Tift Merritt: Traveling Alone
Traveling Alone
CD
CD (Compact Disc)
Herkömmliche CD, die mit allen CD-Playern und Computerlaufwerken, aber auch mit den meisten SACD- oder Multiplayern abspielbar ist.
Lieferzeit beträgt mind. 4 Wochen
(soweit verfügbar beim Lieferanten)
(soweit verfügbar beim Lieferanten)
EUR 15,99*
Verlängerter Rückgabezeitraum bis 31. Januar 2025
Alle zur Rückgabe berechtigten Produkte, die zwischen dem 1. bis 31. Dezember 2024 gekauft wurden, können bis zum 31. Januar 2025 zurückgegeben werden.
- Label: Yep Roc, 2012
- Bestellnummer: 2834700
- Erscheinungstermin: 11.10.2012
Weitere Ausgaben von Traveling Alone
* Digisleeve
»Traveling Alone« ist das 5. Studioalbum der aus North Carolina stammenden Singer-Songwriterin Tift Merritt. Diese Sammlung von Original-Songs zeigt Merritts Songwriting-Fähigkeiten und Geschichtenerzählen durch ihre anmutigen Melodien und Lyrik, warmem Twang und atmosphärischen Elementen, die sich durch die gesamte Platte ziehen.
Das in Brooklyn aufgenommene und von Tucker Martine produzierte Studioalbum wurde von Marc Ribot an der Gitarre, John Convertino an den Percussions, Eric Heywood an der Pedal Steel und Jay Brown am Bass. Diese limitierte 2xLP zum 10-jährigen Jubiläum ist auf wolkigem, salbeifarbenem Vinyl gepresst.
Für “For Traveling Alone”, ihr Yep Roc Debüt, stellte Tift Merritt ihre Traumbesetzung von Musikern zusammen, um eine Platte aufzunehmen, die echt, roh und spontan live war.
Aufgenommen in nur acht Tagen in Brooklyn wurde das Album von Tucker Martine (The Decemberists, My Morning Jacket) produziert, wartet mit einem Gastauftritt von Andrew Bird auf und stützt sich auf eine Band, die unter anderem aus Marc Ribot (Tom Waits), Eric Heywood (Pretenders, Son Volt), John Convertino (Calexico) und dem langjährigen Kollaborateur Jay Brown besteht. Alle Songs wurden von Tift Merritt geschrieben und erreist.
“I’ve always had a taste for traveling alone,” Tift Merritt sings in the title track of her fifth album. This time around, she got to prove it, “calling the shots myself and letting myself go wherever I needed to go” at a point in time when she was a free agent without label or manager. But the song does also conclude that “Everybody here is traveling alone,” a realization that places as much value on community as iconoclasm. And Merritt put together her “dream cast” of fellow travelers to play on Traveling Alone, which found its happy home at her new label, Yep Roc. The road less taken doesn’t preclude good company.
The New Yorker has called Merritt “the bearer of a proud tradition of distaff country soul that reaches back to artists like Dusty Springfield and Bobbie Gentry,” a standard upholding that got underway in earnest with Bramble Rose, the 2002 solo debut that put her on the Americana map forever. As her sophomore album, Tambourine, was followed by Another Country and See You on the Moon, Merritt found acclaim coming not just from critics and awards orgs but her own heroes, like Emmylou Harris, who marveled that Merritt “stood out like a diamond in a coal patch.” Now a leading lady in her own right, Merritt is hardly one to hog the spotlight. She engages in dialogue with fellow artists of all disciplines on her public radio broadcast and podcast “The Spark With Tift Merritt,” bringing in fellow sojourners ranging from Patty Griffin and Rosanne Cash to Rick Moody and Nick Hornby (who devoted a chapter to Merritt in his 31 Songs book).
For Traveling Alone, Merritt knew—and got—exactly the journeymen she wanted with her on this 11-track trip: legendary guitarist Marc Ribot, Calexico drummer John Convertino, steel player extraordinaire Eric Heywood, acclaimed jazz and rock multi-instrumentalist Rob Burger, and longtime cohort Jay Brown on bass. As captured by producer Tucker Martine (known for working with the Decemberists, and one of Paste magazine’s “10 Best Producers of the Decade”) and mixed by three-time Grammy-winning engineer Ryan Freeland, the sound is both spare and luxurious. “Maybe I was bored with bells and whistles and wanted to go without them. It might have been that I didn’t have enough money for bells and whistles,” she quips. “But once you get in that sweet spot where things feel real and right, you just want to burrow down in that feeling. Nothing to hide behind, no distractions, no sense trying to be everything to everybody. There’s a beautiful economy of motion in that place.” Who wouldn’t want to tag along?
