Friday, December 24, 2010

Best of 2010

Coloradoan Top Bands of 2010

2010 was a good year for music in Colorado. Just take a look at this list of albums put out by homegrown artists and bands this year.

Americana/Bluegrass/Jam

Blue Canyon Boys, "Mountain Bound"

Boulder Acoustic Society, "Champion of Disaster"

Chris McGarry, "And the Weary Eyes Reply"

Grant Gordy, "Grant Gordy"

Great American Taxi, "Reckless Habits"

Haunted Windchimes, "Honey Moonshine"

Hollyfelds, "Lo Bueno, Lo Mao, Lo Feo"

Lonesome Traveler, "Looking for a Way"

Loose Cannon Bluegrass, "Loose Cannon Bluegrass"

Mile Markers, "Take to the Road"

Mollie O'Brien & Rich Moore, "Saints & Sinners"

Nathaniel Rateliff, "In Memory of Loss"

Paper Bird, "When the River Took Flight"

Sean Hunting Morse, "Lines from Someplace"

Sweet Sunny South, "Carried Off By a Twister"

David Williams & the Wildgrass Band featuring Kristina Murray, "The Crazy Kind"

WhiteWater Ramble, "All Night Drive"




Mad Mackerel’s 2010 Top Ten Series: No 8, Mrs Mackerel

Here at MM we share, chat, argue, bury and praise music on a pretty regular basis…like daily. So throughout the year, the Mackerel crew (Mrs Mackerel, Barry-Sean, Christy-Popper, Dr Roddy, Polly Pocket, Starbar, MM and others) keep their own ever-changing top tens ready for publication at the climax of the festive season.

So last, but very much not least, is the lovely (though flu-stricken) Mrs Mackerel and her choices for 2010.

4. Haunted Windchimes – Sea Bride (Visit their website here. We can’t post the song or find a stream or a video….)

I loathe wind-chimes. Pointless instruments of aural torture. But once I got past the name, well this is a finger-pickin’ good tune. One of my outstanding films of 2010 wasWinter’s Bone and there’s a scene in it where a hill-billy Nan and her mates are sat round in what looks like someone’s front room/bar. What they make is real music for the soul. I could imagine the Haunted Windchimes pulling up a chair and being right at home – and I mean this musically, not in an in-bred, gun-toting sort of way (she adds hastily).


Mad Mackerel’s favorite albums of 2010

So after much deliberation, head scratching, discussion, and more head scratching, we have MM’s favourite albums of 2010. And we choose our words very carefully here, because we would not presume them to be the best, only those that have given us the most pleasure and enjoyment, records that we have returned to again and

24. Haunted Windchimes – Honey Moonshine


Traditional, old-timey backwoods, backporch music that burrowed its way into your head and then refused to budge.

Download The Haunted Windchimes – Don’t Take My Baby Away (Baby Back) mp3

http://madmackerel.wordpress.com/2010/12/15/mad-mackerels-albums-of-the-year/

KRCC'S BEST OF 2010

Top 10 List for the Grass Roots Revival for 2010:

  1. Infamous Stringdusters, Things That Fly (April 2010 Sugar Hill) (10)
  2. Darrell Scott, A Crooked Road (May 2010 Full Light) (9)
  3. The Haunted Windchimes, Honey Moonshine (June 2010 Blank Tape) (8)
  4. Keller & the Keels, Thief (5/2010 SCI Fidelity) (7)
  5. John Hiatt, The Open Road (March 2010 New West) (7)
  6. Crazy Heart, Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (January 2010, New West) (7)
  7. Roy Schneider, Erleichda (May 2010 Shiny Gnu) (6)
  8. Crooked Still, Some Strange Country (May 2010 Signature Sounds) (6)
  9. Head for the Hills, Head for the Hills (2010, Self) (6)
  10. Nora Jane Struthers, Nora Jane Struthers (June 2010 Self) (6)

The last number in parentheses indicates the number of spins on the Revival this year.

http://www.krcc.org/top2010.php



Sunday, October 31, 2010

Write up in Pueblo Chieftain


Harmonic convergence

Haunted Windchimes spread their musical magic, near and far


Posted: Sunday, October 31, 2010 12:00 am
By AMY MATTHEW | amym@chieftain.com | 0 comments

It's an interesting world The Haunted Windchimes inhabit.

