Euphonic Productions presents: Canyon American Dream
10pm, Tues, June 17 $6 at the door The Earl 488 Flat Shoals Avenue 404-522-3950 www.badearl.com
see pictures of the performance
Canyon Evoking the ghosts of Neil Young, Pink Floyd, and Nebraska-era Bruce Springsteen, the five members of Canyon are individuals who have made their own reinvention into an art form. The band, featuring members of emo rock forerunners Boys Life and Farewell Bend and Slowdime Records founder John Wall, uses the standard lineup of acoustic guitar, bass, and drums to construct simple skeletons of country rock ballads, and proves to be a far cry from their former musical endeavors. Adding lap steel, harmonium, horns, and keyboards to these structures, Canyon produces lush, spacious arrangements that, while deeply rooted in the balladic side of American rock, have influences across the board. The element that is surprisingly absent, however, is that of the members' former projects, and while Canyon's targets seem centered in the audiences of independent music, they would more easily be placed next to spacey balladeers like Low, Mohave 3, Black Heart Procession, Beachwood Sparks or Ida than any of the respective members' former projects.
With a membership that includes Brandon Butler on guitar, lap steel, and harmonica; Joe Winkle on electric and acoustic guitars, harmonium, and lap steel; Derry Deborja on Fender Rhodes and accordion; Vin Novarra on percussion; and John Wall singing and playing guitar (with obvious attention to the Springsteen school of delivery), Canyon also occasionally employs trumpeter Amy Heath and vocalist Yalan Pipillions. In the end, their sound combines the grit of the Americana greats and the reverb-heavy, low-fi charm of indie balladeers. They originally formed in Washington, D.C., in late 1999 and released a self-titled full-length record on Slowdime Records in January 2001. The eponymous release was recorded at Trans Am's National Recording Studio in Washington, D.C. The band followed the release of their debut with a series of short regional and national tours in the spring and summer of 2001. Later that same year, their debut was reissued by the Gern Blandsten label, who also released the band's follow up, Empty Rooms in 2002. A steady tour schedule resulted in their first live album, Canyon Live in NYC. - Nate Cavalieri (All Music Guide)
Canyon: "Empty Rooms" Frequently awesome country space rock from Washington DC. The banner of Cosmic American Music has bee co-opted so often in the past few years that's it's become virtually meaningless. It's strange, though, how few players in the current Americana boom have chosen to graft country song forms onto billowing psychedelia. Especially when Canyon's UK debut proves how effective it can be. There are obvious parallels to fellow travelers My Morning Jacket and The Pernice Brothers, even Uncle Tupelo, but the way these songs spiral from earthbound laments into grandiose space rock is original and often remarkable. Looks like the alt.country cabal just found their Pink Floyd. - John Mulvey, Uncut (June 2003)
Canyon
Info on Canyon can be found at: www.canyonrock.com (band) www.gernblandsten.com (label)
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