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Daniel Martin Moore & Joan Shelley
Farthest Field is a duo-project, as we like to say,
and Joan calls it, an album that lives entirely
in a day-dream. Heres the full story
of the album, told by the poet Marianne Worthington.
And below, theres a bit of the bio & also
a video of the first song from the record, recorded
live at the Emery Theatre in Cincinnati, OH:
The lyrics and music of Farthest Field, the new duet
project from Daniel Martin Moore and Joan Shelley, have
many of the same traits that mark the best and most
admired ancient Chinese poems: a sense of deep
stillness and reverence, a matching of physical landscapes
to inner moods, the dichotomous themes of travel and
homesickness, and, ultimately, lessons in how to be
quietly contemplative yet involved in a place surrounded
by these endless hills and water.
This comparison seems fitting considering 2012 marks
not only the debut of Farthest Field from Ol Kentuck
Recordings, but also the birth year of Daniels
favorite Chinese poet, Tu Fu, born 13 centuries ago
this year.
Daniel and Joan have been referring to Farthest Field
as the duo project from its inception. The
whole thing was inspired by Trawlermans
Song by Vashti Bunyan and Robert Lewis,
said Daniel. Joanie and I worked up a version
of it for a tour we did last summer, and we loved singing
it. We got so much positive feedback from it we started
thinking of other songs we might like to do, and over
time, the idea for this record came to be.
The album was recorded in December, 2011 and February,
2012 in Louisville, Kentucky. The ten original compositions
on Farthest Field display the two Kentucky-based musicians
at their singing-songwriting best. The landscapes of
their words are united with crystalline, nearly fragile,
vocals and minimal, but engaging, accompaniment. This
gentle, acoustic music exhibits a mature and calm transparency
that perfectly matches these poetic lyrics about leaving
and coming home.
As the newest release in the Ol Kentuck catalog, Farthest
Field is yet another example of the collaborative spirit
between artists. While we wrote the songs
individually, we worked out the harmonies and arrangements
and instrumentations together, said Daniel. And
we made it ourselves, playing everything and recording
it ourselves (which was a first for us both). That was
a little intimidating, but it was nice to be limited
in that way, too. There were several covers we were
considering, but as we whittled it down, it was our
own compositions that we focused on. A few of the tunes
were written just before the sessions. At least one
of them is five years old. Most are some age in between.
Joan believed that the duos vocal blend
and complimentary instincts for harmony promised to
make an interesting album. We come from very different
song-writing styles, Joan said, and the
thing that seemed to emerge was this idea that we could
make a voice, one that was mine and his together. There
are only a few lines on this album that arent
sung by both of us in harmony.
Farthest Field, like a revered Chinese poem, is best
savored all at once, best considered as a single musical
experience, because the music and stories walk us through
a single day.
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