This five-piece Pueblo band has a sound that is perfectly suited to college radio but also sounds like it could have existed in a Southern blues joint a hundred years ago.

Their music is decidedly lo-fi — no drum kit takes up space in the band vehicle — but their marketing approach is strictly 21st century, utilizing a well-developed website, iTunes and self-recording to spread their musical word.

They've garnered strong support from audiences and critics in Denver, Colorado Springs and elsewhere. They've opened for Arlo Guthrie and played Red Rocks as part of the Monolith Festival lineup. Yet gigs here in the Steel City, their home base, are rare.

"I don't feel like Pueblo's disregarded us. We just have to work a little harder (here)," said Inaiah Lujan, the band's leader.

The band has a significant core of devoted supporters here. Last summer they made their first appearance at the Bluegrass on the River Festival, to good reviews.
However, a combination of fewer venues, a smaller audience base, a music scene that leans more toward rock and metal than the Windchimes' high harmonies (though Inaiah believes that is changing) and, yes, the band's desire to broaden its reach means they must venture outside Pueblo County. When the goal is to make a full-time living from your music, that's a given.

But here they remain: Inaiah on guitar and vocals; Desirae Garcia on ukulele and vocals; Inaiah's sister, Chela Lujan, on banjo and vocals; Sean Fanning on bass; and Mike Clark on guitar, mandolin and harmonica. They range in age from 22 to 32. Clark lives in Colorado Springs and drives down for practices at the welcoming South Side home that is shared by the Lujans and Garcia.

Maybe this out-of-town popularity actually is a benefit. Pueblo has become a respite — a quieter place to focus on the work of music.

"We stay because of the sense of community, the cost of living. Pueblo just seems simple," said Inaiah. "It's enough out of the limelight that I can get a break from it all and not have to be performing all the time. For right now, it makes the most sense."

So with roots planted here, the band continues to spread its branches toward a wider world.

Americana via punk

You could say The Haunted Windchimes — the band name was inspired by a set of chimes outside the Lujans’ parents’ house that would make sounds even when there was no wind — owes its creation to a genre of music that usually appeals to an entirely different audience.
"I come from a world of punk rock and played in a punk band here in Pueblo," said Inaiah, who moved here about nine years ago with Chela and the rest of their family. "I come from that school of thought and that world. I held on to those sort of political beliefs for a long time."
Hearing that is a surprise, given his personality. This is a man who has a clear passion for life and love, but whose demeanor veers much closer to George Harrison than Iggy Pop.

"What made me gravitate toward what I'm doing now is the simplicity," he said. "The other had gotten so complicated. This was giving back to what it's all about. The ‘three chords and the truth’ mentality became my mantra."

Around the time he was delving into this new musical direction, Inaiah met Garcia through My-Space. It was, he said, "one of those love-at-first-sight deals." They started writing songs together.

"We were writing these minor love ballads, songs for a couple," Inaiah said.
"It was totally different, all romantic and spooky," said Garcia.
As the music evolved, so did the band. Chela joined first.
"I wouldn't let them do music without me," she said.

Clark jumped on stage during one of the trio's live shows and started playing harmonica. Fanning saw the group play at The Downtown Bar in Pueblo; he had recently moved here from Wichita, Kan., and Inaiah was the first person he met.

"Inaiah may not have said yes (to Fanning joining) except he knew Sean was a pretty stellar musician," said Garcia.

Within two years The Haunted Windchimes went from a duo to a quintet. The women, who focused on singing when the band was a trio, each took up an instrument to add to the sound.
Their first show with the current lineup was a memorable one, opening for Denver-based band DeVotchKa at Armstrong Hall in Colorado Springs in 2008.

"I feel like our musical birth was in Colorado Springs," said Inaiah. "It was the first place to really get us . . . to make us feel like part of a musical community."

‘Music nerds’

One of the Windchimes' greatest accomplishments has nothing to do with their musical talents. They form an incredibly functional band, personality-wise. Anyone who's spent time around music groups understands the significance of that.

Sure, there's the brother-sister bond between the Lujans, and Inaiah and Garcia's relationship. But spend an evening with them, watch an impromptu jam session, and what envelops the room isn't just the sweet notes and energy, but the camaraderie.

