Tim Robinson profile picture

Tim Robinson

4 stars from PASTE magazine!

About Me

MONEY IN THE WOODS gets 4 stars from PASTE magazine!PASTE's Amanda Petrusich had this to say: "... a beguiling mix of Greg Brown-style folk and thoughtful alt. country... As a lyricist, Robinson is consistently smart and unassuming, and both his vocals and arrangements are beautifully organic, as simple and inviting as a pile of freshly raked leaves."Here's a link to a clipping of the whole review: PASTE REVIEWThere's also a new review in PERFORMING SONGWRITER.Mare Wakefield says this: "... His easy delivery falls onto your ears like the cadence of a long-lost brother or favorite uncle, someone youve been longing for and never get to see enough, someone with great stories, someone you love."Oh, and Performing Songwriter has now included "money in the woods" on their "best releases of 2006" list!Read the full review here: PERFORMING SONGWRITER REVIEWClick here to buy the CD:MONEY IN THE WOODS was also an '05 NEW PANTHEON MUSIC AWARD nominee!Tim Robinson's literate but earthy songs traffic in neither high-flown linguistics nor mawkish romanticism; his is a direct, trenchant style that expresses the deepest fundaments of humanity in a strikingly original way.Robinson kicked around the NYC songwriter scene in the '90s, quietly soaking up experience and amassing an overwhelming cache of stunning songs. At last, his debut album MONEY IN THE WOODS allows the world at large to hear what Robinson can do. With guest appearances by everyone from staunch supporter Suzanne Vega to hot NY gospel-rockers Olabelle, MONEY IN THE WOODS is a dark, churning stew of folk, blues, and rock. While there's a musical kinship to such roots-conscious craftsmen as John Prine, Greg Brown, and Bob Dylan, the closest lyrical antecedents are literary figures like e.e. cummings and Dylan Thomas, men who shook up the English language and found a way to fashion it into something startlingly new.Robinson's unmannered singing style and raw, minimalist production aesthetic make MONEY IN THE WOODS eminently approachable, but once you enter into the world these songs create, you'll be whisked off down strange, knotty byways you'd never even imagined before. In the end, though, the pure heart and soul behind Robinson's gifted pen is what will make you return to those byways time and again, gleaning something new with each trip.Suzanne Vega says this of MONEY IN THE WOODS:What can I tell you about this collection of Tim Robinson's songs? He is one of my favorite songwriters. You have to read his songs as well as listen to them to get just how striking his ideas are. The songs are witty and sometimes dark but never cynical. This album is the world reflected through the prism of an intelligent and original mind."Acoustic Live says:If your tastes run toward the brilliant and vital, the slightly rough but entirely ready - think Dylan, John Prine, Lucinda Williams, or Steve Earle - then go out and get yourself a copy of Money in the Woods. I edited my profile with Thomas' Myspace Editor V4.4

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 11/22/2005
Band Website: cdbaby.com/cd/timrobinson
Band Members: Tim Robinson: acoustic guitar and lead vocal, David Hamburger: dobro and electric guitars, Dan Vonnegut: drums, Byron Isaacs: electric bass, Michael Daves: mandolin and electric guitar, Suzanne Vega: harmony vocals, Fiona McBain: harmony vocals, Bob Hillman: harmony vocals and acoustic guitar, and Chris Tarrow: mixing and mastering, then joining us with his guitars when we do this live.
Influences: Steve McQueen, Townes Van Zandt, Joe Namath, Bob Dylan, Robert Creeley, John Prine, Diane Arbus, Steve Forbert, Lee Morgan, Sherwood Anderson, Greg Brown, Ferron, Flannery O'Connor, Werner Herzog, Woody Guthrie, Woody Shaw, Hunter S. Thompson, Richard Thompson, Truman Capote, Chris Whitley, The Clash, Edith Piaf, Cormac McCarthy, Bruce (Springsteen and Lenny), Patrick Brayer, Jackson Pollock, The Band, Joan Didion, Bill Morrisey, Edgar Lee Masters, Jack Hardy, Tom Waits, Sam Shepard, Frank Tedesso, Jean Paul Belmondo, Raymond Carver (or his editor, I guess), Tom Robbins, Roger Banister, etc...
Sounds Like: Man, I don't (can't) know what to say about this. You tell me.
Type of Label: None

My Blog

Alan Andrews R.I.P.

No, that's not my picture where it should be, I know. That's a picture an old friend who died last weekend, Alan Andrews. He was a great guy and a fine songwriter. He has a website that's still up,...
Posted by Tim Robinson on Thu, 08 Mar 2007 05:12:00 PST

lyrics

STONE FACE (Tim Robinson 2005) I do not cry for what I feel I kinda brood, that's the deal I wear my hat inside churches - I throw balls I go to sea through shadows swimming My heart sinks...
Posted by Tim Robinson on Tue, 28 Feb 2006 01:14:00 PST

what was the melody?

Where was I going but looking for you In that gypsy cab through the who knows who I am any more, flying down Ave. B Point well taken, I was looking for me In you I guess through my hard to see Ey...
Posted by Tim Robinson on Fri, 02 Dec 2005 08:52:00 PST