Fast forward to 1996. Still singing for her church, Sharon crosses paths with NYCs great indie-soul & funk label Desco Records. It is a match made in proverbial soul heaven; Sharons hefty voice greased by Desco house-band, the Soul Providers. Sharon’s first full-length album, 2002’s successful “Dap Dippin’” with Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kingson Brooklyn-based Daptone Records, served to solidify her reputation as Soul Sister ..1. And, finally, after several more years of non-stop worldwide touring and recording with other notable artists such as Greyboy, Sharon Jones and her mighty Dap-Kings give you their finest full-length effort to date, “Naturally”.

View a video clip of Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings

Marc BroussardMarc Broussard

The son of Louisiana Hall of Fame guitarist Ted Broussard (of the legendary blue-eyed soul combo, the Boogie Kings), Marc grew up surrounded by the diverse musical panorama for which his homestate is world-renowned. Music informed his life from the get-go. As he hit his teens, Broussard was already an accomplished artist, the veteran of a string of local bands and solo acoustic performances, known for tearing up the stage with the raw-throated gusto and worldly emotive power of a man three times his age.

Broussard made his recorded debut in 2002 with the remarkably mature independent release, "MOMENTARY SETBACK." He drew coast-to-coast acclaim in 2004 with his major-label debut, "CARENCRO," a full-blooded take on the blues, soul, Cajun music, rock, and swamp-pop of his native Louisiana, distilled through the talented young tunesmith's flair for smart contemporary songwriting. Broussard performed showstopping sets at festivals like South By Southwest, Bonnaroo, and of course, the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival; and tours alongside such like-minded musicians as Dave Matthews Band, Willie Nelson, Bonnie Raitt, Gavin DeGraw, O.A.R., and Maroon 5.

Marc followed up "CARENCRO" with 2007's critically acclaimed "S.O.S.: SAVE OUR SOUL." The album saw Broussard and his crack band plumbing the vaults of historic labels like Motown and Stax to create 11 incendiary performances of soul classics originally recorded by Al Green, Stevie Wonder, Otis Redding, the Staple Singers, Bobby Womack, and other members of R&B royalty as well as one original tune recorded in the same classic soul vein. Among the album's many highlights was a sweltering take on Marvin Gaye & Tammi Terrell's "If I Can Build My Whole World Around You," performed as a duet with Toby Lightman.

View a video clip of Marc Broussard

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Boz Scaggs $24 - August 13
         David Jacobs-Strain

Boz ScaggsGrammy Award-winning artist, Boz Scaggs, and his band will hit the road in 2008, performing the best known songs of his career, hits that are constantly requested like "Lido Shuffle," "Look What You've Done To Me," "Miss Sun," "Jo Jo," "Heart Of Mine," "Lowdown," "Harbor Lights," "We're All Alone" and many others will be showcased throughout the tour.

Born in Texas and raised with an abiding respect for a wide spectrum of American roots music, Scaggs has combined rock, jazz, R&B and blues to create a trademark sound. With an extensive and distinctive career that has spanned 30 years and many accolades, Scaggs continues to prove himself as one of music's most creative and original artists.
Boz will be releasing a new studio record in April, 2008.

View a video clip of Boz Scaggs

 

David Jacobs - StrainDavid Jacobs - Strain

David Jacobs-Strain, a consummate finger-style and slide guitarist, plays in the blues tradition but isn't from it. Jacobs-Strain’s latest CD, “Liar’s Day” is a genre-defying journal of his pursuit to honor both the roots of American country blues and the possibilities that can grow from them. The 24-year-old artist has toured the country performing at musical festivals and opening for acts such as Los Lobos, Lucinda Williams, Taj Mahal, Etta James, Boz Scaggs, and the Blind Boys of Alabama.

View a video clip of David Jacob - Strain

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Etta JamesAmos Lee $18 - August 21
            Lucy Wainright Roche

Taking inspiration from soul greats, Stevie Wonder and Bill Withers, and folk legends, John Prine and Dave Van Ronk, Amos Lee directs his music with a spirit and presence rooted in American tradition. Amos delivers a unique brand of folk-soul music that aims to unite, uplift, and inspire. The "folk" side is reflected in his nimble acoustic guitar playing and the intimacy of his live performances. The "soul" strain comes through in the engaging song-poetry of his lyrics and in what the Philadelphia Inquirer described as his "easygoing voice" and "raw, unedited emotion."