"We're friends," said Garcia. "I'll see other bands (who) don't seem to like each other, and it's weird."

Everyone else in the band refers to Inaiah as the leader, but it's obviously a democratic enterprise.

"No one's value is worth more than anybody else's," said Clark.

Everyone contributes songs. Fanning, who made his living for several years as a freelance musician in Wichita, does most of the arranging.

These days, touring means everyone loads themselves into Mitch, their old-but-new RV, for some real togetherness.

"We can get five songs done going down the road," said Clark.

The group's musical tastes are far-reaching. A stack of vinyl rests on the floor of the Lujan/Garcia living room; names such as Bob Dylan, Howlin' Wolf, The Beatles, Radiohead and The Beach Boys appear on the covers.

"Long live analog," said Fanning.

Chela favors "conscious, underground hip-hop" by artists like Sage Francis. Garcia lists Velvet Underground, Pixies and Animal Collective among her favorites.

Fanning goes for jazz, with John Coltrane and James Jamerson, the uncredited bassist on many Motown classics, getting specific mention. Clark loves the blues and Led Zeppelin.

“ ‘(Bron-Yr-Aur) Stomp’ (by Zeppelin) — that could be a Windchimes song any day," Clark said.
Inaiah is a devotee of the Beatles, Wings and Neil Young, among others.

"The Beatles is a mom thing," he said. "She knew how to play her favorite Beatles songs (on guitar) and we learned to play on my parents' classical guitars."

He said his attention to the Fab Four comes in phases. According to the other band members, one of those phases has a grip on him right now.

"Inaiah has gone headfirst into the swimming pool of Beatles obsession and he's dragging everybody with him," said Garcia.

"And we love it," added Clark.

"We're all just total music nerds, basically," said Fanning.

All of those diverse ingredients find their way into the Windchimes catalog.
"I think everything in music is unconscious," Inaiah said. "You can sit down and say you're going to write a song — that's conscious — but everything after that is unconscious. It's like dreaming.

Things come out of the woodwork.
"Punk, rock, country — it's all there and all relevant in some weird way."

They've put out two full-length albums, "An Evening With: The Haunted Windchimes" and "Honey-Moonshine," as well as several EPs, and done various side projects on their own label, Blank-Tape Records. The band members said the label, founded in 2008, is another way to control their own creations and provide support to other independent artists.

Music is life

The Windchimes' ambition isn't immediately evident. They are such a genial, unpretentious group that the business side doesn't appear until they start answering questions. Once the subject comes up, it's obvious how seriously all of them take this venture.
"Every day we do something for the band," said Clark.

It might mean updating the website, fixing Mitch, working with their booking agent, practicing or writing — always writing.

"We're a really hard-working band," said Inaiah. "We got screwed over by a lot of promoters early on because we didn't know any better and we thought getting $25 and free drinks was good. Then we started to take on more of a professional (approach) and determine our value."
Now their shows are booked for them and they're playing larger venues. They played the Fox Theatre in Boulder earlier this week and will return to Armstrong Hall Thursday night, this time as the headlining act. They play to audiences comprising older people, punk fans and even children — a variety which pleases them.

For now, all of the members still have a job and/or school occupying some of their time. They know it's all part of the process.

"I feel like it's happening in a very organic fashion," said Inaiah. "What's required of us is more patience."

Next up: recording a second live CD at the Western Jubilee Warehouse in Colorado Springs, the site of their first live recording. That will take place in December. Work on a new album is ongoing and the band already has enough songs written to fill two discs.

But while the business side is necessary, the group remains, as Fanning put it, a bunch of music nerds, and Inaiah remembers the moment he completely bought into the potential of The Haunted Windchimes.

"It was our CD release show on March 20 (of this year)," he said. "It really became apparent to me. I looked out to a sold-out crowd rallying around us. Love was so imminent and so powerful I feel like it changed me forever. The planets just lined up and showed me the potential of a better world, if that makes sense."

Friday, October 1, 2010

P.U.L.P People's Choice Awards 2010


PULP's 1st annual People's Choice Awards went down last night without a hitch! PULP readers chose which bars and bands they think are the best in Pueblo. Blank-Tape represented with winners in two categories including; "Band Most Likely To Make Pueblo Famous." Read the details below.