(yeproc. com)
,,Dabei ist ihr Songwriting merklich reifer geworden, gehen Stil und Klang weit über herkömmlichen Country hinaus, wird Traveling Alone – ganz im Gegensatz zum Titel – eine wunderschöne Gemeinschaftsarbeit aus erlesenem Songwriting und exzellenter Umsetzung." (Good Times, Dezember / Januar 2012)
,,Souveräne Country-Songs, von einer Top-Studioband gespielt." (Rolling Stone, November 2012)
Das in Brooklyn aufgenommene und von Tucker Martine produzierte Studioalbum wurde von Marc Ribot an der Gitarre, John Convertino an den Percussions, Eric Heywood an der Pedal Steel und Jay Brown am Bass. Diese limitierte 2xLP zum 10-jährigen Jubiläum ist auf wolkigem, salbeifarbenem Vinyl gepresst.
Für “For Traveling Alone”, ihr Yep Roc Debüt, stellte Tift Merritt ihre Traumbesetzung von Musikern zusammen, um eine Platte aufzunehmen, die echt, roh und spontan live war.
Aufgenommen in nur acht Tagen in Brooklyn wurde das Album von Tucker Martine (The Decemberists, My Morning Jacket) produziert, wartet mit einem Gastauftritt von Andrew Bird auf und stützt sich auf eine Band, die unter anderem aus Marc Ribot (Tom Waits), Eric Heywood (Pretenders, Son Volt), John Convertino (Calexico) und dem langjährigen Kollaborateur Jay Brown besteht. Alle Songs wurden von Tift Merritt geschrieben und erreist.
Product Information
“I’ve always had a taste for traveling alone,” Tift Merritt sings in the title track of her fifth album. This time around, she got to prove it, “calling the shots myself and letting myself go wherever I needed to go” at a point in time when she was a free agent without label or manager. But the song does also conclude that “Everybody here is traveling alone,” a realization that places as much value on community as iconoclasm. And Merritt put together her “dream cast” of fellow travelers to play on Traveling Alone, which found its happy home at her new label, Yep Roc. The road less taken doesn’t preclude good company.
The New Yorker has called Merritt “the bearer of a proud tradition of distaff country soul that reaches back to artists like Dusty Springfield and Bobbie Gentry,” a standard upholding that got underway in earnest with Bramble Rose, the 2002 solo debut that put her on the Americana map forever. As her sophomore album, Tambourine, was followed by Another Country and See You on the Moon, Merritt found acclaim coming not just from critics and awards orgs but her own heroes, like Emmylou Harris, who marveled that Merritt “stood out like a diamond in a coal patch.” Now a leading lady in her own right, Merritt is hardly one to hog the spotlight. She engages in dialogue with fellow artists of all disciplines on her public radio broadcast and podcast “The Spark With Tift Merritt,” bringing in fellow sojourners ranging from Patty Griffin and Rosanne Cash to Rick Moody and Nick Hornby (who devoted a chapter to Merritt in his 31 Songs book).
For Traveling Alone, Merritt knew—and got—exactly the journeymen she wanted with her on this 11-track trip: legendary guitarist Marc Ribot, Calexico drummer John Convertino, steel player extraordinaire Eric Heywood, acclaimed jazz and rock multi-instrumentalist Rob Burger, and longtime cohort Jay Brown on bass. As captured by producer Tucker Martine (known for working with the Decemberists, and one of Paste magazine’s “10 Best Producers of the Decade”) and mixed by three-time Grammy-winning engineer Ryan Freeland, the sound is both spare and luxurious. “Maybe I was bored with bells and whistles and wanted to go without them. It might have been that I didn’t have enough money for bells and whistles,” she quips. “But once you get in that sweet spot where things feel real and right, you just want to burrow down in that feeling. Nothing to hide behind, no distractions, no sense trying to be everything to everybody. There’s a beautiful economy of motion in that place.” Who wouldn’t want to tag along?
(yeproc. com)
Rezensionen
,,Dabei ist ihr Songwriting merklich reifer geworden, gehen Stil und Klang weit über herkömmlichen Country hinaus, wird Traveling Alone – ganz im Gegensatz zum Titel – eine wunderschöne Gemeinschaftsarbeit aus erlesenem Songwriting und exzellenter Umsetzung." (Good Times, Dezember / Januar 2012)
,,Souveräne Country-Songs, von einer Top-Studioband gespielt." (Rolling Stone, November 2012)
- Tracklisting
- Mitwirkende
Disk 1 von 1 (CD)
- 1 Traveling Alone
- 2 Sweet Spot
- 3 Drifted Apart
- 4 Still Not Home
- 5 Feeling Of Beauty
- 6 Too Soon To Go
- 7 Small Talk Relations
- 8 Spring
- 9 To Myself
- 10 In The Way
- 11 Marks
Tift Merritt
Traveling Alone
EUR 15,99*