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Kevin Carroll

Organic Music in the Digital Age

About Me


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"Take equal parts of George Harrison’s pop-rock ethereality, the sweet side of Paul Westerberg’s songwriting and the sleek classicist rock’n’roll of Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers, and you have a hint at the riches within Kevin Carroll’s Tourmaline. It’s a seductive tour de force that plays more and more like one of your all time favorite albums every time you spin it."
- Rob Patterson Veteran music journalist
From its very first notes, Kevin Carroll’s Tourmaline plays like a genuine classic album — alluringly familiar yet deliciously new and enticing music that obviously springs from its creator’s heart and hits the listener’s own heart as well as mind and soul. Though Carroll is best known as the lead guitarist in Texas country-rocker Charlie Robison’s band The Enablers, it’s anything but a sideman’s solo project or a guitar player’s album. Rather, it’s a rich landmark work of rock’n’roll from a genuine full-fledged musical artist.
Like the mineral it takes its name from, Tourmaline is a gem of many colors and facets. Between the bookends of the “Tourmaline Theme” at the album’s beginning and end unfolds a thematically-linked set of compelling and affecting music with a coherence, eloquence, emotional resonance and musicality that compares to some of the finest rock’n’roll albums that have preceded it. The sound recalls the best artists and moments of AM Top 40 and album rock radio — including stunning parts and figures from Carroll’s guitar — and the songs have a timeless resonance as they explore deep and important human matters with a personal touch. From such meditations as “Another Way,” “Disappear,” “What Was I Thinking?” and the title track to rockers like “Box Of Wine” and “Speed Of Night” to such celebrations of spirit as “Give It Away” and “Make It Feel Good” to the grace note of “At The End Of The Day,” Tourmaline is a vivid pageant of musicality and meaning. In short, it plays like an album for the ages.
Even prior to its release, Tourmaline is evoking critical raves. “Take equal parts of George Harrison’s pop-rock ethereality, the sweet side of Paul Westerburg’s songwriting and the sleek classicist rock’n’roll of Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers, and you have a hint at the riches within Kevin Carroll’s Tourmaline,” says veteran Austin-based music journalist Rob Patterson, reviewer over the years for such rock magazines as Creem, Crawdaddy, Spin, Musician, Request, Harp and many other publications. “It’s a seductive tour de force that plays more and more like one of your all time favorite albums every time you spin it.”
Tourmaline was born out of loss and created from the emotions, wisdom, revelations and personal growth that follow it. The Austin, Texas-based Carroll had already made an initial splash leading his band The Sleestacks with his 1997 album Redemption Day — rated as “an excellent debut” and “a rewarding listen” by All Music Guide — when his mother unexpectedly died from a brain aneurysm. At the same time, the pressures of keeping a band together through everything from low-paying gigs to dodgy major label record deal offers was taking its toll.
During his college years, Carroll copped guitar licks from a hotshot Boise player with a regular gig at a local club — Rich Brotherton, now guitarist and producer for Robert Earl Keen. “I would go see him play when I should have been studying, and then go home and try to figure out what he did.” Eventually Carroll landed a spot in a Boise indie cowpunk band, I-84, and started writing songs.
After that group disbanded, he formed The Sleestacks — the name is from the Saturday morning kids show “Land of the Lost” — which quickly rose to the top of the Boise scene. Fired to do more with his music, he followed Brotherton to Austin and persuaded the rest of The Sleestacks to follow him. The band went through the typical rigmarole that promising bands often endure: changing members, being courted by Sire Records (who Carroll eventually turned down) and winning favorable reviews and the start of an audience in Europe.
But even though Carroll gave up leading a band and pursuing his own songwriting to become a hired gun in 1998 — fittingly, it was Brotherton who Kevin replaced for the Robison gig — songs began to come again to him. Eventually he had far more than an album’s worth of material that felt right and true to him and decided it was time to make another album. “It seemed to me like a healthy investment of time and money. What else would I do with my money?” Carroll quips.
“I really wanted to make a record in the style of those made in the 1960s and ‘70s, with an organic feel and sound, but digitally, though with almost all the parts being first takes.” Tourmaline even features such noted players from the era Carroll was emulating as keyboard player Ian McLagan (from The Small Faces and The Faces) and drummer Barry “Frosty” Smith (known for his work with Lee Michaels). Top Austin musicians Ron Flynt and George Reiff provided recording facilities and musical assistance while others like Chris Maresh (Eric Johnson and Toni Price) and and Bruce Hughes (from Poi Dog Pondering, The Ugly Americans and The Resentments) also lent their talents.
The result is a work that’s almost cinematic in its musical, lyrical and emotional splendor, with an impressionistic slant and a loose narrative theme threading throughout. “It’s about loss and people at various stages in that process. I started to feel like I was carving out a niche for myself as the Elizabeth Kubler-Ross of songwriting. Luckily I’ve since been writing songs about lots of other things and have already started working on the next album,” says Carroll.
And out of sorrow and loss emerged something comforting and inspiring as well as an artist who has firmly reconnected with his muse on a new and higher level than ever before. “It’s a once in a lifetime record,” concludes Carroll. “It was a journey, and it was awesome.” And once listeners take the journey with Carroll through Tourmaline, it’s an awesome experience for them as well that they will surely revisit time and time again.
Here’s a little info on me from the All Music Guide:
Kevin Carroll is a guitarist and a singer/songwriter. He moved from his hometown of Boise, ID, in 1991 to immerse himself in the excellent music scene of Austin, TX. He headed his own band in Austin for several years, releasing the CD Redemption Day in 1997. The album was originally released in Italy, where it received rave reviews. Then, Freedom Records released the record in the United States, where it was equally well-received. Carroll’s sound is diverse and expansive, encompassing elements of pop, soul, folk, and country within an Americana roots-rock base. Influences include Bob Dylan, Gram Parsons, the Pogues, and the Rolling Stones among others. Despite his modest success as a solo artist, Carroll decided to become a guitarist for hire in the Austin area. He has most notably gained acclaim as lead guitarist for SONY/COLUMBIA recording artist Charlie Robison. ..