BAND MOST LIKELY TO MAKE PUEBLO FAMOUS:
THE HAUNTED WINDCHIMES

Having recently opened for Arlo Guthrie in Colorado Springs and with a Red Rocks show and several tours already under their belt, the Haunted Windchimes are well on their way to being nationally known. Bringing Pueblo's music scene along on their coattails, they also give you someone famous to brag about knowing. But you already new that.

-PULP

Check them out at: www.hauntedwindchimes
On tour now! www.hauntedwindchimes.com/shows.html
in Lyons and Longmont this weekend! (Oct 1 & 2)

BEST SOLO PERFORMER
INAIAH LUJAN

Inaiah Lujan is a fixture on the Pueblo music scene, fronting several different bands (including the Haunted Windchimes) ranging in style from hardcore to alt-country to blues and folk. A student of many types of music, all of which he brings to his performances, Inaiah is both a talented musician and a compelling performer, making him a clear choice for the best solo performer catagory.

-PULP

Hear Inaiah's music at: myspace.com/inaiahlujan
Upcoming Shows: October 6th at The Downtown Bar, October 18th at The Triple Nickel

For more info on the PULP awards visit: www.pueblopulp.com

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Heading south to New Mexico this weekend


The Haunted Windchimes will travel south this weekend to perform at The KTAO Solar Center in Taos New Mexico. The show will take place at 7pm this Saturday the 18th of September.

Check out the KTAO website for more info

And don't forget to tune in to KTAO tomorrow morning at 8:30am for an interview with the Windchimes' Inaiah Lujan. 101.9 if you are in the KTAO listening area. Or follow this link to stream the show on-line.

www.hauntedwindchimes.com
www.blanktaperecords.org

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Article in Colorado Springs Independent!



Reverb

Over the course of the past three years, I have written about the Haunted Windchimes on approximately 32 occasions. And in this time, I have witnessed more than just the personal and professional growth of a group of fine young musicians — it's what I truly feel was the planting of a musical and cultural seed.

I first met Inaiah Lujan, guitarist, vocalist and founding member of the Pueblo-based Americana quintet, shortly after he had recorded a 20-song demo of solo material called Songs from a Small Town. We were talking "music" at my record store that I'm not supposed to talk about, when I said something about my friend Joe Kuzma's completely brilliant self-recorded albums, The Modern Italian Cinema and Laissez la Peur du Rouge aux Bêtes à Cornes, and how his music completely disrupted my auditory sensibilities, forcing me to re-evaluate everything I thought I knew about music.

Inaiah told me about his own self-recorded album, and how he hoped I would have a similar reaction to his work. "Yeah right, kid!?" I thought to myself as he eagerly ran out to grab a copy.

Days later, when I finally got around to listening (as I learned long ago never to listen to an album in the presence of its creator), the experience was unnerving. Was this real? Could this be happening? How could some of the most intriguing original music I've heard in years be created by regular kids, in their bedrooms and basements, right here in Southern Colorado? Again, I was awestruck.

Shortly thereafter, I heard that Inaiah had met a girl, Desirae Garcia, and that she was going to be joining him onstage, and together they'd be called the Haunted Windchimes. "No!" I thought naively, until seeing them perform together at a crowded Kinfolks. It was clear, this Desi was no Yoko. Twice proven wrong, I had no reservations when the pair added Inaiah's sister, Chela Lujan, on banjo and vocals, stand-up bassist Sean Fanning, and guitar/harp player Mike Clark (from the far less active but no less endearing Jack Trades).

Now, after doing four self-released albums (including their latest, Honey Moonshine, now in its second pressing since March) and countless shows, the band will be sharing a bill with the absolute embodiment of American folk music, Arlo Guthrie.

On Labor Day, Monday, Sept. 6, on the lawn of Monument Valley Park just west of the Fine Arts Center, the 'Chimes will be opening for Mr. Guthrie, the man who wrote the song "Alice's Restaurant," and what is, silly enough, one of my all-time favorites, "The Motorcycle Song." The man who played the opening day of the Woodstock Festival, and who carries the blood of Woody Guthrie in his veins!

"We'd gotten an offer to play with Glen Campbell at the [Denver] Botanic Gardens and that fell through," says Inaiah, "so we didn't want to get our hopes up ... But then I get a call from our management, Scott O'Malley and Associates, and they said, 'Arlo approved it, we got the gig!'"

