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Thats me in the middle, Devon Sproule laughs, pointing to the cover, Not the pregnant one. One thing at a time!
Tin Angel Records, proudly announces the release of Keep Your Silver Shined, a new collection of songs from 24-year-old singer and guitarist Devon Sproule, with national promotion and distribution by Waterbug Records in the U.S.
Produced by Jeff Romano in the heart of Virginias Blue Ridge mountains, Keep Your Silver Shined highlights Sproules talent for combining Appalachian, folk and jazz influences. From the front porch thump of "Old Virginia Block" to the high lonesome traditional "The Weeping Willow, featuring fellow Virginia-native Mary Chapin Carpenter, this record finds Sproule making another important contribution to the Great American Songbook.
"Vintage country with jazzy sophistication . . . beautifully sparse arrangements and melodies that surprise the ear when you first hear them, but which then get under your skin much more than anything more obvious would." - BBC
Just home from a British support tour with Woodstock legend Richie Havens, Sproule, with her trademark vintage dresses and 50-year-old Gibson guitar, seems pleased.
Being invited back to the UK is always good news. Folks there think youre cool for coming, and folks at home think youre cool for going. Keeps a girls chin up to be called cool once in a while. And the audiences are terrific.
Though she may thrive on the road, Keep Your Silver Shined shifts the light to Ms. Sproules domestic life in Charlottesville, VA, with husband and fellow musician Paul Curreri. The record includes a duet by the two, Eloise & Alex, a Curreri original.
You could call Keep Your Silver Shined my Getting Married Album, I guess. Being in love with Paul Curreri, in love with Virginia, deciding to settle down with both and figuring out how to make it all work. Ours ain't the most steady lifestyle -- a fact that doesn't always jive with the healthy, future-planning parts of being married. But we're happy, both writing, touring and getting the bills paid.
Gorgeous laid-back Southern-tinged music. Very highly recommended for lovers of good songwriting and seriously sexy (or sexily serious) voices." - Maverick Magazine
Sproule's previous effort, Upstate Songs (City Salvage Records) was included in Rolling Stone's Critics Top Albums of 2003. Critic Julie Gerstein called the record, "perhaps the sweetest and most honest folk-pop album recorded this year," and added, "Sproule's vocal and lyrical beauty is unmatched."
Describing her girlhood on a 1960s-founded commune in rural Virginia, and the rope hammocks made there, Sproule sings in Silvers, Does the Day Feel Long,: All my thinking back has been strung up between two tall trees / Some kind of language learned in the country / Grapes filled with a million seeds each.
In Stop By Anytime, sparse drums hint at a bossanova: Stop by anytime / Ive got the bookshelves loaded and the backyard is green and blooming / Stop by anytime / Let the humidity curl your hair / And the mulberries stain your toes / If you could come around, I could show you down / To where the knots of the day untie / So stop by, stop by anytime.
Sproules own jazz standard Lets Go Out playfully complains: Theres nothing in the fridge / Nothing in the cupboard / The jelly jar is empty / And Im plum sick of peanut butter / A groundhog ate the lettuce / Right out of the ground / Honey, lets go out! A clarinet picks up the tune, backed by the brushes and bass of an able rhythm section.
Sproule's songs ooze the atmosphere of balmy Virginia days
and her sunny outlook is infectious." - The Observer
Born to hippie parents on a commune in Kingston, Ontario, Sproule claims dual citizenship with both Canada and the US. After moving between private, public and home schooling, she eventually left high school, recorded her first record, and began touring nationally -- all before the age of eighteen.
Keep Your Silver Shined presents an honest and sparkling portrait of Devon Sproule: candid, poetic and right at home.
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