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Loudon Wainwright III
Folk

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Last Login:  11/20/2008
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   Loudon Wainwright III: General Info
Member Since2/1/2007
Band Websitelw3.com
Band Members Strange Weirdos: Music From and Inspired by the Film KNOCKED UP
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Loudon as "Dr. Howard" - Knocked Up
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Influences
Sounds Like Passion Play

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Type of LabelIndie




   Upcoming Shows ( view all )
Nov 21 2008 8:00P
Rams Head Annapolis, Maryland
Nov 22 2008 8:00P
Remis Auditorium, Museum of Fine Arts Boston, Massachusetts
Nov 29 2008 8:00P
The Sanctuary Concerts Chatham, New Jersey
Nov 30 2008 8:00P
Hugh’s Room Toronto, Ontario
Dec 1 2008 8:00P
Hugh’s Room Toronto, Ontario
Dec 4 2008 8:00P
Iron Horse Music Hall Northampton, Massachusetts
Dec 5 2008 8:00P
One Longfellow Square Portland, Maine
Dec 6 2008 8:00P
Tupelo Music Hall Londonderry, New Hampshire
Dec 10 2008 8:00P
Blender Theatre at Gramercy POSTPONED TO Feb. 18th!!!!! New York City, New York
Dec 11 2008 8:00P
Tarrytown Music Hall w/ The Roches Tarrytown, New York
Dec 12 2008 8:00P
YMCA Boulton Center for the Performing Arts Bay Shore, New York
Jan 16 2009 8:00P
Great American Music Hall w/ Jill Sobule San Francisco, California
Jan 17 2009 8:00P
Humboldt State University Arcata, California
Jan 24 2009 8:00P
Acoustic Music San Diego San Diego, California
Feb 14 2009 8:00P
Eccles Performing Arts Center, w/ Leo Kottke Park City, Utah
Feb 18 2009 8:00P
Blender at The Gramercy New York City, New York
Feb 19 2009 8:00P
Sellersville Theater Sellersville, Pennsylvania
Feb 20 2009 8:00P
The Emelin Theatre for Performing Arts Mamaroneck, New York
Feb 21 2009 8:00P
The Library Theater Birmingham, Alabama
Feb 22 2009 8:00P
The Library Theater Birmingham, Alabama
Feb 25 2009 8:00P
Palladium Theater St. Petersburg, Florida
Feb 27 2009 8:00P
Eddie¹s Attic Decatur, Georgia
Feb 28 2009 8:00P
Grey Eagle Music Hall Asheville, North Carolina
Mar 1 2009 8:00P
Belcourt Theater Nashville, Tennessee

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   About Loudon Wainwright III
The first 250 fans to pre-order Recovery will receive their copy autographed by Loudon!

What if you could go back in time and have a dialogue with your younger self, stopping to appreciate the triumphs and chuckle at the foibles you might’ve experienced years -- or even decades -- back. That’s the concept at the core of Loudon Wainwright III’s Recovery, a fascinating collection on which the celebrated singer-songwriter revisits some of his earliest work, imbuing the songs with the voice of experience and the musical sophistication gained over nearly four decades spent traversing music’s blue highways.

“Friends of mine had suggested I go back and rework some of my older material, but my reaction was always just to shrug,” says the singer-songwriter-renaissance man. “I’d kept performing a few of these songs, but most of them, I hadn’t really thought about in at least 30 years. But when [producer] Joe Henry and I were working together on the soundtrack to Knocked Up, he brought up the idea and wouldn’t let it go, so I started going back to the early stuff.”

And back Wainwright went, clear back to the first track on his self-titled 1970 debut, “School Days,” a wry slice of collegiate bravado that imbues Recovery with musings about scenarios that played out “in Delaware when I was younger” -- a notion that’s all the more intriguing when one realizes the words were written by a 23-year-old whippersnapper.

“Like most overly dramatic twentysomethings, I thought I’d burn out quickly,” he says of the tone expressed on that song, and several of Recovery’s other offerings. “I certainly didn’t think I’d be around any longer than Jim Morrison. But somewhere along the way, I changed my mind. I got interested in being old when I was fairly young, and wrote from that perspective. So songs about getting old had one kind of resonance for me then and another kind now.”

Changes in attitude are but one aspect of what makes Recovery such an intriguing listen. Wainwright -- with the help of Henry -- also took the opportunity to alter the tenor of the tunes by augmenting their original spare, solo acoustic sound with cleverly-appointed arrangements. On “Saw Your Name in the Paper,” a cautionary tale about the pitfalls of spending too much time seeking fame,” that translates to Patrick Warren’s stately piano lines being layered over a steely, slowly-marching rhythm. “Drinking Song,” on the other hand, gets an even more vivid veneer of wooziness from an off-kilter percussive underpinning and a fuzzed-out six-string melody courtesy of Greg Leisz.

