| | Adam Klein Distant Music CD Adam Klein Discography of CDs
 |
|
Our Price: $13.69 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days
|  |
A proud native of Athens, GA, Adam Klein writes strongly crafted, literate, rustic, passion-filled, straight-from-the-heart “country-folk” songs. Having come of age frequenting shows in the famed nightclubs of his hometown, Klein has been influenced and shaped by Athens’ thriving and diverse music scene. Distant Music, self-released in April 2006 on Cowboy Angel Music, is Klein’s first long-player, indeed his first release. The album was recorded by David Barbe (Uncle Tupelo, Son Volt, Drive-By Truckers, Kevn Kinney) at his Chase Park Transduction studio in Athens. Recorded on vintage analog equipment, these recordings capture Klein’s moving voice in its purest form— charming, passionate, intimate, and vulnerable. Klein recruited a number of talented local musicians to help fill out the songs. William Tonks (Workhorses of the Ent./Rec. Industry, Barbara Cue, Jack Logan and the Monday Night Recorders) provided the dobro and tremolo guitar sounds, John Neff (ex-Star Room Boys, Drive-By Truckers, Barbara Cue, Jack Logan...) manned the pedal steel, David Blackmon (Blueground Undergrass) played fiddle, and Clay Leverett (Now It’s Overhead, The Chasers) sang his trademark high harmonies. The added instrumentation complements the acoustic tracks with warm, lush textures, layerings, and the perfect undercurrents of both searching and yearning.Adam holds an MA in Near Eastern and Judaic Studies and a BA in English and American Lit. from Brandeis University. His extensive travels played an important role in shaping Distant Music, a record, he maintains, with a great deal of movement and distance. The album was formed, among other places, in Boston, Australia, and Mali, West Africa, where Klein lived for two years in the village of Dougouolo as a Peace Corps Volunteer.“I’ve found that songs tend to reflect the place, and space, in which they form,” he says. “In Mali, I was living in the middle of a great expansive bush land, according to the natural cycles of the sun, moon, and the land. Felt like something straight out of Faulkner or Steinbeck— take the donkey cart into the county seat 25km away for market day. Sleeping outside, under the stars, for a year and a half. And the songs I wrote there, sitting in my shade spot, or strumming a guitar at night, in silence under a canopy of stars, reflect and complement that environment. Many of the songs of Distant Music— “Lonesome and Aching” especially, plus “Full Moon Night”, “Mississippi Momma”, and “Dusty Rose”, written on the banks of the Niger River in Segou, are products of the stillness and peace of their homeland, deep Mali.”Distant Music explores the timeless themes of love, loss, distance, movement, and home. Distant Music Music | Category | Country Albums | | Label | CD Baby | | CD Universe Part number | 7292365 | | Catalog number | 101397 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Aug 22, 2006 |
Adam Klein Distant Music Songs | 1. | St. Paul |
| 2. | Restless Soul |
| 3. | Dusty Rose |
| 4. | Full Moon Night |
| 5. | Star Of Love |
| 6. | Time |
| 7. | Visions Of Faith |
| 8. | Truck Stop Love |
| 9. | Walkin' |
| 10. | Bound To Roam |
| 11. | Mississippi Momma |
| 12. | Lonesome And Aching |
| 13. | River Blues |
| Distant Music Review
GuidelinesRemember to focus your comments on Adam Klein Distant Music CD. Check our review guidelines for specific details regarding customer review policy. To submit your review, please fill out the above form and click "Submit Review." A staff member will then verify your review meets our guidelines. Upon approval, your review will be published within a few days. Please do not use this form to comment on web site errors or for order related questions. If you have concerns of this nature, please contact customer service by filling out this form.
Purchase Distant Music CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Blues Breakers With Eric Clapton CD (1966) Gold
Distant Music album
$19.10 John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers: John Mayall (vocals, piano, organ, harmonica); Eric Clapton (vocals, guitar); John McVie (bass); Hughie Flint (drums).
