Lonesomehighway Issue4.Pdf
In the fair city of Detroit, nestled among the garage- rock nooks and country crannies, lurks the music of Blanche. Husband and wife Dan and Tracee Miller trade intense and haunting vocals over an uneasy sea of pedal steel, banjo, raw guitar sounds, and sparse, driving drumming. The moods created in the songs seem to define Blanche. Some songs are sad and pretty, while others have a powerful, spooky feel. The melodies trick you into singing along with tales of superstitions, garbage picking, fading trust, and feelings of lost hope. The sound combines the intense desperation of the Gun Club, the sincere sadness of the Carter Family, and the creepy playfulness of Lee Hazlewood Intro taken from the biography on the Blanche website which is well worth a visit and a wonderful design. www.blanchemusic.com INTERVIEW BY STEVE RAPID | PHOTOGRAPHY BY RONNIE NORTON Tell us what the secret of Little Amber Bottles is? Feeny on the pedal steel and his singing. That’s what is most important that overall sound, everyone bringing Well Tracee wrote that song so that’s more for her. I think you can find the answers to little amber bottles in dif- what they have to it. ferent ways, because they can be medication, something that helps you, or you can look to little amber bottles for the wrong reasons. It’s whichever way you use them. I think people rely on medication too much. But you have done some solo shows? Well every once in awhile I do it. I think I’ve done three.
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