Infinity Music Hall & Bistro
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An Evening with Hiss Golden Messenger + Aoife O'Donovan

Hartford

DETAILS

Tue, August 23, 2022
Hartford, CT
Show: 8 PM

Ticket INFO


Member Presale: 4/27/22 12 PM
Public Onsale: 4/29/22 12 PM

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An Evening with Hiss Golden Messenger + Aoife O'Donovan
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Hiss Golden Messenger

Connect with this artist:

www.hissgoldenmessenger.com

Artist Bio

“I went looking for peace,” says songwriter M.C. Taylor of Hiss Golden Messenger about his 
new album Quietly Blowing It, out March 26, 2021, on Merge Records. “It’s not exactly a record 
about the state of the world—or my world—in 2020, but more a retrospective of the past five years 
of my life, painted in sort of impressionistic hues. Maybe I had the presence of mind when I was 
writing Quietly Blowing It to know that this was the time to go as deep as I needed to in order to 
make a record like this. And I got the time required in order to do that.” He pauses and laughs 
ruefully. “I got way more time than I needed, actually.”
Quietly Blowing It was written and arranged by Taylor in his home studio—his 8’ × 10’ sanctuary 
packed floor to ceiling with books, records, and old guitars—as he watched the chaotic world spin 
outside his window. “Writing became a daily routine,” he explains, “and that was a ballast for me. 
Having spent so much time on the road over the past ten years, where writing consistently with 
any kind of flow can be tricky, it felt refreshing. And being in my studio, which is both isolated from 
and totally connected to the life of my family, felt appropriate for these songs.” Between March 
and June, Taylor wrote and recorded upwards of two dozen songs—in most cases playing all of 
the instruments himself—before winnowing the collection down and bringing them to the Hiss 
band. In July, the group of musicians, with Taylor in the production seat, went into Overdub Lane 
in Durham, NC, for a week, where they recorded Quietly Blowing It as an organic unit honed to a 
fine edge from their years together on the road. “We all needed to be making that music together,” 
he recalls. “We’ve all spent so many years traveling all over the world, but in that moment, it felt 
cathartic to be recording those particular songs with each other in our own small hometown.”
Throughout Quietly Blowing It, Taylor brings his keen eye to our “broken American moment”—as 
he first sang on Hiss Golden Messenger’s critically acclaimed, GRAMMY®
-nominated Terms of 
Surrender (2019)—in ways that feel devastatingly intimate and human. Beginning with the 
wanderer’s lament of “Way Back in the Way Back,” with its rallying cry of “Up with the mountains, 
down with the system,” Taylor carries the listener on a musical journey that continually returns to 
themes of growing up, loss, obligation, and labor with piercing clarity, and his musical influences—
including classic Southern soul and gospel, renegade country, and spiritual jazz—have never felt 
more genuine. Indeed, Quietly Blowing It is a distillation of the rolling Hiss Golden Messenger 
groove, from the rollicking, Allman-esque “The Great Mystifier” to the chiming falsetto soul of “It 
Will If We Let It,” to the smoky, shuffling title track with its bittersweet guitar assist from Nashville 
legend Buddy Miller. The album ends with soulful lead single “Sanctuary,” a song about trying to 
reconcile tragedy and joy, with references to John Prine (“Handsome Johnny had to go, child…”), 
economic disparity, and the redemptive quality of hope. Indeed, when he sings, “Feeling bad, 
feeling blue, can’t get out of my own mind; but I know how to sing about it,” it feels like the album’s 
spiritual thesis. Throughout Quietly Blowing It, Taylor reckons with the tumultuous present in 
wholly personal terms, encouraging listeners to do the same. “These songs always circle back to 
the things that I feel like I have a handle on and the things that I’m not proud of about myself. 
When I think of the phrase ‘quietly blowing it,’ I think of all the ways that I’ve misstepped, misused 
my gifts, miscommunicated. ‘Born on the level, quietly blowing it.’ That’s what’s on my mind there. 
Always fuckin’ up in little ways.”

Aoife O'Donovan

Connect with this artist:

www.aoifeodonovan.com

Grammy award-winning artist Aoife O’Donovan operates in a thrilling musical world beyond genre. Deemed “a vocalist of unerring instinct” by the New York Times, she has released three critically-acclaimed and boundary-blurring solo albums including her most recent record, 2022’s boldly orchestrated and literarily crafted Age Of Apathy. Recorded and written over the course of Winter and Spring 2021 with acclaimed producer Joe Henry (Bonnie Raitt, Rhiannon Giddens), Age Of Apathy is “stunning” (Rolling Stone) and “taps into the propulsion of prime Joni Mitchell” (Pitchfork).

A savvy and generous collaborator, Aoife is one third of the group I’m With Her with bandmates Sara Watkins and Sarah Jarosz. The trio’s debut album See You Around was hailed as “willfully open-hearted” by NPR Music. I’m With Her earned an Americana Music Association Award in 2019 for Duo/Group of the Year, and a Grammy-award in 2020 for Best American Roots Song.

O’Donovan spent the preceding decade as co-founder and front woman of the string band, Crooked Still and is the featured vocalist on The Goat Rodeo Sessions - the group with Yo-Yo Ma, Stuart Duncan, Edgar Meyer, and Chris Thile. She has appeared as a featured vocalist with over a dozen symphonies including the National Symphony Orchestra, written for Alison Krauss, performed with jazz trumpeter Dave Douglas, and spent a decade as a regular contributor to the radio variety shows “Live From Here” and “A Prairie Home Companion.”


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