“ Amos Lee”, his eponymous Blue Note debut, is set for release in March 2005. The eleven tracks, all composed by Amos, were produced by Lee Alexander and recorded by Danny Kopelson in July 2004 during two weeks of sessions at The Magic Shop in New York City. Among the album's choice cuts are the atmospheric opener "Keep it Loose, Keep it Tight" and "Arms of a Woman," a classic triplet ballad that could have been covered in an earlier era of soul. Enhanced by a delicate string arrangement, "Soul Suckers" warns a young performer of the hazards of the music business. "Bottom of the Barrel" echoes classic John Prine in its wry humor, resilient spirit, and timeless melody.

The 27-year-old former schoolteacher grew up going between Philadelphia and entered the University of South Carolina in 1995, where he began to play acoustic guitar and write songs. After graduating college with a degree in English, Amos returned to Philadelphia where he taught elementary school. His desire to pursue music as a career forced him to make the difficult decision to leave teaching.

After having had the honor of opening shows for such legends as Bob Dylan, BB King, and Mose Allison, a break came when Norah Jones became an early convert to his cause and invited Amos to open her European tour, beginning in April 2004. Equipped with only his voice and guitar, Amos found himself facing 3,000-5,000 listeners a night--and up to three times that number when he joined Norah's US tour (through November '04.

View a video clip of Amos Lee

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The Avett Brothers $18 - August 27
                    Shawn Mullins

Avett BrothersIf you put your ear to the street, you can hear the rumble of the world in motion; people going to and from work, to school, to the grocery store. You may even hear the whisper of their living rooms, their conversation, their complaints, and if you're lucky, their laughter. If you're almost anywhere in America, you'll hear something different, something special, something you recognize but haven't heard in a long time. It is the sound of a real celebration.

It is not New Year's, and it is not a political convention. It is neither a prime time game-show, nor a music video countdown, bloated with fame and sponsorship. What you are hearing is the love for music. It is the unbridled outcry of support for a song that sings to the heart, that dances with the soul. The jubilation is in the theaters, the bars, the music clubs, the festivals. The love is for a band.

The songs are honest: just chords with real voices singing real melodies. But, the heart and the energy with which they are sung, is really why people are talking, and why so many sing along.

They are a reality in a world of entertainment built with smoke and mirrors, and when they play, the common man can break the mirrors and blow the smoke away, so that all that's left behind is the unwavering beauty of the songs. That's the commotion, that's the celebration, and wherever The Avett Brothers are tonight, that's what you'll find.

View a video clip of The Avett Brothers

Etta JamesShawn Mullins

Shawn Mullins’ vibrant new album, “honeydew” (released March 11th) is teeming with humanity — hobos, railroad workers, traveling salesmen, homeless troubadours, fearful old people, youngsters yearning to escape from a dead-end existence, and several generations of family members, living and dead. There’s a ton of heartache in this record, and a ton of hope as well, as Mullins explores the dark corners of contemporary existence while also delving back into the past, capturing vivid pictures of his native Atlanta and the surrounding South in a voice of plainspoken eloquence and uncommon genuineness. This richly interwoven, character-driven work is at once the most panoramic album of Mullins’ distinguished career and the most intensely personal.

A song cycle in 12 parts, “honeydew” took shape organically out of a series of devastating events in Mullins’ life, beginning with the death of his mother in October 2006. “It was a tough year,” he acknowledges, emitting a brief, rueful laugh before continuing. “And this is like a bad country song, but then my dog died. Roadie had been with me for almost 17 years. I was halfway finished with writing the record when all this devastation went down — I felt like death was all around me, and the process of writing helped me get through it.”

While the performances from Mullins and his fellow players are enthralling in their naturalness and subtlety, “honeydew’s” most revelatory aspect is the songs themselves. “The artists who inspire me are incredible songwriters with a way of painting a picture — it sounds cliché, but that’s the way it is,” says Mullins. “More than anything, I’ve always aspired to write great songs, and I think I’ve grown a lot as a songwriter. Part of it stems from the fact that I finally feel complete artistic freedom, and because of that, the songs on this record say exactly what I wanted to say. These are my own pictures.”

View a video clip of Shawn Mullins

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