Monday, September 17, 2012

Laxmag Review and pictures by Rebecca Black

Monday, 17 September 2012 at 08:00 clock Under the heading Brooklyn Darkfolk & Bedroom Epics there were J. Allen, along his Brooklyn Sangeskollege Patrick Crowson and the Munich songwriter Fabio Russo and beschertem the audience an evening of the finest folk. In keeping with the title of the event, the venue was held: dark and dim. Sparse lighting with candles standing on the floor - you know the of Nirvana's Unplugged - and a series of small light-emitting elements, which together with a colorful medley of art covered the walls, this provided the bedroom romance. Amidst this shadowy arrangements played successively the three folk musicians. The term Darkfolk fit the evening most likely to occur at the beginning Patrick Crowson. He used the classical attributes of good folk music, guitar and voice. The latter is especially significant for Crowsons rather uneingängige title, because while they are sometimes almost unobtrusively class it alongside the guitar, then the singing wildly screwed up elsewhere, broke and scratched here and there, narrowly passing tones. So stretching was a wonderfully bizarre disharmony that resembled Weird folk greats like Bonnie 'Price' Billy. Less discord, albeit a little less crankiness and thus more conformism, was heard at the Munich Sangeskollegen Fabio Russo. Significantly more dreamy and melodic, it went to in his plays. A clear voice he played catchy folk-pop, which he partly vortug unreinforced and close to the audience. Although the saying "The Bucket List" and is also often worn not simply inaccurate, it aptly describes the music but evening. Because in the end was J. Allen. Wonderfully twisted and strangely fascinating presented itself to the musicians. To choppy, yes, almost quirky movements he managed most beautiful and atmospheric folk. It quickly became clear that Allen has a gift that many, if not most musicians going on: credibility. Feelings, whether despair, sadness or love landed unceremoniously at Publlikum which was released after nearly three hours in the night. Rebecca Black

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