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DESCRIPTION:Every great piece of art is both a mystery and a love story. 
 True art causes us to ask questions while also supplying us with answers
 . True artists like CAROLINE HERRING never fail to make us feel somethin
 g\, whether profound sadness or overwhelming hope.&nbsp\;This is surely 
 the case with Herring&rsquo\;s latest and best album\, CAMILLA.&nbsp\;He
 rring&rsquo\;s songs are always perfect little mysteries and powerful\, 
 hopeful love stories\, but they are never simple thrilling romances. The
 y are complex\, modern\, tradition-influenced compositions about love an
 d hate and everything in between. On CAMILLA\, her sixth full-length rel
 ease\, Herring has created her most profound album yet\, a collection of
  ten deeply moving songs.Since her debut in 2001\, Herring has gained a 
 devoted following\, has been embraced by tastemakers like NPR and Oxford
  American\, has become the only American representative for the prestigi
 ous Cecil Sharp Project\, a group of musicians who are commissioned to r
 esearch and create new music based on the life and collecting of the fam
 ed songcatcher\, and has emerged as one of our best and most consistent 
 singer-songwriters. Herring has established herself as a lyrical and inv
 entive songwriter and a singer whose vocals never fail to move the liste
 ner with her high trills and rich vibrato. The Mississippi native\, now 
 based in Atlanta\, has been compared to Lucinda Williams\, Joan Baez\, a
 nd even Mozart. Although the comparisons are nice (and hold water) the t
 ruth is that she has her own signature sound that comes to full manifest
 ation on CAMILLA\, a career-defining record.&nbsp\;&ldquo\;I feel braver
  on this album\, and I feel it represents me wholly\,&rdquo\; she says. 
 While Herring describes her songs as &ldquo\;simple&rdquo\; they are any
 thing but&mdash\;they are complex\, mysterious\, and very intelligent.Th
 e Herring Sound is one that is both achingly ancient and decidedly moder
 n\, one wherein the internet can be mentioned within seconds of a lyric 
 like &ldquo\;I want to stay with you/my place of belonging&rdquo\;. Herr
 ing&rsquo\;s specialty is studying the South and the way race still haun
 ts its people and places but her music transcends that&mdash\;the race-h
 aunted South becomes a microcosm for the nation\, and even the world ent
 ire. Like the best writers\, Herring manages to make the specific someth
 ing very universal. When she sings of a &ldquo\;little girl in your nigh
 tgown/chasing after fireflies&rdquo\; while a mansion goes up in flames 
 (&ldquo\;that&rsquo\;s tradition burning down&rdquo\;)\, she&rsquo\;s no
 t only creating a mesmerizing image\; she&rsquo\;s also reminding us tha
 t &ldquo\;they&rsquo\;ve got you where they want you/they&rsquo\;ve got 
 the lid screwed down.&rdquo\; She explains: &ldquo\;The little girl may 
 chase fireflies\, she may gain solace knowing they\, God-willing\, will 
 always be there to catch\, but she must also know that in the big scheme
  of things she is a mere firefly to most people\, to the system\, and sh
 e must see the world for what it is and never pretend differently.&rdquo
 \; In Herring&rsquo\;s world\, we are all the victims of the injustice a
 nd discrimination\, whether we know it or not.&nbsp\;Injustice is the ma
 in theme that holds all of Herring&rsquo\;s work together\, but she neve
 r fails to inject light so that hope is the victor in all of her music. 
