News on your favorite shows, specials & more!

The Honey Dewdrops to Release New Album in March

By: Jan. 17, 2019
Enter Your Email to Unlock This Article

Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe.




Existing user? Just click login.

The Honey Dewdrops to Release New Album in March  Image

Americana duo The Honey Dewdrops - Laura Wortman and Kagey Parrish- have long felt the push-and-pull between their original roots in the Appalachian mountains and their current home in urban Baltimore. You'll hear it in their harmony soaked songs and the mastery of their instruments' acoustic tones, but also in their songwriting, which reflects the hard realities of today. With their fifth independent release, Anyone Can See out on March 1st, 2019, they have primed the creative energy so prevalent on their previous releases. Each song sparkles with focused intensity, and, with their new album, the duo show that they're growing rapidly as artists, enthusiastically exchanging an impossible quest for perfection for the compelling ebbs and flows that accompany an intimate, authentic kind of expression.

With Anyone Can See, Parrish and Wortman wanted to recreate the flexible, spontaneous atmosphere of their live performances. "We focused in on that live energy by sitting close to each other in the studio so we could hear everything in a natural way," says the duo. "By recording each song in its entirety and keeping edits minimal we found the takes that had the magic often had some variation of voice and rhythm, like the songs were unfolding themselves." Chasing this magic, Parrish and Wortman also found their sense of musical clarity evolving over the course of the album's creation. "The process made us look at how we define what is "right" in our performances," says Parrish and Wortman. "What sounded good to us was the unexpected, the improvisational moments that enhanced the arc of a song." It helped too that producer Nick Sjostrom guided the duo towards a grounded result, helping to manifest a succinct album while also encouraging a freeing creative atmosphere. Though the creation of Anyone Can See contains elements of an artistic awakening in certain senses, Parrish and Wortman have also remained loyal to their roots, with the album evoking the duo's characteristically powerful melodies and intricate chord progressions.

Making the album in Baltimore, it was inevitable that the city would be reflected in the songs, and three of the album's best tracks focus on different experiences in Baltimore today. "Rainy Windows" paints the scene for the many overcast and wet days the two have had there, and "Welcome to the Club," is a somewhat ironic take on their changing neighborhood of Hampden. One of the most powerful songs on the album, "Going Rate," is a sobering reflection on the protests and the curfew that surrounded the death of Freddie Gray in 2015 while in police custody. Not ones to shy away from difficult topics for songwriting, "For One More," speaks to a more humanist view on immigration based on welcoming rather than excluding. "We're all better together," says Parrish. Rounding out the album, the duo return to their American folk and country roots with the melodic instrumental "Ecola" and a clever cover of Hank Williams' "Ramblin' Man."

Ultimately, The Honey Dewdrops decided to keep their listeners at the forefront of their thoughts throughout the production of Anyone Can See. "We want people to feel like they are sitting in the room with us, close by," said the duo. The result is a record drenched in sonic roominess, each of the tracks stretching to fill the space, but with a warmth that allows the album to fit comfortably anywhere. In this way, the intimacy oscillating throughout the record complements and overturns the melodic vastness: nobody will get lost in this expanse.



Comments

To post a comment, you must register and login.






Videos