Includes original release liner notes by Neil Slaven & reissue liner notes by Paul Trynka.
1966's BLUESBREAKERS WITH ERIC CLAPTON is full of portent, as some of its participants ...
| | Lyle Lovett Natural Forces CD (2009)
Distant Music CD music
$12.15
| | Jamey Johnson That Lonesome Song CD (2008)
Distant Music music CDs
$10.55
| | Have Yourself A Tractors Christmas CD (1995)
Distant Music songs
$5.95
| | The Very Best Of David Frizzell & Shelly West CD (2009)
Distant Music album
$9.99 The 16-track THE VERY BEST OF DAVID FRIZZELL & SHELLY WEST covers the duo's ...
| | George Strait 50 Number Ones CDs (2004)
Distant Music CD music
$20.35
| | Sylvia Telles Reencontro: Serie Elenco CD (2004)
Distant Music music CDs
$13.95
| | Look To God CD (2004)
Distant Music songs
$20.25
| | 'Mandy Troxel EP CD (2006)
Distant Music album
$12.69
| | Ida Viper Some Of These Days CD (2006)
Distant Music CD music
$15.19
| | Mystic Cowboys I Wanna Be A Flower CD (2007)
Distant Music music CDs
$14.79
| | El Serio Soy De La Calle CD (2007)
Distant Music songs
$15.19 Mi nombre es Jaime Torres mejor conocido como EL SERIO, soy hombre que voy caminando en los pasos de la sociedad con mi vida que cada vez mejora con ...
| | Synchrony Level Red CD (2007)
Distant Music album
$9.85 I am the artist Synchrony a Guitar soloist. My sound is created slowly one layer at a time. I work alone in my under ground recording studio. It is my music laboratory. I have been recording my ideas from the very start. As an artist I explore, experiment I never really know what will happen, that’s ...
| | David Stephens Postcards From Sadness CD (2007)
Distant Music CD music
$16.45
| | J Krishnamurti Krishnamurti,J. Vol. 3-Real Revolution CD (2007)
Distant Music music CDs
$11.49 “The free mind never asks how, but is always discovering, moving, living.”Krishnamurti spent his adult life speaking to people around the world on the eternal questions of life. One could say he was a philosopher in the original sense of the word, not an academic or intellectual, but a lover of truth. But who Krishnamurti was is probably not as important as what Krishnamurti said, or rather the exploration we can take through the words he has left:“I think it is important to understand that freedom is at the beginning and not at the end. We think freedom is something to be achieved, that liberation is an ideal state of mind to be gradually attained through time, through various practices; but to me, this is a totally wrong approach. Freedom is not to be achieved; liberation is not a thing to be gained. Freedom, or liberation, is that state of mind which is essential for the discovery of any truth, any reality; therefore, it cannot be an ideal; it must exist right from the beginning. Without freedom at the beginning, there can be no moments of direct understanding because all thinking is then limited, conditioned. If your mind is tethered to any conclusion, to any experience, to any form of knowledge or belief, it is not free; and such a mind cannot possibly perceive what is truth.”Krishnamurti raises questions such as:“What is it that we are seeking? And can a mind that is seeking ever find something beyond time, beyond its own projections?”“Is there such a thing as the absolute, the immeasurable, and is there any relation between that immensity and our everyday living?”“Is there freedom in thinking, or is all thought limited?”Krishnamurti challenges us to approach these questions in a way that defies traditional roles of teacher and student. He does not see himself as someone dispensing knowledge or ideas to be collected, and asks the reader to find a relationship in which there is no following of an authority, only discovery:“I do not believe that there is any teaching; there is only learning, and this is very important to understand. When the individual who is listening regards the speaker as one who is teaching him something, such an attitude creates and maintains the division of the pupil and the master, of the one who knows and the one who does not know. But there is only learning, and I think it is ...
|
|
|