Carsie Blanton
Mon 25 Nov 2024 (note: this event has already taken place)
8pm
FREE
Carsie Blanton is a songwriter with hooks, chutzpah, and revolutionary optimism. Inspired by artist-activists including Nina Simone and Woody Guthrie, her catalog careens through American popular song from folk and swing to pop-punk protest anthems.
With her unique mix of humor, soul, and political wit, and fifteen-plus years on the road, Blanton has amassed a dedicated fan base and a small menagerie of viral hits (Rich People, Shit List, Fishin’ With You). Her forthcoming album After the Revolution, produced by Grammy-winner Tyler Chester, is slated for release in March of 2024.
“It’s been a long, weirdcouple of years”, says songwriter Carsie Blanton, “between the pandemic and other disasters, every day brings a new kind of anxiety. We need to find ways to remember who we are.”
After keeping her band afloat throughoutlockdown with live-streamed ‘Rent Parties’, going viral with a song memorializing John Prine(Fishin with You), and releasing acritically acclaimedmid-pandemic album (2021’s Love and Rage,“fighting fascism with big hooks and an even bigger heart" according to American
Songwriter), Blanton may be the person to help us do that.
“When you spend your time watching the news or social media, people seem cruel and stupid. But I think that by a wide margin,people are good, and want to take care of each other.”
Yet Blanton’s songs are far from saccharine. She doesn’t shy from vulgarity or politics, and at a recent live performance, the audience was laughing more often than crying. Songs like Shit List and Dealin’ with the Devil lampooned neo-Nazis and Democratic Senator Joe Manchin, respectively, while others bordered on the burlesque.
Blanton and her impeccably dressed “Handsome Band” demonstrated musical acumenbetraying a long tenure as live performers. Accompanied by Joe Plowman on upright bass and Patrick Firth on Wurlitzer, her songs meandered from Americana and rock to cocktail jazz,Motown,and Elvis-Costello-esque poppunk. Three-part harmonies thickened the sound of the trio, while kazoos leavened it.Blanton’s years in New Orleans could be heard not just musically,butin her flair for the macabre. (Blanton grew up in Virginia and currently resides outside of Philadelphia.)
Mid-show, Blanton performed several songs solo, showcasing the stripped-down arrangements featured on her forthcoming album Body of Work(produced by Grammy-nominee Tyler Chester).
Despitesomebawdy humorand a far-left political bent that some may find unsavory,the overwhelming message of Blanton’slive show was one of compassion and humanity.Her opening song, Be Good, invites us to be more like Christ and MLK, while her encore, All My Love, was dedicated to the healthcare workers, social workers, and teachers who pulled the rest of us through the pandemic (and who are invited to attend her 2022 shows for free).
“We make music because it makes us feel better”, she said near the top of the set. “We share it because we want to make you feel better, too.”
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