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09/10/2010
The Golden Palominos with guests - The Jim Campilongo Electric Trio and The Tony Scherr Trio.
11/11/2010
First Class International Wine Pairing Series - Argentina: presented by American Airlines
Music Event March 23, 2010
- Sondre Lerche and special guest JBM
- 9:00pm
Tickets
- Bar Stools $20.00
- Reserved Tables $25.00
- Reserved Best Tables $30.00
- VIP Tables $35.00
SOLD OUT
On the Web
About Sondre Lerche
"There's a tendency in our time, subscribing to the idea that anything 'authentic' or 'honest' is automatically good," says Sondre Lerche. "I find that depressing. You have to actually create something. There has to be a process. I try to avoid just singing my diary over a couple of chords."
Fighting words? Not quite. Lerche, an award-winning singer-songwriter, newly minted Hollywood go-to man and frequent sighting on critics' year-end "best albums" lists, simply believes there's a lot of work that goes into crafting a song. Heartbeat Radio, his fifth studio album and first for Rounder Records, is proof that good art needs time, thought and careful construction. It is a "generous" album (his words), and a summation of everything Lerche has learned over the last decade of making music.
"The records I do seem to be a reaction to the record I did before," says the Brooklyn musician, who was born and raised in Norway and returned there to record Heartbeat. "My last few records were recorded with my backing band, Faces Down, almost live off the floor. And those were a reaction to my first records, which were more studio affairs. On this album, I wanted both: I wanted the physical force and excitement from the live setting and the patience and the endless possibilities of the studio setting."
Heartbeat Radio is certainly Lerche's boldest and most challenging record. While it maintains the studio polish of his groundbreaking debut, Faces Down, there's also a sense of musical adventure that stems from his later work. The songs mix acoustic guitars with grand gestures of orchestral pop, with elements of anything from 50s Jazz, via 60s and 70s Brazillian psych-folk to state-of-the-art 80s pop masters such as Prefab Sprout, Scritti Politti and Fleetwood Mac.
Although Radio presents a variety of moods and sounds, the opening track "Good Luck" may best describe the story behind the record. "That was inspired by parts of my last year or two," admits the singer, who went through some drama (good and bad) to get to a finished album. "Sometimes it's really hard getting the songs to the level of excitement you have, and still defining your everyday life. But in the end, considering how unfair this world often appears, it's really about how goddamn lucky I am to make a living writing and performing my songs!"
Lerche's triumphs and travails of the last few years certainly left a mark; he moved to the U.S. and dealt with various practical matters (including some green card issues), forcing some delays. But he also recorded the soundtrack to the hit movie Dan in Real Life ("The director wanted a musician to work with and he convinced both me and the Disney Corporation that I was the only one who could do it.") And, most importantly, Lerche left his major label home and struck out on his own.
Heartbeat Radio was admittedly a slower process than his previous work -- Lerche was handling the production of the album (along with long time guitarist Kato Adland), and utilizing a large number of backing musicians in the recording, incorporating violinists, cello players and other assorted string players into the mix. Lerche and Adland were determined to both test out new ways of recording and embrace new influences—most prominently on "Easy to Persuade," which features the singer opening with the very Nelly-like proclamation "Is it hot in here?" and ending the song with dark "Blade Runner" synths, Disney-meets-This Lizzy arpeggios and a dramatic bebop solo, half Coltrane, half Miami Vice.
Fortunately, '80s pop wasn't the only musical influence that shaped his musical upbringing. Born and raised in Bergen, Norway, Lerche was inspired by the music he heard emanating from his older sibling's bedrooms -- be it A-ha, Elvis Costello or classic rock. Inspired, he picked up the guitar at the age of 8, and as a teenager performed at open mics at the club where his sister worked. Before his 16th birthday, he was signed to Virgin/EMI. "I had to start singing to get all these songs out there," he says. "No one else was going to!"
With Radio completed, Lerche plans to head back out on the road. But instead of simply recreating the expansive nature of his new songs, most of the sets will be performed solo (another tour with a regular back-up band will happen later in the year). "I like that contrast," he says. "You get to hear where the songs came from -- just one guitar, one voice, like how I do my demos. It's a fun challenge to try and make it as dynamic and exciting as possible No matter what I do to these songs in the studio, they'll get by on their own."
About JBM
Jesse Brian Marchant, AKA JBM, is a Montreal-born singer song-writer. He recorded his debut album Not Even In July in Henry Hirsch's church studio, Waterfront Studios, in Hudson, NY, in the Fall of 2008 and was released in early 2009.
JBM is moniker for the music of Jesse Marchant. Jesse was born in Montreal, Canada and has spent most of his adult life living in New York City and in Los Angeles. While living in L.A., JBM contributed music to the film 'Lovers in a Dangerous Time'. He is currently based in Brooklyn, NY and in Lake Clear, NY.







