You can hear the listening on Old Man Luedecke’s latest album, Domestic Eccentric. You can hear the cabin in the snowy Nova Scotia woods where it was recorded
Date/Time: Mar 25 2018, 8:00 pm to 10:00 pm
Vancouver, Rogue Folk ClubCost: $28.00
Find tickets: here
On their third collaboration, you can hear the beautiful conversation between Old Man Luedecke and Tim O’Brien, two like-minded artists in love with folk and roots music, playing at the height of their powers.
“You can’t fake a work of heart,” Luedecke sings in The Girl in the Pearl Earring, the second song on Domestic Eccentric, and the assured confidence of that line, the assertion of a straightforward truth, is the guiding principle behind the entire album. Old Man Luedecke is the real thing, a modern-day people’s poet and traveling bard and balladeer. He’s played around the world to a loving and increasing fan base, and won two Juno awards in the process. Tim O’Brien is a multiple Grammy-winning roots multi-instrumentalist whose solo work and collaborations have made him one of the most respected American players working today. The two last worked together on Luedecke’s 2012 release, Tender is the Night, which was nominated for a Juno Award, listed for the Polaris Prize and won Album of the Year at the East Coast Music Awards.
Not since Loudon Wainwright III has anyone written so honestly, so openly, or with such aching tenderness and good humour about family life. "Saving up for date night so we can have our fight" (The Early Days). But Luedecke has always insisted on a solid poetic heft in the way he uses words, and highly personal stories are what have always connected him to the universal in his audience. Recording with Tim O’Brien in an intimate setting at home has yielded an album where the songs take the starring role.
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