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Karaugh Brown selected reviews “Karaugh
Brown is a name to remember…” “Karaugh
Brown smolders on her first full-length release…” “Karaugh
Browns debut fascinates with impressionistic “She
will remind some of young Suzanne Vega with her stark melodicism,
literary sense, and brooding persona.” “With
... Morrissey’s wise production decisions and Brown ’s
incisive, eloquent songs, one hell of an album was born.” “Then
her warm voice would kick in, its soft, cottony edges working with
near-impressionist strokes the character studies that make up the
bulk of her numbers.” |
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www.rambles.net (back to top) Karaugh Brown is a name to remember for future reference. It's certainly an unusual name -- not Brown, obviously -- but it will be for her writing that she should become famous. This CD has 11 tracks, all of which appear to be written by the young lady. These are not your run-of-the-mill love songs or contemporary comment pieces. Each has a literary quality that betrays an interest in language and its use. Even the title of track 1 will fascinate: "The Flame & the Smoulder." The track is rather enigmatic but is worth a listen even just for the final line, "Through the topaz of your eyes." "Still Love" is a song of love and distance. "I pray three times a day, once for my love three oceans away." These are lyrics that deserve a much wider audience. The title track of this album continues to tease us with the lyrics. It is a joy to listen to but one can never be sure what we are hearing. The song seems to be written in Venice but lines like "I tiptoed around scared to be an American" made me long for liner notes explaining the background to these inventive songs. Again with "San Antonio" -- I felt this song would mean so much more if I could understand the background. Here as in other songs the language is that of poetry. "All I see are angels and acrobats, married to the ground." "Swallow" is one of my favourite tracks on the album. Who could ignore lyrics like "out of real and into reeling"? If one track on this CD should get a mass audience it has to be "One Two Three." Even if you never buy the CD seek out the lyrics of this one track. It is fantastic in content and in execution. This is one of those true "album releases." It is not hit-single material. These are strong songs, not listened to by the mass radio audiences, and I hope that such neglect will not discourage Brown. Here is intelligent English, thoughtful words and feeling for emotions. One Round Orange is poetry for 2003. - Rambles written by Nicky Rossiter published 12 July 2003
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WBUR 91.9fm (back to top) Karaugh Brown smolders on her first full-length release, One Round Orange. Many folk musicians amp it up at the recording studio, but "One Round Orange" hews to acoustic production values. Brown borrows surviving members of the 90s rock band Morphine, which may account for some measure of the album's skeletal sound, although she sounds like this live and solo: dark, sometimes ominous, spare, heavy on bass and Brown's oscillating guitar, with muffled drums. This is a real headphones album: it has an unparalleled intimacy. Brown's songs are poems, slow to mid-tempo meditations set to music. Her sinuous voice becomes cutting just when it seems at its most delicate. The emphasis is on the mood and the words, not the notes. The album is filled with details about places around the world -- cathedrals in Venice, Santa Fe, Florence, Buffalo. It also contains striking imagery, as this picture of futility in the tune "Contessina": "Down in the quarries, we bring a canary/and he sings and he sings till he can sing no more." Brown also has a bent for the allegorical and elliptical. Not knowing what is going on in her songs can become frustrating, but mystery is preferable to the transparent narcissism in the songs of too many other folksingers. Her use of oblique storytelling and attention to dynamics recalls the early work of Suzanne Vega. "One Two Three" covers upper-class domestic violence in a nursery-rhyme style. The somber "Katherine" quietly pulsates as it describes a suicidal woman in gothic language (her "blood is always warm") reminiscent of Tori Amos' first album. "Swallow" retells the Bluebeard story, perfectly marrying Brown's lyricism, taste for the gory detail, close focus, and ethereality: "They weren't kidding about towers and skeleton keys," she comments, with understated sarcasm. The album's distinguishing feature -- its moody, cyclical, dream-nightmare quality-- is unrelenting. There's little variation in "One Round Orange." All the songs sound the same, quiet and sparse. But subtle differences emerge occasionally, such as the bare use of harmony in "One Two Three" and the feverish rhythm of "Swallow." "Patriot" is comparatively upbeat, as the singer, sounding passionate and choky, reminds someone: "I am not your patriot, I am your lover standing outside your door." "San Antonio" is catchy and fanciful, heralding hope in the form of "angels and acrobats." Some may find One Round Orange monotonous, but this spooky, deeply personal album is unusual to merit close attention. The best songs are irresistibly compelling. As she sings, "You have to crawl to get this far inside."-Danielle Dreilinger
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Sing Out! (back to top) Karaugh Browns debut fascinates with impressionistic images, unusual melodic and harmonic contours and delicately atmospheric arrangements. The mood is both haunting and hopeful, rendered in Brown's well-chosen words and plaintive singing. Producer Bill Morrissey's production is sensitive and skillful (despite his unfortunate decision to record the guitar "plugged"). Nice stuff. -RM
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Boston Globe (back to top) Bill Morrissey helped
put Ellis Paul on the map when he produced his first CD in the early
90’s.
He hoped to do the same by producing One Round Orange, the just-released
debut disc for promising new Boston songwriter Karaugh Brown. She will
remind some of young Suzanne Vega with her stark melodicism, literary
sense, and brooding persona.
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Performing Songwriter (back to top) A Chance meeting with folk heavyweight Bill Morrissey at the Cambridge, Mass., Club Passim led not only to an opportunity for singer-songwriter Karaugh Brown to open for the Grammy-nominated artist, but also to Morrissey's offering to produce her full-length debut. With Billy Conway (Morphine, Twinemen) on board as both engineer and drummer, Morrissey's wise production decisions and Brown's incisive, eloquent songs, one hell of an album was born. (paragraph) One Round Orange is ultimately about the expressive qualities of both Brown's voice and lyrics. Her poet's soul is heard in the breathless "One Two Three" and the Rickie Lee Jones-reminiscent "Still Love" in which she even manages to rip the triteness out of the the word "heart."
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Boston Phoenix (back to top) Young folksinger
Karaugh Brown seems utterly comfortable on stage— as
long as she’s performing her songs. It’s those moments between
numbers that reveal her coltish streak, when her conversations with the
audience are punctuated by nervous breaths. But Brown needn’t worry.
Her CD-release show at Club Passim a couple Wednesdays back proved she
can captivate a crowd. And before that, she’d already won over
one of New England folk music’s toughest and most discerning fans:
Bill Morrissey. |