For tickets, info and free album downloads, visit hauntedwindchimes.com.

There are about a dozen other awesome shows this week — including Cheap Girls and Damion Suomi & the Minor Prophets at the Triple Nickel on Friday, Sept. 3, and Living Legends with Black Pegasus and the ReMINDers at the Black Sheep on Tuesday, Sept. 7 — so dig a little, dig?

Send news, pix and seedlings to adam@csindy.com.

read original article

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Mad Mackerel Recommends Haunted Windchimes




We became aware of Haunted Windchimes via an eMusic recommendation and having some credits to use, duly downloaded the album Honey Moonshine as much for the great name and great artwork as anything else.

And, boy are we glad we did.

It is a wonderful album of authentic, bewitching folk that draws you in and holds you tight. Beautiful harmonies and the traditional topics of love, heartbreak, lonliness and desperation abound, but there is also the righteous anger of political protest A Ballad Of Human Progress to finish the album with a snarl. Banjo, guitar, harmonica, violin and drums provide much of the instrumentation and it is done wonderfully without a single bum note.

We have the video to Waitin’ On A Train for you, plus a download from previous album An Evening With The Haunted Windchimes. In fact both their previous albums can be downloaded for free from The Internet Archive here.

Visit their MySpace here or website here. Download the new album from eMusic here.

Download The Haunted Windchimes – Don’t Take My Baby Away (Baby Back) mp3 (from Honey Moonshine)

Download The Haunted Windchimes – Lordy Lordy mp3 (from An Evening With: The Haunted Windchimes)

read original article
Includes photos and a video

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Music festival a rousing success for organizers

Carie Canterbury
The Daily Record

Westcliffe’s two-day Wet Mountain Western Jubilee proved to be the success organizers had hoped for when they took it over for the first time this year.

“Our vision for this festival is we want this to be the friendliest, warmest — we want this to feel less like a production and more like a family reunion,” said Aaron Wolking, Sons and Brothers representative and event organizer.

Formerly called the Wet Mountain Western Days, the event was on the verge of being discontinued until the Sons and Brothers band stepped in.

“This festival existed for probably about 10 or 12 years,” Wolking said. “When we got the call the festival was potentially going away, we jumped in as Sons and Brothers Events, LLC — we wanted to do whatever we could to save this thing.

“It’s important culturally, and it’s important for the arts to keep these styles of music — we have western and cowboy and Americana — it’s all kind of roots based.”

Wolking said the Wet Mountain Valley has developed into a hot spot for great, kind of off-beat genre music, and the band didn’t want to see one of the cornerstone events of that reputation go away.

“We’ve been so fortunate, so blessed, to get to have Don Edwards and Waddie Mitchell here with us this weekend,” he said. “They’re great friends. We work through the same artist representative in Colorado Springs, and so that’s how we got to know Don and Waddie.”

Wolking said music lovers packed into the 8,000 square foot tent, and they loved the Category Stompers, as well as “local heroes,” Sugarfoot.

“The Haunted Windchimes from Pueblo have come in and stole the show,” he said. “They’re building a huge buzz in the southwestern United States, playing all the time. They came in here and just leveled the place.”

Sons and Brothers played host for the two-day event.

“We’ve been real honored and people continue to come see us and like what we’re doing,” Wolking said. “We’re real honored to get to be the host of this deal.”

Band members gathered for a jam session/concert Saturday night at Cliff Lanes in Westcliffe, Wolking said.

“It had the exact feel we want to represent in this festival,” he said. “We had triple fiddles and swing numbers; it was this really awesome time. People were dancing…it was just way to much fun. We came to the conclusion that this should be illegal; or they should at least tax this much fun — this isn’t hardly even right.”

“It’s just been outstanding,” he said. “I was giddy last night because it has just been phenomenal, this is just one of the most beautiful valleys in the entire state and the weather has been perfect. The tent has been jammed all day yesterday, and we’ve got a nice big turn out today. We couldn’t be happier with how the festival has gone.”

Cañon City resident Sharon Whitney attended Sunday’s show. She said she comes every year for the music, the atmosphere and the beautiful scenery.

“It’s been absolutely marvelous,” she said. “Every time, it’s been pure joy.”

