Late At Night
The Beauty Way
Performed By
The Beauty Way
Album UPC
888174780641
CD Baby Track ID
TR0000396667
Label
The Beauty Way
Released
2014-04-01
BPM
130
Rated
0
ISRC
ushm21408114
Year
2014
Spotify Plays
21
Songtrust Track ID
180046
Writers
Writer
James P Bouchard
Songwriter ID
39986
PRO
ASCAP
Pub Co
CD Baby Publishing
Composer
James P Bouchard
ClearanceFacebook Sync License,Traditional Sync,YouTube Sync ServiceOne Stop
Publisher Admin
CD Baby Publishing
Rights Controlled
Master and Publishing
Rights
One-Stop: Master + 100% Publishing
Original/Cover/Public Domain
original
Country
United States - Massachusetts
Description
Roots Americana music; 4 musicians with roots in country, folk, classic rock, blues and R'n'B, taking detours into each one in turn but forging their own path amid a sound all their own using guitars, ukuleles bass and drums.
Notes
Alternative Americana Country Rock Ska Rythym & Blues Old School everything music, often featuring lap steel guitar so it refers to old-school country, ukulele so it sounds plucky and old-timey, fleet-fingered electric guitar that smokes like the best of classic rock, multiple voices with a varied sound.
lineup:
Jim Bouchard; ukulele, guitars and vocals - grew up listening to The Beach Boys and Beatles as played by his older brothers, Albert and Joe, who went on to found The Blue Oyster Cult. Played banjo and guitar on the folk scene in Boston in the ‘90s, in various incarnations, solo and as part of seminal Americana collaborative Toots Rambles; recent convert to the ukulele and despite its connotations as the chosen instrument of Tiny Tim, Jim tries to push it into more of a rock realm.
Peter D’Angelo; drums and percussion - played in Punk Alt-Country band Big Barn Burning throughout the late ‘80s, most recently found playing with classic power rock band Green Street Station and now also The Beauty Way.
Cate O’Connell; lap steel and electric and acoustic guitars and vocals - our lap steel virtuoso played in bands with Matt Nathanson in high school and went on to discover the lap steel; studied with David Lindley, she has a great appreciation for classic rock especially Jackson Browne.
Severin Grossman; bass - the true road-worn veteran of the group, longtime bass player with Willie Alexander and the Boom Boom Band.
Why the name “The Beauty Way”?: It’s a song we like to play by Eliza Gilkyson, but also there’s also the meaning that comes from the Navajo culture about living the right way, however vague that sounds, its expression is in such concepts as beauty, perfection, harmony, goodness, normality, success, well-being, blessedness, and happiness. Sort of like the Buddhist idea of The Middle Way, treading lightly on this earth with compassion to all. And we’d like to do something that has a bit of beauty in it, so there you have it..
lineup:
Jim Bouchard; ukulele, guitars and vocals - grew up listening to The Beach Boys and Beatles as played by his older brothers, Albert and Joe, who went on to found The Blue Oyster Cult. Played banjo and guitar on the folk scene in Boston in the ‘90s, in various incarnations, solo and as part of seminal Americana collaborative Toots Rambles; recent convert to the ukulele and despite its connotations as the chosen instrument of Tiny Tim, Jim tries to push it into more of a rock realm.
Peter D’Angelo; drums and percussion - played in Punk Alt-Country band Big Barn Burning throughout the late ‘80s, most recently found playing with classic power rock band Green Street Station and now also The Beauty Way.
Cate O’Connell; lap steel and electric and acoustic guitars and vocals - our lap steel virtuoso played in bands with Matt Nathanson in high school and went on to discover the lap steel; studied with David Lindley, she has a great appreciation for classic rock especially Jackson Browne.
Severin Grossman; bass - the true road-worn veteran of the group, longtime bass player with Willie Alexander and the Boom Boom Band.
Why the name “The Beauty Way”?: It’s a song we like to play by Eliza Gilkyson, but also there’s also the meaning that comes from the Navajo culture about living the right way, however vague that sounds, its expression is in such concepts as beauty, perfection, harmony, goodness, normality, success, well-being, blessedness, and happiness. Sort of like the Buddhist idea of The Middle Way, treading lightly on this earth with compassion to all. And we’d like to do something that has a bit of beauty in it, so there you have it..
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