Search - Barton Carroll :: Together You & I

Together You & I
Barton Carroll
Together You & I
Genres: Country, Folk, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (10) - Disc #1

Let s Get On with The Illusion, sings Barton Carroll on his fourth album, Together You and I on Skybucket Records, out January 19, 2010. It s a song about love but a shoulder-shrug type of love that resigns itself to I gue...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Barton Carroll
Title: Together You & I
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Skybucket
Original Release Date: 1/1/2010
Re-Release Date: 1/19/2010
Genres: Country, Folk, Pop, Rock
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 020286150824

Synopsis

Product Description
Let s Get On with The Illusion, sings Barton Carroll on his fourth album, Together You and I on Skybucket Records, out January 19, 2010. It s a song about love but a shoulder-shrug type of love that resigns itself to I guess this is good enough. A cynical narrative runs through the album for sure, but Carroll s sardonic wit is coupled with lightly shuffling horns, making for happy sounding songs instead of a somber ones. His tone and sleight-of-hand songwriting skill gained him critical acclaim for his previous release, The Lost One from Pitchfork, Harp, American Songwriter and more. I tried to think like Cole Porter when I wrote that song. He was a master at metaphor, says Carroll. His songs were sweet and dark, hopeless and happy, fresh and unashamedly cliché. Sounds a lot like love. A North Carolina native who now lives in Seattle, Carroll s songs are structured in folk traditions he grew up with, but he trades in standard instrumentation for the west Coast horn sound of Craig Flory, and the production of Jazz bassist, Matt Weiner. The three bonded over a love of the Gerry Mulligan and Paul Desmond records of the 1960 s, and the influence comes through. He also sings his first duets with Seattle singer Anna Lisa Notter. Carroll s love for the previous era comes alive on the first track, The Poor Boy Can t Dance. I love how the band sounds on this one. They sound like a WWII era English Swing band: the kind of guys who are classically trained, but they have just been bitten by the

Swing bug. Love that clarinet!, says Carroll. Something Good is the only song Carroll didn t write, and it comes from an odd sounding source for a Seattle based musician The Sound of Music. I thought the first line sounded a bit like a Barton Carroll song, Perhaps I had a wicked childhood. Perhaps I had a miserable youth.

The title song is akin to a desultory short story a follow up to Burning Red And Blue, a song of destructive love from the last record. But, with Notter s vocal and traces

of hope in the characters, maybe their ending will be okay after all. The characters are a few years older. The man has been imprisoned, and the woman is trying to adjust to life alone in a foreign land. This is the conversation they have through the prison glass. Barton Carroll was a member of Crooked Fingers. He has also toured with Azure Ray and Dolorean.

Praise for The Lost One:



Putting his songwriting at the forefront, the straightforwardness of the arrangements make his character sketches sound believably plainspoken instead of clever. The Lost One is a fine way to spend 42 minutes, and probably best served with scotch. Pitchfork



While most folks are either struggling with something, creating tension in their music, and others are relying on more traditional methods and sounds to form their music, Carroll somehow makes it seem effortless... the beauty of his songs leaves a feeling of easiness...This is excellent Americana without a hint of twang, but so much soul and depth that it needs to be heard. Give your soul the dark light that it craves and give The Lost One a listen. Hybrid Magazine



One of the most stunning of these tracks, is Burning Red and Blue , built on a circling 12/8 blues riff that ll put you in mind of House of the Rising Sun . There s a menace in the verse, as the narrating character insinuates I ll be out back / In my blue jeans / And my gun to a woman who is clearly not entirely free to make her own choices. It s masterfully done, though, the whine of steel guitar, the deep baritone mutterings, the half-sketched portrait of destructive love. Popmatters
 

CD Reviews

Barton Carroll isnt exactly the first to do this but he cert
Thefunk | Chicago Illinois | 04/05/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I'm hardly one to judge a folk album.. but I saw barton carroll put on a live show one evening in february.. and he was very very impressive. His album is good.. many songs have meanings that echo certain cliches but take you on downtrodden lyrical twists. It doesn't cease to remain lyrically interesting in his variety of compositions.



I really enjoy it.. 9 out of 10."