She said she was especially touched by the Sons and Brothers Sunday morning performance.

“They definitely had me in tears this morning,” she said, “when they sang the song their dad wrote; the emotion on their faces just touches your heart.”

Whitney looked forward to hearing Waddie Mitchell.

“I’ve heard him before,” she said. “He’s fabulous. And Don Edwards, I have heard his music for years and years and years, and I’ve never seen him live before so I am so excited about that.”

Wolking said he had heard rumors that Michael Martin Murphey might show up but certainly was excited to see him join Mitchell and Edwards on stage.

“The fact that you get Don, Waddie and Murphey together is just awesome,” he said.

Since the weekend was such a big hit, Wolking said Sons and Brothers hopes to continue and develop the festival in the future.

“We’re really excited,” he said. “We’re definitely going to do it again next year.”

>Read original post

Monday, August 23, 2010

HAUNTED WINDCHIMES TO OPEN FOR ARLO GUTHRIE!!!




ARLO GUTHRIE
W/ SPECIAL GUESTS: THE HAUNTED WINDCHIMES

Labor Day, Monday, Sept. 6;
rain or shine.
Doors open at 6 p.m.; concert begins with The Haunted Windchimes at 7 p.m.

Tickets are $32. Purchase tickets online or call 719.634.5583

Arlo Guthrie, best known for the songs City of New Orleans and Alice’s Restaurant, played on the opening day of Woodstock in 1969. Now he will play the opening concert for what we hope will become a regular series of summer concerts at the FAC!

The venue is the lawn just west of the Fine Arts Center in Monument Valley Park, surrounding by trees with outstanding views of Pikes Peak and the Rocky Mountain Range.

The smell of the grass, a picnic dinner, visiting with friends and neighbors, Pikes Peak in the background and the incredible talent of Arlo Guthrie—what could be better?

COLORADO SPRINGS FINE ART CENTER

Friday, August 13, 2010

MOUNTAIN MUSIC

A popular Westcliffe music event is getting a reprieve, thanks to some of the region's well-known musicians.

The Wet Mountain Western Jubilee, formerly Wet Mountain Western Days, is scheduled for Aug. 21 and 22 under a large tent on the west end of town. The event used to be produced by the local chamber of commerce, but the organization decided to discontinue its involvement after last year's edition.

"There's a lot of work that goes on, a lot of liability, so I don't blame them," said Aaron Wolking of the Westcliffe-based band Sons and Brothers.

The continuation of the annual festival, which began in 1998, was in limbo until members of the Wolking family were urged to take over the production.

"We were kind of on the fence as far as what we wanted to do, but a lot of people called us up and asked if we were going to step in," said Wolking. "As a business decision, I'm not sure how great it was, but we wanted to at least do our part and give it a shot for one year to keep this thing going. Westcliffe has developed this reputation for being a hot spot for music."

The event lineup is impressive: Legendary western singer Don Edwards and cowboy poet Waddie Mitchell both will participate, as will Sons and Brothers. Rising Pueblo band The Haunted Windchimes and The Category Stompers from Tennessee have also joined the list of performers, providing a modern dose of American roots music. Local band Sugarfoot will kick off the performances both days.

"This is the biggest lineup we've ever had," said Wolking. "It's not often Don and Waddie show up together in this part of the world."

Daily tickets for the festival are $20; children 12 and younger get in free. Each act will perform a full set. Two-day passes are $35. An additional dance and concert will take place at 7:30 p.m. Saturday. Those tickets are $15.

"I would say it's a jam session, but it will be a little more formal than that," Wolking said of the dance. "It will be a collaboration among the artists."

Future editions of the festival are not assured. Wolking said if it makes money, Sons and Brothers would like to continue producing it. If the profit isn't there, "We can't afford to underwrite it, just like anybody else," he said.

But it's a tradition that's worth trying to save, said Wolking.

"We decided it was important to the community. It's preservation of the arts and it's important economically. We've got to keep people coming into town."

For details and tickets, visit www.wetmountainwesternjubilee.com or call 719-371-3838.

Click here for original post.

