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Quiet Countries

New Album coming soon...

About Me

Quiet Countries is the one man band of ex-Laserhawk drummer Leb Borgerson. Using his voice, a baritone guitar, two looping pedals, an MPC 1000, a Casio CZ 101 keyboard, various effects pedals, and a variety of musical styles, Leb creates lushly orchestrated, uniquely written songs. In 2003 Quiet Countries released a limited edition EP on Lucky Madison Records, consisting of early versions of songs from his live set, sound experiments, and fleshed-out improvisations. In February 2006 Quiet Countries debut full-length, "No One Makes a Sound" will come out on Lucky Madison. Recorded over two years and containing most of the music in the live set since late 2002, the album continues the mood and atmosphere of the EP but is a more fully realized version of the Quiet Countries sound. Glitchy, pounding beats mix with swirling guitars, chiming glockenspiels, warm keyboards, and Leb's eerie voice. Reverent organ tones blend with Japanese zithers, pianos and strange samples to create moody, but beautiful music. Although Leb plays most of the instruments on the album, two of the best tracks are products of collaboration; "A Wicked Word" features the considerable talents of Lisa Molinaro (violin and viola) and Kevin O'Connor (drums) from Talk Demonic, and Victor Paul Nash (vibes) from Point Juncture WA. The ode to paranoia that is "If My Hands Shake" featured the beautiful voices of The Quiet Country Singers: Lauren Finbraaten, Alan Singley, Liam Kenna (The Snuggle Ups), Emilie Strange (Junior Private Detective) and Victor Paul Nash (Point Juncture WA).
Now you can buy Quiet Countries new album No One Makes a Sound right HERE, right NOW securely with PayPal.

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 8/12/2004
Band Website: quietcountries.com
Band Members: Leb Borgerson - Vocals, Guitar, Koto, Samples, Beats, Loops
Influences: Themselves, Jeff Buckley, Godspeed You Black Emperor, New Order, Fugazi, Eureka Farm (The Misadventures of Two)
Sounds Like: "Leb Borgerson, the sole citizen of Quiet Countries, uses more pedals, loops, dials and gadgets than James Bond to handcraft each song before your eyes. His powerful, soaring voice distinguishes him as a 21st-century troubadour worth hearing." -Karla Starr/The Willamette Week"Quiet Countries, the solo project of Leb Borgerson, put on a blown-out set of Mack-truck vocals over beats and loops expertly manipulated to create moments of high drama worthy of both the psycho-histrionics in Ibsen's A Doll's House and the right-now teen angst on The O.C." -Mark Baumgarten/The Willamette Week"A jittery blend of heavy beats, baritone guitar and augmented vocal loops that range from desolate to downright creepy, Quiet Countries perform some strange variant of electronica that has yet to be named. Dark wave glitch pop? Intelligent kick dub Detroit techno? Whatever the category, Quiet Countries are well on their way to mastering it." -Brian Graham/Tablet Magazine"Leb Borgerson imbues his solo project, Quiet Countries, with a natural conviction that hints at genius. Wielding a baritone guitar, he loops dissonant melodies with a Line 6 pedal and layers booming beats, syncing them perfectly with the mathy evilness of the guitar. His voice cuts through with tortured lines like, we can't keep wrapping ourselves in plastic... but we try, we try, we try; in the process, he obliterates the traditional role of the singer/songwriter, combining meaningful lyrics with modern modes of musical creation, filling out the heart that is absent in much electronic music." -Kevin O'Conner/The Portland Mercury"Quiet Countries' Leb Borgerson is one of the few one-man bands around that doesn't rely on a laptop, instead relying on actual instruments: guitars, keys and yes, a table full of boxes and wires. It all results in Portland-inspired moody atmospherics coupled with heart-attack deep bass beats." -Michael Byrne/The Willamette Week"With all its glitched beats and laptop-born melodic flourishes, Quiet Countries makes for a very different type of singer-songwriter than the usual coffee-house troubadours." -Richard Shirk/The Willamette Week"Take a good musician who knows music theory. His band breaks up and he's left to be inspired with his solo work. Then, say this guy has some nice looping gear, a guitar and some great songwriting ideas. Put this guy in a studio with his experience and some free time you would then have Leb Borgerson and his Quiet Countries. Loop based guitar rock. Vocals that penetrate. Times that change. Serenity within madness. Order amongst chaos. All That is felicitous. This album is merely an EP but feels more whole than they usually do. There were a lot of nuances that I didn't catch the first time I listened. If your stereo is set so the whole cd repeats, you may not even notice 'til the third time around." -Maranda Dabel/Music Liberation Project
Record Label: Lucky Madison Records www.luckymadison.com
Type of Label: Indie

My Blog

Quiet Countries vs Wilding at the Ohm

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Posted by Quiet Countries on Sun, 29 Apr 2007 12:39:00 PST

Pants Machine Video for Highwaz of our Minds

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Posted by Quiet Countries on Wed, 07 Mar 2007 07:38:00 PST

Alan and Leb at the Doug Fir

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Posted by Quiet Countries on Wed, 07 Mar 2007 07:36:00 PST

Quiet Countries Live at The Doug Fir 5

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Posted by Quiet Countries on Wed, 07 Mar 2007 07:34:00 PST

Quiet Countries Live at The Doug Fir 3

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Posted by Quiet Countries on Wed, 07 Mar 2007 07:33:00 PST

Quiet Countries Live at The Doug Fir 4

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Posted by Quiet Countries on Wed, 07 Mar 2007 07:33:00 PST

Quiet Countries Live at The Doug Fir 2

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Posted by Quiet Countries on Wed, 07 Mar 2007 07:32:00 PST

Quiet Countries Live at The Doug Fir

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Posted by Quiet Countries on Wed, 07 Mar 2007 07:31:00 PST