
Patrick Crowson
"Patrick Crowson"
by Johanna J. Bodde
PATRICK CROWSON "Patrick Crowson"
(Self-Released)
http://www.patrickcrowson.com/
www.cdbaby.com/cd/crowson
http://http://insurgentcountry.net/Patrick%20Crowson%20-%20Review.htm
Don't worry, Patrick Crowson doesn't look one bit like the muddy creature on the cover of his self-titled CD! He is a handsome young man who explains: "You know, the cover came out of an accident. A friend of mine and I were doing construction down in Waco one Summer. We were bored of the heat and decided to make a claymation western. We spent some time creating the clay cowboys - borrowed a Super 8 camera with stop-motion - set up the light and started to film. Unfortunately the lights were too hot and the clay cowboy started to melt and that was pretty much the beginning and end of the western. I always liked the one shot we got. My friend always called it the "meltin' cowboy". He'd say: "Just like you and me in Waco, man."
Patrick was born in Alton, Illinois. How did he get involved in music? "As far as learning, my older brother Mark and my good friend Paul Bodig taught me more about music than anybody else - along with the first two Kristofferson records and some others. My first band was with my brother, a guy from Austin who just had a kid and a friend from Missouri. We were the Oblate Brothers. We played in a bunch of different Ice Houses in Houston. Played a couple of shows in Austin and a couple in Shreveport and then we just kinda burned out. We were moving pretty fast at the time but we had some fun. I took off for a while and ended up forming a band called Cockfighter. I ran into a guitarplayer whose heroes were The Minute Men. We made a couple records, made a lot of noise and then I was called back home for a while." Paul Bodig -the good friend- also wrote the biography, not your regular bio but a well-written novelette, that begins with a quote of Townes Van Zandt: "In motels, I've written a lot of songs during the day -- because in a motel room there's not much difference between the day and the night. When the door's closed and the big rubber curtains are shut, it's just like night." Patrick adds: "I don't think I really deserve to be mentioned in the same sentence but Townes Van Zandt is one of my heroes. Then of course Dylan, Kristofferson, Newbury and a bunch of others."
No big surprise, that his lyrics turned out to be impressionistic dark poetry, about people. "The present is always dark," said Patrick Crowson, who wrote the songs for his record at a particularly trying time and comments a year later: "As far as the inspiration and lyrics, it's hard to say. It's not like I'm trying to be coy or mysterious but once they're done I don't really think about them much. I'm glad they're there but why or how I got 'em doesn't really matter much to me." How about the music? Patrick lives now in the Boerum Hill neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York. His friends are Josh and Todd Allen from Meanwhiles. Josh produced the CD (together with Patrick) and plays guitars, piano, harmonium, genie organ, keyboards, sanctum & tone educator bells, while brother Todd is the bassist and Patrick himself plays guitar. Josh describes the results as "dark acoustic songs with shadowy arrangements weaving through the narratives."
Well, I hope my music loving friends who visit this site, also like listening to poetry. It's worth trying anyway! And if Townes Van Zandt had been born in the late 70s, he might have made music like this...
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Written by Johanna J. Bodde, March 2007.
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