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 1/29/2005
Band Website: kevincarroll.net
Band Members: The Organics:

Mike Meadows-percussion innovator, vocals
John Bush- percussion galore
Ed Friedland-upright bass extraordinaire
and sometimes
Ron Flynt- keyboards, vocals

Buy the album here.

album price
KEVIN CARROLL: Tourmaline $15.00
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or download it here

Influences: here we go.....this is tough since it's hard to always know what is an influence, especially on an unconscious level. Here are some of the conscious ones: the Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, Sly and the Family Stone, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, Joe South, Dusty Springfield, Creedence Clearwater Revival, the Waterboys, the Pogues, Otis Redding, Ike and Tina Turner, John Lennon, Sade, Tom Waits, Booker T. and the MGs, the Meters, Neil Young, George Harrison, World Party, Shuggie Otis, Bob Marley and the Wailers, Lisa Mednick, Chuck Prophet, Outkast, Ian Hunter, Aimee Mann, D'Angelo, Townes Van Zandt, Grant Green, Citizen Cope, Phil Upchurch, T-Bone Burnett, Miles Davis, the Band, Big Star, ELO, Tricky, Lee "Scratch" Perry, Doug Sahm, the Animals, Keith Richards, Toots and the Maytals, all of the stellar musicians with whom I've had the privilege to play, my socio-economic status, my blood sugar level, the war, and on and on and on. As Townes Van Zandt once said when asked what his influences were " the grass, the wind, the trees" everything influences the creation of music.
Sounds Like: some of the past, some of the present with a little of the future....
Record Label: Me
Type of Label: Indie

My Blog

KC Newsletter June 2008

Hope you are starting off summer swimingly. I know I'm enjoying it and looking forward to even more chances to perform for you. I'll tell you more about that below.There are a few points of interest...
Posted by Kevin Carroll on Sun, 08 Jun 2008 02:32:00 PST

Looking for a booking agent

Here's a shout out to all music industry types or prospective industry types.I'm looking for someone to assist in the booking dept. of kevincarroll.net.I offer all the usual perks of booking an Austin...
Posted by Kevin Carroll on Mon, 18 Feb 2008 10:36:00 PST

KC Newsletter September 2007

Hello folks,I hope this finds you well and ready for the fall.September promises to be an exciting month with several shows, a freshly assembled, rapidly growing street team aptly named Team Tourmalin...
Posted by Kevin Carroll on Thu, 06 Sep 2007 08:47:00 PST

KC Newsletter August 2007

KEVIN CARROLL NEWSLETTER AUGUST 2007 Hey there again.....it's time for another update.  KC shows are slowly starting to appear on the not too distant horizon, there are a couple listed here.&nbs...
Posted by Kevin Carroll on Tue, 07 Aug 2007 10:36:00 PST

TOURMALINE RELEASE PARTY 6/19 @ LAMBERT'S

Tourmaline will be released into the world 6/19/2007This album, as many of you know, has taken several years and much effort to complete.I hope you'll be happy with the results. I've already garnered...
Posted by Kevin Carroll on Wed, 23 May 2007 12:43:00 PST

who's bloggin' who?

I'm just starting to settle from the enormous amount of travelling I've done and am still doing. 12 flights, 2 trans-Atlantic. 42 hrs just to get to our hotel in Kuwait. Countless bus rides in Kuwai...
Posted by Kevin Carroll on Fri, 06 Apr 2007 11:29:00 PST

Megalomania in Mesopatamia

Last week while touring the Middle East I had the unique opportunity to visit a palace thast Saddam Hussein had built. The seemingly majestic construction was for "hunting" and he only made it there ...
Posted by Kevin Carroll on Fri, 30 Mar 2007 10:22:00 PST

nice write up in the houston press

kc story houston presshere's a nice write up from William Michael Smith in the Houston Press promoting my show at Mojo Risin' on Feb. 14th...that's right ...Valentine's Day.I'll see you in Houston.......
Posted by Kevin Carroll on Thu, 08 Feb 2007 05:05:00 PST

maybe i oughta get out more often

So I've been going out every night this week.....playing gigs around Austin. Wed. night at the Continental Club I realized how many people I know. It was dizzying....I hardly got to finish a sentenc...
Posted by Kevin Carroll on Sat, 27 Jan 2007 04:50:00 PST

Unlock Austin

Here's a new website promoting Austin's music scene. You can sign up in a minute and support your favorite bands. Check out my profile and show me some love....you can write reviews, offer ratings, ...
Posted by Kevin Carroll on Fri, 29 Dec 2006 11:52:00 PST