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February 2001 Parasol
Newsletter
Issue #39
We have so many releases to highlight I have no
room to rant. Check out the Coming Soon section on page 2; Green
Pajamas, Bettie Serveert and Club 8! And I swear, in addition
to the aforementioned, we have a new Adam Schmitt song on the
forthcoming Parasol's Sweet 16, Volume 3.
SPOTLIGHT

Fonda-The Strange and the Familiar
CD
(AHA!-021) $11.00
This new album from Los Angeles California
bliss-pop group Fonda, is easily compared to early Lush, with Emily Cook's
vocals reminiscent of Amelia Fletcher (Marine Research, Heavenly, Talulah
Gosh). The Strange And The Familiar is a full-blown collision of sunny
West Coast pop and British dream-pop/shoegazer sonics. Grand arrangements
punctuated by Emily's angelic vocals and lent all sorts of altitude by a
glorious tapestry of guitars, courtesy co-vocalist David Klotz and former
Mighty Lemon Drops guitarist David Newton. The album covers a wide variety of
sounds from the 60¹s girl group inspired opener "Sun Keeps Shining On
Me" to the sparse melancholy beat of "Cape May". From sweet
jangly love songs ("Close To Home") to tales about losing the one you
love ("Dance in the Light"), The Strange & The Familiar makes
mundane life seem strangely beautiful. The history: Emily Cook moved from
London to Los Angeles in 1994 to work in the film industry. A chance meeting
with David Klotz on a movie set led to the friendship that would soon form
Fonda. Sharing an adoration for vintage keyboard rigs and the technicolor
musicals of French film director Jacques Demy (The Umbrellas of Cherbourg),
they started writing the songs that would make up 1998's Music For
Beginners EP (Top Quality Records). David Newton, a long time friend of the
band and former member of Sire/Reprise artists The Mighty Lemon Drops, joined
the band after producing their debut album The Invisible Girl in the
Fall of 1999. With a host of close friends filling in on bass and drums, Fonda
self-released the album in November 1999. It was embraced by college radio,
peaking at #39 on CMJ¹s album charts. Songs from The Invisible Girl
would be released on compilations in Japan and used in various films and TV
shows including Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

George Usher-Days of Plenty CD
(PAR-CD-056) $10.00
On his second album for Parasol, this New Yorker
exhibits why Tower Pulse once described Usher as "one of America's
foremost and unsung pop auteurs." While avoiding the "concept
album" tag, Usher's latest work Days of Plenty does use the
mellotron-driven, psychedelic title track as its spiritual center, around which
the other songs revolve. The lost soul of the 21st Century Man who has
"everything." In "Channel 104" the Orwellian image of
crowds in front of a giant screen has been replaced in actuality with the
television viewer whose realities are continually challenged by the gulf
between what's outside his window and what's on his television. The respect
that Usher elicits in the New York music community runs deep. WFMU DJ and
recording artist Laura Cantrell used an Usher-penned song, "Not the
Tremblin' Kind," as the title song to her new, critically acclaimed album,
and Bar None recording artist Kate Jacobs wrote a "tribute" song to
Mr. Usher, titled "George Says," that opened her What About Regret
record. The chorus tag line, "George says 'Love is never wasted'"
suggests that for all of Usher's interest in philosophies and politics, a
central theme of Usher's writing, including the songs on Days of Plenty,
is love
with an Usher twist. Mixed by Mitch Easter, Days of Plenty
is the follow up to Usher's 1998 album Dutch April.

Steve Almaas-Kingo A Wild One CD
(PAR-CD-067) $10.00
Singer, songwriter, and guitarist Steve Almaas
describes his new album as simply "a collection of songs I like. My last
album (1998's Human, All Too Human) expressed a specific mood and
feelings. This one is made up of old and new songs that I thought would sound
good in the hands of the players." Produced by Steve Almaas, arranged by
The Ministers of Sound, Kingo A Wild One was recorded by Eddie Sperry at
Eddie's House in NYC and mixed by Mitch Easter at Fidelitorium Recordings in
Kernersville NC. The album contains 12 songs, with one, "She Thought She
Knew Him Well", dating back to Steve's days with his mid-'80s band Beat
Rodeo. Others, like "Pretty Picture," were finished just prior to
their recording. With Steve Almaas on guitar and lead vocals, The Ministers of
Sound are Dan Prater (bass, backing vocals), Doug Wygal (drums, percussion),
and Jon Graboff (6 and 12 string electric guitar, pedal steel, mandolin,
acoustic guitar). Old friends Richard Barone (E-bow, vocals) and Chris Whitley
(banjo) join in on "Kingo A Wild One" and "The Wrong Man"
respectively. Kingo A Wild One is Steve's fourth solo album, the first
to be released domestically in the U.S.

