portrait of this blog's author - by Stephen Blackman 2008

Sunday, October 25, 2020

 N.P.R

via Voodoo Wagon

NATALIE MERCHANT

I noticed a site listed by Voodoo Wagon this morning featured a Natalie Merchant clip from NPR Tiny Desk concerts in 2016 and checked out the link to find it dead so thought I would repost it for them so this for the guys at Voodoo Wagon and Floppy Boot Stomp and especially those who disappear from the blogosphere, Rock 'n' Blues Stew this one's for you. . . . . this will do nicely for a Sunday (sunny here . . . ) 🌞

January 12, 2016    9:00 AM ET




In the summer of 2014, Natalie Merchant came to Washington, D.C., to perform her first album of all-new material in 13 years. She was supposed to play here at my desk the day after that evening's performance. Instead, she fell ill, wound up in a D.C. hospital, and canceled her upcoming dates.

Now, Merchant has rerecorded her first solo album Tigerlily, complete with strings and different instrumentation. That album is called Paradise Is There: The New Tigerlily Recordings, and she recently came back to town to make a documentary film about that record. And so it was with abundant joy that Natalie Merchant finally made it to the NPR Music offices. This was truly one of the most warmhearted Tiny Desk performances I've ever seen. She sang the title track from 2001's Motherland, "Texas" from that self-titled 2014 release and something from Tigerlily, and then Merchant had the NPR audience join her for a beautiful hymn heard on The House Carpenter's Daughter — so have a tissue handy.

Paradise Is There: The New Tigerlily Recordings is available now. (iTunes) (Amazon)







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