advertisement
Home.News.Features.Reviews.Blogs.Calendar.Audio/Video.Store.
Current Issue

Paste Digital Edition |
October '08
Web Extras | Subscribe
Renew | Back Issues
CD Sampler Sleeves

Paste Magazine Awards


advertisement



Pages tagged “doug burr”

The Culture Club returns!

|

image

That's right faithful podcast listeners, The Culture Club is back from a long nap. We've been busy here at in Multimedia land since the beginning of the year and have tons of content coming your way soon. On with the podcast!



Links:
The National
The Signal
Doug Burr
Hallelujah The Hills
Soulsavers
Don DiLego
Dax Riggs
The Wombats
The Bridges
The Mondegreens
Pale Young Gentlemen

Related Links:
Review: The Signal
Feature: The National - Grow Up! Look Sharp! Be Responsible!
Review: The National - Boxer


A/V

Categories:

4 To Watch: Doug Burr

|
photo by Andy Lai

Hometown: Denton, Texas
Fun fact: Burr wrote much of the material for his sophomore effort, On Promenade, after reading Greil Marcus’ Mystery Train, which he describes as the perfect companion for “dread and redemption.”
Why he's worth watching: Burr was up for four Dallas Music Awards earlier this year.
For fans of: Will Oldham, Neil Young, Johnny Cash, Mahalia Jackson

"I’ve always loved old fashioned phrases and wording. Especially in poetry and music.” Doug Burr, fresh in from pulling his two-year old son around their back yard in a wagon, is dissecting the bones of his exceptional sophomore release, On Promenade. “Not sure exactly where that came from. Maybe growing up on the old hymns.”

Burr speaks in a clipped Texas accent that belies the long, languid tones of his music. Exquisitely detailed, slow and deliberate, his songs have as much in common with the literature of Eudora Welty and Cormac McCarthy as with the work of the Americana dimmerati to whom he is often, and somewhat shortsightedly, compared.

The singer and songwriter set a very particular path for himself with the release of his debut, 2003’s The Sickle and the Sheaves, a conceptual gospel album created with immortality in mind. “I had a friend in the death-throes of cancer who identified so thoroughly with one of the songs that he requested I sing it at his funeral,” Burr explains. “At that point, I realized I needed to record it for his and his family’s sake—for my sake.”

On Promenade elaborates on these themes of birth, death and renewal, beginning with the quietly vesperal “Slow Southern Home” before patiently building into the quickened heartbeat of “In the Garden.” The cycle ends with a trio of songs capped by the gorgeous “Blood Runs Downhill,” a eulogy for the rest of the album—it’s part gospel, part Alex Chilton at his most ethereal.

“I had a dream one night,” Burr says. “I was in a hearse with Johnny Cash, and June was in a coffin in the back. He looked at me and said ‘Love is fear,’ the opposite of ‘Love casts out all fear’ from the Bible. But I immediately knew what that meant. The more you have, the more you will one day lose.”


Articles

Categories:







advertisement
 
 

 





 


 
 


Non-U.S. Addresses | Privacy

Give the Gift
of Music


11 magazines
+ 11 CDs
+ the priceless joy of finally having someone to debate good music with

Give Now >

Paste offers a variety of subscription services online to best serve you.

Order Paste
  Subscribe
  Gift Subscriptions
  International Subscriptions
  Back Issues

Your Subscription
  Account Maintanence
  Address Change
  CD Sampler Sleeves
  Contact Us
  FAQs
  Pay Bill
  Renew Subscription
  Where to Buy

Contests.

Paste Magazine Culture Club.

Podcast Feature.

Episode 70
August 19, 2008

We're bringing you some of the artists we think are the best of what's next. Featuring selections from Slow Runner, Janelle Monae, The Spring Standards and more!
// More Info
// Download

Subscribe in iTunes.