Artist Description
"Soaring harmonies, social consciousness, and impressive musical prowess…Girlyman's bittersweet approach to the human condition will strike a chord regardless of the listener." - San Francisco Chronicle"In the field of pop group vocals, Girlyman is in the rarest of company…a luxurious sonic bubble bath for the ears." - Vermont Guardian
Harmonies: if you had to describe the music of Girlyman in one word, this would be it.
The story doesn’t end there, of course: the band blends modern acoustic,
americana, and folk-rock into a musical recipe The Village Voice has called “really
good, really unexpected, and really different.” The wide range of instruments – acoustic
guitar, banjo, mandolin, djembe, electric baritone guitar – reflects an
eclectic sound, and the band members switch off lead vocals and songwriting
duties. But it is the stunning three-part vocal blend that creates the Girlyman
magic.
Girlyman (Nate
Borofsky, Doris Muramatsu, and Ty Greenstein) hails from Atlanta, GA,
though they formed the band while sharing an apartment in Brooklyn, NY. In
2004, Amy Ray signed Girlyman to her indie label, Daemon Records, and the following years brought long opening runs
with Dar Williams and The Indigo Girls. The band now has a
strong national following of its own, and spends a lot of time criss-crossing
the country, playing to intensely loyal “girlyfans” who often travel hundreds
of miles to see shows. And the name? “It’s great for us, provocative and
playful,” says Muramatsu. “It makes people laugh. But it also hints at
how we’ve never quite fit in. Nate wears make-up onstage, I’m a Japanese-American
playing to mostly white audiences. Ty is a grown-up tomboy. The name Girlyman
lets us acknowledge that we’re out of the mainstream, but without taking
ourselves too seriously.”
Girlyman has sold tens of thousands of copies of its three studio albums, and in 2008 the band released a fourth CD, Somewhere Different Now (live). Packed with 29 tracks, the latest album has it all: new, unrecorded songs, covers, hilarious banter, and improvised ditties. Somewhere Different Now is 76 minutes of pure, unleashed Girlyman, with all their intensity, levity, and harmony.




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