Friday, July 30, 2010

ALBUM REVIEW: The Haunted Windchimes

honeymoonshinecover.jpg

THE HAUNTED WINDCHIMES
Honey-Moonshine
Blank Tape Records

Maybe I was just bored, or perhaps it was an instinctual lust for alcohol, but the old-timey drawing of a jug of moonshine on the Haunted Windchime’s debut, Honey-Moonshine, drew me right in. Society tells me: don’t’ judge a book by its cover, but fuck ‘em. It looked awesome, so I gave it a spin. The Haunted Windchimes, I soon discovered, are a rootsy folk band that raise the hairs on my arms with their bewitching harmonies. Sassy female timbres blur into male-led verses, creating a sound that sways from the holy to the demonic. You can hear a bit of a raspy Andrew Bird in the male vocalist (Inaiah), and a bit of Dolly Parton and Lilly Allen in the females (Chela and Desirae). These three voices snap together like LEGO bricks and remind me of a combo of Fleet Foxes and Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young. The Windchimes hypnotize while remaining springy and fun. Inaiah, Chela and Desirae sing cliché lyrics dealing with love, heartbreak and loneliness, but somehow they do not suffer from this. Non-political lyrics are digestible and make it easier to cozy up to the album. However, with the densely political finisher “A Ballad of Human Progress,” The Windchimes show they can go from Vanilla Ice to Public Enemy at the drop of a dime. It is a refreshing folky burst of anger. The instrumentation is pretty much constant throughout— banjo, guitar, violin, upright bass and the occasional harmonica. No, there isn’t any jug blowing here… but there is one snazzy kazoo solo (“Waitin on a Train”). Listening to Honey-Moonshine reminded me of sitting in a log cabin somewhere in New York with a couple of friends, passing around a large jug of whiskey. It was a great random find (thanks to the album art) and is certainly worth a listen while the weather is still hot.

– MATTHEW HENGEVELD, Phawker.com

read original post here


Tuesday, July 27, 2010

End of Summer Tour and More!

Howdy Folks,

The Haunted Windchimes are puttin' on our traveling shoes for the next couple of months with shows in Kansas, New Mexico and more! All starting this weekend with two shows in Wichita Kansas. Saturday July 31st The Haunted Windchimes make their debut at Wichita's annual ICT FEST held at the Eagles Lodge North 3103 N Broadway. Here is a the line up and show times for bands:

==========================
==

ICT FEST SCHEDULE


SATURDAY, JULY 31st

Ryan Windham 5 - 5:30

Whittier 5:45 - 6:15

Boys Beware 6:30 - 7:00

Hawley Schoffner 7:00 - 7:30

MjolniirDXP 7:30 - 8:00

Antimosity 8:15 - 8:45

Haunted Windchimes 9:00 - 9:30

Jabberjosh 9:45 - 10:15

Muscle Worship 10:30 - 11:00

Low Oriole 11:00 - 11:30

Solagget 11:30 - Midnight

Powerlifter - 12:15

============================

THE TRACK HOUSE - WICHITA KS

The following Sunday (August 1st) The Windchimes will join the Fanning Brothers and their group Solagget for a good ol' fashion house show at an awsome place called The Track House! Located at 722 E. Blake in Wichita. The show will start at 7pm with local opener Notes and Scraps.

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PIZANOS / SECO PEARL - TAOS NM / ARROYO SECO NM

After Kansas we shoot down to New Mexico for a couple of dates! August 5th we are at Pizanos playing an all ages show starting at 7pm. Pizanos is located at #23 State Highway 150 in Taos, NM. That following sunday we will be joining fellow Blank-Tapers The Changing Colors and more at the wonderful Seco Pearl in Arroyo Seco New Mexico. The Seco Pearl is located at 590 Hondo Seco Rd. The Show is welcome to all ages and will begin at 8pm!


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SWALLOW HILL W/ CHATHAM COUNTY LINE - DENVER CO

August 14th The Haunted Windchimes will be sharing the stage with newgrass band Chatham County Line at Swallow Hill / Daniels Hall, located at 71 East Yale Ave in Denver Colorado! Tickets are already on sale and are discounted for advance purchases.

