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MP3 Frank Cruz and the New Deal - A Place of Our Own - EP

Indie rock, alt-country, and neo-folk signifiers populate these stories of highways, homesteads, and generational mythologies; expect Hammond organs, Hohner harmonicas, and heartfelt songs performed by some of the Bay Area''s premier up and comers.

4 MP3 Songs in this album (14:11) !
Related styles: ROCK: College Rock, FOLK: Alternative Folk

People who are interested in Wilco The New Amsterdams Iron & Wine should consider this download.


Details:
“With a trunk of ultra-personal songs--from acoustic folk numbers to heart tugging piano ballads--Frank Cruz walks around with his heart duct taped to his sleeve . . . Taking his cues from Adam Duritz’s narrative style, Cruz tackles the standard singer-songwriter subject: relationships. From bluntly honest songs about his strained past with his father to everyone’s doomed attempt at understanding the opposite sex, Cruz isn’t afraid to let you into his life. While not necessarily as gifted a singer as his idol, Cruz can match Duritz’s knack for telling a compelling tale.”

--Chris Jay, The Ventura County Reporter

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Notes on "A Place of Our Own":

In advance of their forthcoming full-length album, Frank Cruz and the New Deal, hailing from Berkeley, CA, are proud to present this beautiful, hand-made, limited edition 4-song E.P.

Featuring the talents of full-time New Dealer Chris Dixon, as well as a distinguished rhythm section consisting of Danny Casentini and Johnny Snapp (formerly of Poor Bailey) “A Place of Our Own” charts a course between the aural textures of Explosions in the Sky, The New Amsterdams, and early Death Cab for Cutie and the literate gravitas of Pedro the Lion and Iron & Wine.

The resulting 4 songs are both intimate and expansive, managing to be about Cruz’s very specific characters and settings, and at the same time about something much more universal: the highways and homesteads, heartaches and old family photographs we all know too well.

“A Place of Our Own” begins on the highway, with Cruz sending well wishes to those nearest and dearest as he moves out and moves on. The traditional folk structure and instrumentation of “Highway 101 Serenade” (acoustic guitars, harmonica, and Hammond organ) are complicated by the juxtaposition of feedback, samples, and lo-fi beats, creating an effect that’s both comforting and disorienting, in all the right ways.

While “Highway 101” is about leaving home for unnamed destinations, track two outlines a completed journey, following Mean Gene across the country, as he searches for a town that might “give a man a break.” When Cruz’s title character finally arrives in Los Angeles, circa 1960, the resulting musical arrangement--complete with handclaps and a fantastic walking bass line—suggests that hope remains, even as the lyrics reveal uncertainty.

“Furniture & Photographs,” the third track on “A Place of Our Own,” helps announce a shift away from the acoustic/singer-songwriter territory the New Deal deftly occupied for the first half of the E.P. Chris Dixon’s electric guitars gradually grow and swell into a wash of delay, reverb, and ebow, before a rhythmic acoustic guitar, recalling the intimate arrangements of the previous two songs, help to usher in the rest of the band. Though Danny Casentini''s drums keep the 4/4 time impeccably well, Cruz is forced to judge temporality by the positioning of furniture in an old girlfriend’s childhood home, as he revisits the old days with her mother and father.

It seems as though Cruz can''t get out the words out fast enough on the E.P.’s closing track, “We Have the Technology.” Featuring an almost danceable bass line courtesy of Johnny Snapp, “Technology” is kicked up a notch by Dixon’s freewheeling guitar riff that recalls the Get Up Kids and even John Mellencamp at their very best. And while “A Place of Our Own” began with leaving home, the final track marks a return: this song ends not with another solo departure, but with Cruz welcoming us to come along--“Come on, baby, let’s go home.”

In the E.P.’s closing measures, Frank Cruz and the New Deal claim “we’ve found a place of our own.” In many ways, this fresh E.P. from the New Deal fits in perfectly with that sentiment. It’s the sound of leaving home and coming back again, and figuring out how to be a little bit better along the way.

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This is a hand-made, limited edition E.P. Each copy is unique and individually numbered.

These songs were recorded at home, in Berkeley, CA by C. Dixon and F. Cruz. The drums, bass, and electric guitars were recorded at Nu Tone Studios, in Pittsburg, CA by Willie Samuels and mixed by Willie at Nu Tone on December 22nd, 2008.

Screen printing, Gocco, layout and design by Jodie Cruz, F. Cruz and C. Dixon.

For lyrics, photographs, credits and more, visit us online at https://www.tradebit.com

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