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

Sunday, April 11, 2021

The Handsome Family - Rotterdam, The Netherlands 2002 - Floppy Boot Stomp

 THE HANDSOME FAMILY

A beautiful set from Floppy Boot Stomp this morning and what better way to celebrate Sunday (in my opinion!) From The Netherlands in 2002 


The Handsome Family - Rotterdam 2002 - Floppy Boot Stomp

Floppy Boot says:

The Handsome Family - Live at Nighttown 
May 9, 2002
Rotterdam, Netherlands

Soundboard @320

Taped by: Jan de Bever
Transferred by: Michiel Oudendijk

EXCELLENT RECORDING!

Husband-and-wife duo the Handsome Family have been labeled both alt-country and traditionalist, but truthfully their often dark music lies in a unique space somewhere in between, blending the sounds of traditional country and bluegrass (and, especially, murder ballads) into a more modern scenery. Vocalist and composer Brett Sparks hails from Texas, where he studied music and briefly worked around the oil rigs. By the mid-'90s, he resided in Chicago with his wife Rennie Sparks, a fiction writer originally from Long Island. Brett persuaded Rennie to write lyrics for him, leading to the unusual and striking form of the Handsome Family's songs -- evocative scenes and brief tales (of both the daydream and ghost-story varieties) in lieu of the standard verse-chorus-verse structure.


The Handsome Family's debut album, entitled Odessa, was released in January 1995 on the independent label Carrot Top. This first home recording (all of the Handsome Family's albums are recorded in their living room) had slight punk shadings not heard on their subsequent albums. Odessa unfortunately made few waves except for some radio stations' ban on the second song, "Arlene," which is about a woman who gets bludgeoned to death. The follow-up came in May of the following year, and the Handsome Family hit the road in support of their new release, Milk and Scissors, first touring the U.S. with Wilco, then heading on to Europe for shows in Austria, Germany, and Switzerland. With Milk and Scissors, the duo had traded in their previous rock edges for more traditional country sounds. The resulting album won praise from the critics, got named in the Top Ten of 1996 by alt-country/Americana magazine No Depression, and was featured on John Peel's BBC show. ~MORE at All Music

 
Set List: 
So Much Wine 
Arlene 
A Dark Eye 
#1 Country Song 
Weightless Again 
Down In The Ground 
Don't Be Scared 
No One Fell Asleep Alone 
A Beautiful Thing 
So Long 
When That Helicopter Comes 
The Giant Of Illinois 
Peace In The Valley Again 
In The Air 
The Sad Milkman 
My Sister's Tiny Hands 
All The TVs In Town
Encore: Cathedrals 
I Know You Are There
 


Check out this wonderful version of Gold:

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