> Get Tickets

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WET MOUNTAIN WESTERN JUBILEE - WESTCLIFFE CO

Make plans now to come to beautiful Westcliffe, CO on August 21st and 22nd for the Wet Mountain Western Jubilee! This two-day western and Americana music festival will feature the talents of the iconic western/cowboy entertainer Don Edwards, internationally renowned cowboy poet and humorist Waddie Mitchell, the hottest brother band in the Rocky Mountain West, Sons and Brothers, Pueblo's folk/Americana phenomenon the Haunted Windchimes, Nashville's genre-defying roots music group the Category Stompers, and Custer County music heroes Sugarfoot! All of this incredible entertainment will be held on August 21st and 22nd at the West End of Main Street in Westcliffe under the big tent overlooking the Wet Mountain Valley and the spectacular Sangre de Cristo mountains.

> Get Tickets

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Hope to see ya'll soon!
-The Windcimes



For more info and a full list of upcoming shows please visit: www.hauntedwindchimes.com




Wednesday, June 30, 2010

HAUNTED WINDCHIMES - JULY 2010 UPDATES



HONEY MOONSHINE GOES DIGITAL!


You heard right folks, our newest release Honey-Moonshine has made its launch into the world of downloads and is now available through many online distributors such as: iTunes, Amazon, Napster, DigStation and more! Download your copy today.

> find out more


DOWNLOADS: RARE, UNRELEASED & LIVE RECORDINGS

We are now offering free downloads of our first two albums; BALLAD OF THE WINDS and AN EVENING WITH: (currently out of print) via: www.archive.org In the near future we hope to bring you more live, rare and unreleased recordings.

> find out how you can help


UPCOMING SHOWS!

It's been a few weeks now since our last performance and we sure do miss all of you! We hope you miss us too and will come out to see as at Rubbish Gallery in Colorado Springs on Friday the 9th of July. It is going to be a wonderful night of Art, Food and Music! See the flyer below for more info or visit: www.hauntedwindchimes.com/shows.html to check out details on all of our upcoming shows.

> View full show schedule


BLANK-TAPE RECORDS & 4TH OF JULY WEEKEND

Our beloved Blank-Tape Records will have a booth set up at this years 4th of July Festival in Manitou Springs at Soda Springs Park! Members of the Windchimes as well as many other Blank-Tape artists will be down there selling merch , singin' and a-pickin' all-day-long at The Blank-Tape Booth on Saturday July 3rd! Come down and pick up some merch and check out performances by fellow Blank-Tapers: The Changing Colors and Michael Clark (Haunted Windchimes, The Jack Trades, Ghost of Michael Clark)!

> Learn more about Blank-Tape



Thursday, June 3, 2010

Updates for June 2010



The Big Something
Western Skies Rides Again!

The much beloved news magazine Western Skies returns after several years of dormancy. Produced by KRCC News Director Andrea Chalfin and The Big Something’s Noel Black, the hour-long, monthly show will air beginning this Sunday at 11 a.m. Shows addressing a single topic facing the region and the west will follow on the first Sundays of each month.

The Haunted Windchimes recorded the theme music for Western Skies, check it out below!


Western Skies theme song written and arranged by The Haunted Windchimes.

Bluegrass on the River
Boulder Weekly

June 4-6 Greenway Nature Center 5200 Nature Center Rd. Pueblo

When it comes to music, Pueblo has a lot to offer. Located at the confluence of the Arkansas River and Fountain Creek on the southern end of the Front Range, Pueblo is rich in history and culture, as well as opportunities for recreation. Every summer, the Pueblo Greenway and Nature Center hosts a bluegrass festival that rivals the best in the state. Bluegrass on the River is the perfect showcase for the best of what Pueblo has to offer, and its perfectly located stages have few rivals as far as great places to hear music go. It’s worth the trip if you can make it.

It’s reasonably priced, too: The whole weekend will only cost you $35. Tickets are available for individual days, as well. Friday will only cost you $8, Saturday $20, and Sunday $15. For more information, check out www.natureandraptor.org/ BluegrassOnTheRiver.html, or call 719- 549-2414.

The Haunted Windchimes play Friday, June 4th at 8:30pm and Sunday, June 6th at 6:30pm. On Saturday the 5th we will be hanging out selling merch and playing music in the campground and possibly the pickin' parlor! Come on down and bring the whole family!

And don't forget on June 11th we play the Front Range BBQ in Colorado Springs!

Front Range BBQ - June 11, 2010

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Photos: The Donut Whole - Wichita KS (5/1/10)
































All photos taken by Azaria Garcia, Copyright 2010