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Edie
Carey w/ John Dobat
“Accidental Poet,” one of Edie Carey's earliest songs, describes a particularly eloquent friend, but could just as easily refer to Carey herself and the circuitous and serendipitous route that led her to become one of the country's most notable young songwriters. Somehow, all of the seemingly unrelated turns – from her intention to become a doctor, to a tiny music room in the basement of a Morningside Heights' chapel, to a year in Italy – managed to steer her towards music.
Born in Burlington, Vermont and raised in the Boston suburbs by her English teacher father, therapist mother, and poet stepmother, Edie Carey couldn't help but learn to love
words. So, she made plans to major in English/Creative Writing with Pre-Med classes at Barnard College in New York City. However, during her freshman year, two pivotal discoveries knocked those plans right off course - The Postcrypt Coffeehouse and the Italian language.
In the Postcrypt, an intimate music venue in the basement of St. Paul's Chapel at Columbia University, the seeds of possibility were sewn as Carey watched Jeff Buckley, Ani Difranco, and Lisa Loeb among others perform unplugged to candlelit audiences. She saw how words could sometimes have even greater power when used in a song, and simultaneously came to appreciate the sonorous quality of words regardless of their meaning or the melody in which they were framed. This appreciation for their musicality grew deeper with the study of Italian, which eventually led her to spend a year abroad in Bologna, where she taught herself to play the guitar.
After the release of The Falling Places in 1998, she began venturing outside of New York City to play neighboring east coast cities, and gradually expanded throughout the United States, then Canada and the UK. While the debut was a very sparsely produced acoustic contemporary folk album, Call Me Home, Carey's follow-up in 2000, was by comparison an all-out pop record, a tribute to her early inspirations and the reckless abandon of her childhood. With its release, the “accidents” continued, and Carey unexpectedly found herself achieving her childhood dream of appearing on television with Ed McMahon.
Since 2000, she has been working as a full-time performing songwriter, touring rigorously to promote all of her independently self-released records, which now include Come Close, her 2002 live CD, When I Was Made (2004), and the latest addition to her growing catalog, Another Kind of Fire. Looking back, she has to wonder if maybe this wasn't an accident after all.
John
Dobat writes songs that echo the path we all travel; faith, love,
hurt, and our ties to those around us. His style is eclectic and
original. With a musical background stemming from acoustic rock,
bluegrass, traditional country, and pop, John has a keen sense of
melody and words. In 2008, John was awarded Finalist/Honors in the
national Great American Song Contest for his song "Better
Angels" He also received honorable mention in the Great Lakes
Songwriting Contest for "Give up my Heart" in 2007, and in
2005.
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"Edie
Carey is gifted with one of those voices that could sound great
singing anything. So the mystery and beauty on her [third] studio
full-length is how she maintains an intimate, delicate approach on
her elegant, if low-key singer-songwriter folk-pop. Economic
instrumentation forces all your attention toward the gentle
story-telling, rich with humanity and insight... Vulnerable and
pleasing, Carey draws us into her world, where we find we have a
lot in common."
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Paste
Magazine
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