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SUMMER BLANKET
Gripping, textured indie-pop from singer-songwriter Keith Michaud.
"His melodic, acoustic-based rockers dwell on themes of the lovelorn and hearts battered and bruised." Reviewer: Tamara Turner, CD Baby
Using Wilco, Dashboard Confessional and Ryan Adams as a
springboard for their own mix of spiraling emo, indie, psych folk and
spacious jam, Summer Blanket hones in on the points of connection
between sweet guitar lines, introspective harmonies and this cleverly
composed ache that is both lush and empty-feeling. Speaking to the
quality Dashboard fans have come to love (a hazy, stripped down,
exquisite nakedness of soul met with a juicy tenderness, a budding
sentiment of hope and meaning), "Whisper Louder" gives all that and
more, exploring the inner landscape for all its crags and canyons, its
precious gems and its rotting sludge. In short, this is a gorgeous 11-track album.
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Link to band website or contact - Myspace/summer blanket
Biography
KEITH MICHAUD of Summer Blanket performs a solo acoustic sets of his originals and covers.
Whisper Louder, the follow-up to 2004's acclaimed debut
Charm Wrestling from Summer Blanket, reveals that the simple pleasures
of Keith Michaud's songwriting continue to evolve. The subdued yet
bubbly folk pop of this South Florida songsmith features a few more
electric guitars this time around. His melodic, introspective
acoustic-based rockers circle on themes of the lovelorn and hearts
battered and bruised. But all is not melancholy in this pastoral,
chamber pop realm, especially in Michaud's sprightly additions of
piano, xylophone and sunny production details. (Milesofmusic.com)
Before we all turn into Stepford wives, listen to Charm Wrestling, the debut album from Summer Blanket, and soak up the regret and heartbreak of Keith Michaud’s voice as it glides over the dystopia of South Florida with achingly beautiful, blissful rock and the pastoral hues of something straining to break out of this water-logged state.” Charm Wrestling, Named Best Album of the Past 12 Months, 2004ť :: Keith Michaud named songwriter of the year by the Broward County New Times 2005.
Sophomore efforts can be a stick in the craw, with all its expectations. Summer Blanket's local press threw humbling accolades at the group for its debut. And there was even the occasional nod from notoriously fickle online zines. But when you're an artist still trying to make a name for yourself, you can breathe easy. Rest assured there was no pressure here.
Summer Blanket's debut, Charm Wrestling, was a deeply personal collection of mostly intimate folk-tinged tunes by Keith Michaud. However, when they took to the studio the second time around, Keith and Co. went in search of something bigger.
Whisper Louder: By name, it hints at what you can expect in the follow up. Bigger guitars, bigger production. Reinvention was not necessary to assuage fans and critics, but it did happened naturally. The band would like to think you'll find a marked evolution in the songs and production value.
Michaud and his merry band of musicians holed themselves up for three weeks, once again in Matt Cohen's Morning Drinker Studios in Pompano Beach, Florida. What came out of the sessions was nothing short of astounding. Gone are the intimate folk tunes, but what remains is the personal intimacy of the lyrics and delivery. We think that Whisper Louder speaks volumes. Copyright 2006 Pop Up Records.
Out of Nowhere: Pop Up Records bubbles up from South Florida's musical depths
By Mosi Reeves
Article Published Jan 22, 2004
Last November Pop Up Records issued its first release, an album by Summer Blanket titled Charm Wrestling. The album has a rare, fragile quality emphasized by its downbeat melodies and confessional verse, the work of Keith Michaud, who plays bass and guitar while singing on its nine tracks, and a handful of friends who accompanied him on esoteric instruments like glockenspiel and Fender Rhodes piano. "I'm a walking document of failure/It's a talent all my own," he characteristically sings on "Someday," a floating pop ballad similar to the other eight tracks on the album. Despite Charm Wrestling's melancholy air, it feels honest, even if Michaud's words are more reflective of his own internal life than any sort of universal truth. Jason Knapfel and Nick Dominguez, the two owners behind Pop Up, describe the recording as a coup of sorts. "We're big fans of his," admits Knapfel during a joint interview with Dominguez at Morning Drinker Studios in Fort Lauderdale. (A third associate of the label is Derek Cordova of Further Seems Forever, who helps the duo look for potential talent.) True, Charm Wrestling is a strong debut from a promising new singer-songwriter. But Michaud is also a relatively unknown musician released on a new, untested label. Still both parties are capturing South Florida music fans' attention with their surprisingly high production values. The sound of the album is rich and full, a professional record produced on the cheap. Recorded at MDS Productions, it cost a mere $650 to make. "[Studio owner] Matt Cohen was super-fair to us," says Knapfel. The CD's artwork, a simple picture of floating clouds, is clean and striking, as visually impressive as anything a better-known indie company such as Sub Pop might have produced. Like fellow local overachievers Counterflow Recordings, Pop Up doesn't sacrifice quality for frugality. Pop Up is the result of several conversations Knapfel and Dominguez had in early 2003. The duo both work at www.ediets.com, a health and fitness Website. "Every week when we'd go out to lunch, I'd throw out the idea of starting a label," remembers 33-year-old Knapfel. He turned to Michaud, with whom he had once shared membership in a band called Waking Universe, to be his first artist. "That was more of a heavy rocking band, more on the punk side," says Knapfel, who now plays in another group called Brite Side. "But I always liked his singer-songwriter [songs]." He eventually got a chance to hear Michaud's demo tape; impressed, he asked if he could issue the songs as Pop Up's first release.
Start-up costs for Pop Up took about $1000 of Knapfel and Dominguez's personal savings, which went toward production costs for the Summer Blanket CD. For his part, Dominguez, who is 28, designed the disc's artwork and the label Website, seeking to establish an image that was clean, professional, and iconic. The label name itself is a play on the frustrating pop-up windows that appear when you load certain sites. They hope, though, their output won't be as annoying. "It was a labor of love," says Knapfel of the Summer Blanket release.
Although it didn't take much money for Pop Up's owners to get into the music industry game, drawing attention to its efforts and building an audience for its products will eventually prove to be the bigger challenge. Toward that end they've contracted with Fanatic Promotion, a New York-based independent publicity firm that has worked with Sleater-Kinney, My Morning Jacket, and Steve Earle, to handle their national press. "I know they've done good work," says Knapfel, who adds that he first heard of the firm through his freelance writing assignments for the Sun-Sentinel. It doesn't help, though, that South Florida's audience for original live music is something of a work in progress. Only a handful of people showed up when Summer Blanket opened for the Album Leaf and American Analog Set last December. "If you're not a pop-punk band bringing in a bunch of sixteen-year-old kids, doing adult-oriented original rock is a little bit of a harder sell," says Knapfel. "So we'll often do shows in front of 40 people. If we sell five CDs that night, we're happy."
Maybe that's why Pop Up's attention is focused on the rest of the country instead of its own hometown. Its next projects include a release by Army of Me, a Washington, D.C. punk band with an established following; and Artists Speak Against Poverty, a unique compilation that will feature spoken-word tracks by Daryl Palumbo (Glassjaw), Jason Gleason (Further Seems Forever), Vinnie Caruana (Movielife), and several other underground heroes. With luck, both forthcoming albums will further position Pop Up as an outpost for consistently strong music that happens to be based in South Florida. "We're not really a local label," says Knapfel. "We want to be like any other label, no matter where we're based."
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