Jenifer Jackson-Birds CD
(PAR-CD-068) $10.00
Note to film buffs: Songs from Birds
figure prominently in Daydream Believer, a new film by Debra Eisenstadt,
winner of The Grand Jury's "Best Dramatic Feature of 2001" at the
Slamdance Festival. Sometimes you hear a song and just know that you want to be
involved in telling the world about the recording artist. Jenifer Jackson's
"Mercury, The Sun & Moon" from Birds, produced one of
those epiphanies. Her songs are lovely and mysterious and daring, intimate and
natural, sexual and sparse and true and also deceptively simple. This peerless
New York City songwriter's talent for melody and subtle arrangement make for a
record full of style and short on kitsch. Delicately wrought by producer Brad
Jones (Cotton Mather's Kontiki) with a handful of superb players, Jenifer
Jackson's Birds is an elegant work of classic pop; effortlessly graceful
and resonant. The Village Voice has called her "a passionate,
evolved, swinging modern." CMJ said: "There's a particularly
soft, almost naive sense of beauty to JJ's songs that belies the sophistication
of their craftsmanship and presentation." Jenifer's recordings are liked
by people who appreciate Nick Drake, Joni Mitchell, Burt Bacharach, and vocal
jazz like Chet Baker and Julie London. Her performing, recording and
songwriting credits include collaborations with Jules Shear, Medeski Martin and
Wood, Oren Bloedow, Marshall Crenshaw, Swandive, and an album of duets recorded
with her father, jazz radio DJ legend Julian Jackson.
Coming Soon...
Various Artists-Shoe Fetish: A Tribute to
Shoes (Parasol) CD due in February
Waltz For Debbie-Gone and Out (Hidden Agenda) CD due in March
Green Pajamas-In a Glass Darkly (Hidden Agenda) EP due in March
Bettie Serveert-TBA (Hidden Agenda) Mini album due in April
Jack & the Beanstalk-TBA (Parasol) CD due in April
Tractor Kings-Sunday Night (Mud) CD due in May
Absinthe Blind-TBA (Parasol) CD due in May
Autoliner-TBA (Parasol) CD due in May
Club 8-TBA (Hidden Agenda) CD due in May
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT...
The Beauty Shop is starting to
attract attention from mainstream press outlets for its debut release Yr
Money or Yr Life. Dave Sprague writing for RollingStone.com said,
"Devoutly minimalist and unsparingly brooding, the Illinois-based band can
conjure up images of the Tindersticks (in the cryptic elegance of arrangements
like the one that swaths the menacing "Death March") or the Gun Club
(thanks to ominous tales like the self-destructive "I Got Issues").
The mortar holding it all together oozes from the voicebox of frontman John
Hoeffleur, whose sepulchral tones -- imagine Leonard Cohen with a deeply
ingrained Midwestern drawl -- belie his youth, and lend undeniable heft to the
dank, drug-sodden imagery that permeates the remarkably addictive disc."
And, Time Out New York writes "Yr Money or Yr Life sound(s) like is
a first-rate, sloppy acoustic album crawling with thoroughly morbid, mordant
tunes about death, drugs, stalkers, tough times and bad love
" See
them at Schuba's in Chicago on February 7.
SOME PARASOL RELATED ARTIST ANSWERS SOME
QUESTIONS
Neilson
Hubbard
1. Mixing session you wish you could have
attended-
"Probably none of them. I start hating songs after that many
listens."
2. Songs you think you probably shouldn't
like but just can't help yourself-
"'You're the Inspiration' by Chicago and 'Forever Yours' by Journey. They
remind me of going to junior high dances."
3. Favorite record that you can't find on CD
(or CD you can't find on vinyl)-
"I always use to look for Jamboree by Guadalcanal Diary, but never could
find it, but recently I've been looking for Hugo Largo's Meddle."
4. First Concert-
"KISS (1979) Jackson, MS Coliseum."
5. Favorite Bass Player-
"Jason Wilkins. He's mine
keep your hands off."
Dropped by his major-funded independent label (E
Pluribus Unum/Geffen/Interscope) after a mega-merger, Hubbard took back his
latest album, Why Men Fail, and dropped it on the Parasol stoop. The album
features musical contributions from Peter Holsapple, Will Kimbrough and David
Lowery. Amazing stuff from this Mississippian who is a sometime collaborator of
former This Living Hand bandmate Garrison Starr.
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