 We hear this wonderful mix of reality and optimism on every song on CAMI
 LLA. The album is filled with stories of people traveling long hard jour
 neys who are ultimately rewarded by self-worth\, resolution\, or the pro
 mise of kindness. On CAMILLA we come to know a tired woman who is helped
  along the way by folks who &ldquo\;tie my traveling shoes&rdquo\;\; a n
 arrator singing of &ldquo\;a hard summer in the mountains&rdquo\; but co
 mforted by the goodness of nature\; a mother who finds that taking her d
 aughter to Obama&rsquo\;s inaugurationis not easy but well worth the tri
 p\; another song shares the true story of a woman who survived the horri
 fic fire-bombing of a Freedom Riders bus\, witnessing the horror of burn
 ing bodies and the beauty of a twelve year-old white girl who brought he
 r water despite the protests of the townspeople. In &ldquo\;Black Mounta
 in Lullabye&rdquo\; and &ldquo\;Camilla&rdquo\; we hear from mothers who
  have lost their children but keep their dignity&mdash\;and hope&mdash\;
 intact.CAMILLA is a thought-provoking album that will illicit tears but 
 ends up filling the listener with a profound optimism. &ldquo\;Until You
  Go\,&rdquo\; certainly the best grief song since George Jones sang "He 
 Stopped Loving Her Today&rdquo\; and far more nuanced and elegant than t
 he excellent &ldquo\;If I Die Young&rdquo\; (The Band Perry)\, is&mdash\
 ;without a doubt&mdash\;one of her best songs\, and one of the most beau
 tiful compositions and productions of the year. The album ends with two 
 more songs that cause the light (hope) on the album to increase as stead
 ily and warmly as a summer sunrise in the Delta: &ldquo\;Flee As A Bird&
 rdquo\; is a mesmerizing 1840 hymn and &ldquo\;Joy Never Ends (Auld Lang
  Syne) wraps everything up with its treatise on friendship and endurance
 . &ldquo\;I believe it&rsquo\;s true that joy never\, ever ends\,&rdquo\
 ; Herring says\, of the closing song. &ldquo\;Everything else might. But
  joy will always be in our grasp.&rdquo\;Herring introduces us to a whol
 e cast of characters\, all of them as perfectly crafted as those populat
 ing a novel. We miss them all once the record is finished\, so much that
  the first instinct is to click play again so we can visit the Deep Sout
 h that is Everywhere\, the characters that are All of Us at our best and
  worst\, in our deepest sorrows and proudest joys.&nbsp\;&ldquo\;To me\,
  CAMILLA is about grief and injustice. Deep love and hope. Perseverance.
  Heroes\,&rdquo\; Herring says.&nbsp\;Besides it&rsquo\;s profundity\, C
 AMILLA is also wonderfully produced by Erick Jaskowiak\, best known as a
 n engineer for folks like Alison Krauss\, Crooked Still\, The Chieftains
 \, and many others. The band has quite a pedigree as well: Fats Kaplin (
 pedal steel\, fiddle\, banjo) and Bryn Davies (upright bass) both play w
 ith Jack White&rsquo\;s band (and on his latest album\, Blunderbuss)\; S
 teven Sheehan (acoustic guitar)\, Bryan Owings (drums\, chains) make for
  a full\, rich sound. Additionally\, there are terrific vocal harmonies 
 from Mary Chapin-Carpenter\, Aoife O&rsquo\;Donavan\, Claire Holley\, Ka
 thryn Roberts and Jackie Oates\, and as guests\, some killer licks on th
 e electric guitar by Sean Lakeman a driving banjo by Leonard Podolak. an
 d emotive violin and viola playing by Andrea Zonn.&nbsp\;All these picke
 rs join forces to create one of the best albums of the year and the reco
 rd that is sure to give Herring even more acclaim and widely broaden her
  fan-base. The title of the record is from Herring's song named for a sl
 eepy Georgia town. &ldquo\;That&rsquo\;s where\, in 1962\, a woman named
  Marion King was beat unconscious by a deputy sheriff when all she did w
 as take a casserole to her friend&rsquo\;s daughter in jail\,&rdquo\; He
 rring explains. &ldquo\;Beauty and horror. All in one word. And camilla 
 is such a beautiful word.&rdquo\;
URL:http://duluth.patch.com/events/eddie-owen-presents-caroline-herring-r
 ecord-release-celebration-w-special-guest-bo-bedingfield
SUMMARY:Eddie Owen Presents: Caroline Herring Record Release Celebration 
 w/ Special Guest\, Bo Bedingfield
LOCATION:Red Clay Theatre: 3116 Main St\, Duluth\, GA
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