newsletter archive

29 September 2009

Hope you're all well... It's been a while since we've been in touch and we've a bunch of news for you...

First up...
As part of the Whelans 20th Anniversary celebrations Mark Geary plays a special show at Whelans, Dublin on Tuesday 6th October 2009. Entrants to the show will get a free CD copy of Mark's new Live album 'Live Love Lost It - NYC' - a brand new live album recorded in New York this summer which features songs from across his 3 studio album catalogue like 'Gingerman', 'Volunteer', 'Ghosts' , 'Cold Little Fire' and 'It Beats Me'. This album will not be available elsewhere until November this year.

'Live, Love, Lost it - NYC', is the follow-up to 2008's 'Opium' and is due for release later this year in Ireland and the US.

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1. Gingerman
2. Cold Little Fire
3. Ghosts
4. It Beats Me
5. King Of Swords
6. Maid Of Gold
7. Obi's Chair
8. See-Saw
9. Just Like Tom Thumb Blues
10. Volunteer
11. America
12. Away
13. Beautiful
14. Adam & Eve

New York - 1993
From what I remember...
I had started playing shows - supports, late night gigs, the parks, the subways and even at open mic's. One in particular stands out, in the sidewalk cafe on Avenue A, whose M.C. Latch became a friend and a confidante. My brother Karl was running the Sin-É cafe with Shane Doyle on St. Mark's Place, this helped while I was coming to terms with the enormity of my move from Dublin to New York. Where to live, how one made money, where could I play shows, and all the other questions that needed answering?

You could still play in CBGB's - if you could guarantee you could bring a crowd, or as happens most, you didn't mind playing at 3am on a Monday to no one and with no money to show for it. "The walls, the waitress and the weirdo's" as "Latch" would say.

Giuliani was the mayor of New York, having made a name for himself as a district attorney, prosecuting the likes of John Gotti from the Gambino crime family, who was very much the Godfather of the times.

A pizza slice cost a dollar, which increasingly became the only source of food and nutrition for the hard nights when no money was made. This was also how you could bribe your band mates into playing, you'd buy the pizza on the way home.

There were coffee shops, like Sin-É - that acted more like mini orphanages for the transplanted and the disposed, people writing plays, people nodding out, people hiding from the heat or the cold, from the landlord or the law.

New York somehow offered me a chance to reinvent myself, it offered me shelter if I was willing to work late and hustle, friendship to people on a first name basis but without knowing their details but what I wanted more than anything was to play music, to get these songs out of my head, to record and see where it took me but each door seemed bolted shut; I was at a loss as to how people went about finding a way in.

New York - 2009
I sit in a cafe off of 2nd avenue. I always seem to find myself in coffee shops in New York, I know more people through the hours and years I have hung out in them, years can go by and I will walk into one and see someone I know. It's a feeling that I have just stepped outside for a little and here I am again, seeing the people who had formed my first impressions of New York, all these years later.

We are recording three shows over a week long period; I sit here with a half read book and half written set list, nervous about tonight.

Each show turned out so differently, each live show is so utterly different. The crowd change. The feeling in the room changes, the sound of your foot as you stamp along to the songs, sound different, my voice through the monitor in each club - different,
How does this all work!?

How do you record a show that captures the essences of what it is you do as a musician? The truth is that it's a rare thing; the hope is that you trust yourself enough that you have the tape running while you are on, that it translates unto a CD, that this was a moment. Not just a version of a song, but a feeling and communion between you and your audience. The cynic's will tell you - "it's all been done before" - live performance is a vehicle for your CD sales and you move from town to town hawking your music and climbing the rung of the slippiest ladder you've ever known but tonight at least, I have come here, with a clear idea of what and where I came from, and why I do what I do, New York for all it's madness, for all the pitfalls and crushing defeats, also has a tale to tell and a lesson to teach if you sit and listen long enough and if you remain teachable.
That's what I've learned

Love Mark Oct 2009
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You can catch the art work for the new album over at http://www.markgeary.com/music.shtml and pick up an exclsuive pre-release copy at the Dublin show on 06 October 2009. Tickets are only €21.50 from ticketmaster.ie (http://www.ticketmaster.ie/event/18004325E11F2AA4) and a few euros less over at http://www.wavtickets.com/.


after that... mark's going all czech on us...

CZECH REPUBLIC
05 Nov 2009 :: U Nacelnika, Praha - 9pm
06 Nov 2009 :: c.k.Solnice, Ceske Budejovice - 8pm
07 Nov 2009 :: Festival Folkovy spiz, Namest nad Oslavou - 9pm
08 Nov 2009 :: Hotel Gustav Mahler, Jihlava - 7.30pm
09 Nov 2009 :: Dum kultury, Mohelnice - 7pm
10 Nov 2009 :: Festival Pisu pisnicky, Olomouc - 7.30pm

SLOVAKIA
11 Nov 2009 :: DK Zrkadlovy haj, Bratislava - 8pm

AUSTRIA
12 Nov 2009 :: Verein08, Wien - 7.30pm

details for all the dates are up on myspace (http://bit.ly/Nr5lr) and http://www.markgeary.com/

Right... that's all the gossip for now.
All the best!

The Mark Geary Team
http://www.markgeary.com/