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Put your hands on the remote! browse music »The Unkindness of Ravens by Blind Willies
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fave it Roots Rock | Power-folk
10 tracks | 58 minutes
Released Jan 2007
on Diggory
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- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 06:35 Last Rites in December lyrics BUY MP3 06:35 Last Rites in December lyrics "GIFT MP3" 06:35 Last Rites in December
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 04:04 Mainline lyrics BUY MP3 04:04 Mainline lyrics "GIFT MP3" 04:04 Mainline
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 05:23 Feel Like Going Home lyrics BUY MP3 05:23 Feel Like Going Home lyrics "GIFT MP3" 05:23 Feel Like Going Home
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 05:53 Marie lyrics FREE 05:53 Marie lyrics "GIFT MP3" 05:53 Marie
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 04:39 Sister lyrics BUY MP3 04:39 Sister lyrics "GIFT MP3" 04:39 Sister
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 06:39 No Peace For the Hunted lyrics BUY MP3 06:39 No Peace For the Hunted lyrics "GIFT MP3" 06:39 No Peace For the Hunted
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 07:10 Something in the Night lyrics BUY MP3 07:10 Something in the Night lyrics "GIFT MP3" 07:10 Something in the Night
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 06:15 Making Time Go Slow lyrics BUY MP3 06:15 Making Time Go Slow lyrics "GIFT MP3" 06:15 Making Time Go Slow
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 05:40 The Unkindness of Ravens lyrics BUY MP3 05:40 The Unkindness of Ravens lyrics "GIFT MP3" 05:40 The Unkindness of Ravens
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 05:52 Blow Wind Blow lyrics BUY MP3 05:52 Blow Wind Blow lyrics "GIFT MP3" 05:52 Blow Wind Blow
A soulful mix of folk, country, rock, and blues. Alexei's lyrics are an intimate exploration of America's psycho/social landscapes. The music is spare and evocative, Annie Staninec's fiddle flowing like a river through the songs.
Bio / Background
Blind Willies is Annie Staninec, multi-genre fiddler, and Alexei Wajchman, guitarist/singer/songwriter. They met and began playing together at San Francisco School of the Arts.
Annie has been playing bluegrass/old time fiddle for more than a decade. She's a regular on the bluegrass festival circuit where she tours with Lost Coast. In 2006, she toured with David Grisman and the Gypsy Caravan as the featured fiddler. She's also played with Darol Anger, Stephane Wrembel, and Crooked Still. Annie is Djangofest Northwest's 2006 recipient of the Dudley Hill Award for exceptional young artist.
Alexei grew up in San Francisco's Mission District. After learning to play clarinet and sax, he taught himself to play guitar and began writing songs at 15. He was awarded the Blue Bear Celebrity Scholarship to study guitar and voice in 2002 and 2003. His early influences included Nirvana, Bob Dylan, Woody Guthrie, Velvet Underground, Robert Johnson, Leadbelly, Hank Williams, Jimi Hendrix, The Doors.
↓ more ↓His music is a soulful mix of folk, country, rock, and blues, and his lyrics are an intimate exploration of America's psycho/social landscapes.
Blind Willies made their professional debut at San Francisco's Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival in 2004. They've played SF's Great American Music Hall, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts Zeum, and the SF Folk Festival. In January 2007 they performed with Peter Stampfel(The Holy Modal Rounders, The Fugs) in New York, and opened for Penelope Houston(Avengers) in San Francisco.
Their debut album, The Unkindness of Ravens, was recorded and mixed by Lemon DeGeorge(Jolie Holland, Genghis Blues) at Crib Nebula in San Francisco, and mastered by Paul Carlsen(Nirvana's Nevermind) at the Russian River. It's been getting radio and podcast play across the US. The cd has been played on Duke Lang's Vancouver, BC Better Days Radio, and it was in the Top 10 for 10 weeks(3/24/07) at Stanford University's KZSU Sunny-Side Up show.
4/12/07 Review in Delusions of Adequacy:
Blind Willies' debut, The Unkindness of Ravens, has been knocking around my CD player for quite a few months now, quietly haunting random moments of my life during this tail end of winter and early spring. As the days grow longer and the East Coast slowly emerges from icy temperatures, I've come to love this disc rather a lot - so much so, that I find words are failing me. How can one truly relay the maddening beauty of the first crocus poking through the dry, cracked Earth to someone who has never seen it happen? How can I possibly explain something like the Blind Willies song, "Last Rites in December", in such a way that you'll understand how breathtaking it is?
Blind Willies are Annie Staninec (fiddle) and Alexei Wajchman (guitar, vocals), a duo that met while at San Francisco School of the Arts. Staninec and Wajchman, both accomplished musicians, made their professional debut as Blind Willies in 2004 at San Francisco's Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival. Since then, they've played a variety of venues and recorded their first release - a collection of ten acoustic tunes featuring the fiddle, guitar, and a bit of harmonica.
There's nothing overtly unexpected on The Unkindness of Ravens, but Blind Willies play incredibly wonderful music. Alexei is a remarkable songwriter whose lyrics go well beyond the average ramblings of most singer-songwriters. Even "Mainline" - with its "hungry pawn store prisoners" - is well-crafted enough to run with the big boys and Wajchman wrote the song at the tender age of 15. Annie's fiddle is the perfect accompaniment for Alexei and it's the soft wails from her instrument that really give this album an overall feel of quiet desperation - like waking up in a cold sweat with traces of a nightmare clouding your mind.
Tracks like the seven minute long "Something in the Night" are further proof of Alexei's knack as a wordsmith; here, he sings "there's something in the night/even when you're blind/taking drugs to cancel time/that keeps your eyes wide open and your heart clenched tight" and the scene almost materializes right in front of you. Still, it's the opening track, "Last Rites in December" that gives me butterflies every time I hear it. This song just has that certain something that makes it stunning and I find myself returning to it over and over again. "Last Rites in December" is Blind Willies' perfect blend of instruments and voice(s). As Wajchman and Staninec sing "there's no warmth in this city/there's no joy in this lover of mine/so I'm leaving with nothing/I think I'll make it this time" you can feel not only the heartbreak, but the delicate new leaf of hope.
Although I'm sure my words are woefully inadequate, I cannot urge fans of all sorts of folk music enough that they should not miss out on The Unkindness of Ravens. The opening track alone is sufficient to pay for this debut CD, but there are nine other gems just waiting to be discovered.
-Jennifer Patton, Editor
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