Virgil Shaw profile picture

Virgil Shaw

About Me

Review from All Muisic Guide-Quad Cities was loaded with amazingly rich, evocative songwriting, and so too is Still Falling; however, Virgil Shaw's second solo outing is quite a different narrative from his first even if it tells much the same tale. "Stunning" seems to be the word that has most attached itself to Still Falling, and with excellent reason. Eschewing the stark hollerin' blues and sometimes devastating bleakness of the debut (but not its soulful, almost gospel fervor), the album has a swooning, stardust lushness missing on its predecessor. Employing many of the same players, it nevertheless is much more exquisitely produced. Beds of vibes, horns, and keyboards wrap themselves around bridges and refrains before fading back into the darkness, only to reappear again when the mood runs high. Country music has always been but a few liquor benders and a few bad breakups (and perhaps a nudge and a wink) from R&B, and Still Falling, with its almost inarticulate depths of emotion and the fervor with which both its despair and jubilation are conveyed, could often pass for either genre depending on which bar you happen to be hearing the music in. This is true on such songs as the raucously cynical "Clock on the Wall," the crestfallen title track, and the woefully poignant and noble character study "Owner Operator." And nowhere is it more evident than on "Sing Me Back Home," which even displays some of Willie Nelson's jazzy sense of rhythm. Shaw's half-there, half out-to-lunch slur of a drawl, though, is as country as it gets, often missing the high notes by a couple miles and barely scraping the underside of some of the mid-range ones, but he wrestles and wrangles with every tune with such undeniable passion and fire that it always comes out sounding just right. Full of ballads as mortally anguished as a howl at the moon and spot-on evocations of the sort of blindly fumbling and sloppily groping sentimentality to which we all, at times, fall prey (even if we have trouble admitting it), Still Falling couldn't be any more beautifully broken if filled up the bottom of George Jones' bourbon flask._----------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------Mr. Shaw gets his extroverted waltzes and rockers from a honky-tonk somewhere in the "wilderness of this world" that he sings about in his cracked voice. It's a place where the mystic Americana of the Band meets Mr. Shaw's own surreal tales and hard-luck images." The New York Times ------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------ -----------------------------------------------------------" Shaw's second solo album is both well-constructed and full of beautiful abstractions. Weird like Roky Erickson and soulful like Van Morrison, Shaw's lyrics paint fanciful scenes that are loosely encased by clever, mid-tempo arrangements." Rolling Stone ------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------ ---------------------"It makes no difference where Virgil Shaw may lay his head at night, his music does the traveling for him. Still Falling [mixes] Dixieland piano and horns with tunes that sound like they might be tumbling out of a saloon with horses hitched out front... Strangely timeless, Still Falling is a return to a history most of us never knew." CMJ--------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------ -----------------"Virgil's songs fracture images, turn them sideways, and hold them up to the ultraviolet, letting us lucky ones see not just a snapshot, but the beautiful, warped depth of it all? He's damn near the best we got." - Jim Fairchild / Grandaddy--------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------ ----

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 17/11/2005
Band Website: www.virgilshaw.com
Influences: Bob Dylan, Merle Haggard, Gram Parsons
Sounds Like: Will Oldham, Jay Farrar, Van Morrison, Granfaloon Bus
Type of Label: Major

My Blog

Dieselhed Reunion Show!!

Here is a Nice little Article that ran last week in the SF Bay Guardian about the Dieselhed Reunion Show. http://www.sfbg.com/entry.php?entry_id=554   Real huff Dieselhed revved our motors By Win...
Posted by on Tue, 16 May 2006 08:43:00 GMT

Virgil on tour..sort of

We have posted some additional live show dates for the beginning of the summer. Virgil will be playing four dates around New York City during May. In June, our fearless leader will be heading out on a...
Posted by on Sat, 06 May 2006 00:08:00 GMT