Wainwright describes the latter song -- one of several avowedly autobiographical essays on Recovery -- as his way of addressing the fact that there was “plenty of alcoholism in the family...To quote a line from “Nanny”, a song not on this album which celebrates my Dad's mom, ‘men were queer who just drank beer and ginger ale was for sissies.’”

That brand of black humor is but one of the calling cards the Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter plays on Recovery. He addresses the loneliness of the long-distance touring musician on 1971’s one-night-stand allegory “Motel Blues” -- a tale he grants that he’s oddly detached from at this juncture in life. On a similar continuum, he takes on the trauma of being unable to write a tune on a rocked-up version of “Muse Blues”(driven by the locked-in rhythm section of David Piltch and Jay Bellerose)-- an ironic topic for a man who’s filled more than 20 albums with strikingly original songs over the years.

“My father [LIFE magazine veteran Loudon Wainwright Junior] could write to deadline, to order, and what I inherited from him was my ability to be descriptive,” says Wainwright. “Nothing fancy. For a guy who was touted as a new Bob Dylan, I’m not cryptic or mysterious or complicated at all.”

Loudon Wainwright III was one of -- if not the -- first to be anointed with that title back in the late ‘60s, when he began plying his trade in the folk clubs of Boston and New York. His self-effacing wit and broad humor earned a cult following -- and, in 1972, a bona fide top 40 hit in the form of the rollicking “Dead Skunk.” By the middle of that decade, his reputation as one of the folk-rock scene’s true characters -- in contrast to his peers, he had a fondness for Brooks Brothers’ flannels and neatly-shorn hair -- had spread far enough that he was tabbed as a recurring character on the CBS series M*A*S*H, on which he portrayed “singing surgeon” Calvin Spaulding.

While Wainwright has maintained a parallel career in front of the cameras -- appearing in such flicks as The 40-Year-Old Virgin, The Slugger’s Wife and Elizabethtown -- he’s always been most at home with guitar -- or, even more accurately, a pen -- in hand. Always one for unsparing detail, he spent the ‘80s turning out stinging, critically-acclaimed discs like Fame and Wealth -- on which he shrugged off the importance of both -- and 1989’s Therapy. The latter title is an anomalous one, given the fact that he once offered “as to whether what I do is therapeutic for myself, I doubt it. My career has provided me with a living and a half-assed identity, but having it hasn’t resolved any of my so-called ‘stuff.’”

That ‘stuff’ included a sometimes tumultuous personal life, and the rearing of several offspring, including acclaimed singer-songwriters Rufus and Martha Wainwright, the latter of whom joined in on Loudon’s 2003 album, So Damn Happy. In recent years, Wainwright’s been reaching new sets of ears, thanks in part to a plethora of soundtrack work -- like the compositions he and Joe Henry contributed to the blockbuster Knocked Up.

That resurgence makes it all the more timely to revisit the still-vibrant material that Wainwright re-imagines on Recovery. Whether he’s basking in the tongue-in-cheek misanthropy of songs like “Old Friend” or musing about the pleasures of isolation on the appropriately-titled “Movies Are a Mother to Me,” the 61-year-old still bristles with passion and energy -- and the excitement of a man who’s in the throes of rediscovery, not in the midst of a nostalgia trip.

“I called the album Recovery for a number of reasons,” Wainwright explains. “The title can be taken so many ways. You could look at it as an archeological dig -- like unearthing some dinosaur bones -- since the newest thing was from 1973. But more importantly, it also carries the connotation of getting better, which is something we’d all like to think we’re doing.”

There’s no questioning the fact that Loudon Wainwright III is doing just that -- and will continue to do so for a long while to come.


   Loudon Wainwright III's Friend Space (Top 16)
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Loudon Wainwright III's Friends Comments
Displaying 50 of 498 comments  ( View All | Add Comment )
beanie





Nov 19 2008 2:35 AM

Thanks for the add Loudon. We loved your show in Mpls last night.
Thanks for the autograph, and the hubby is all smiles getting a pic with ya! peace, beanie
Bittersweet caramel





Nov 15 2008 11:33 PM

A great reference for me.
Best wishes from Spain!
Mark Lindrin





Nov 16 2008 1:41 AM

Thank you Mr. Wainwright, for the add. I appreciate it, and am honored.
Mark
Nas





Nov 16 2008 10:52 PM

I hope to see you in Portland Oregon at some point. Seeing you in SF at the festival was wonderful! Thank you for playing "In C". What a beautiful song.
Take care
jeffery





Nov 12 2008 7:11 PM

Hi Loudon! I am damn proud to be among your friends, sir. Your songs alternately have me in hysterics, then completely bewildered by the boldness and beauty of your honesty.
Thanks for the add; I love you!
Alex.





Nov 13 2008 12:07 AM

your music makes peace with my heart. thank you for being so wonderful.
Congo’s Angels





Nov 13 2008 5:53 AM

Thank you so much for helping Congo's Angels break the silence on behalf of women in Congo

Blessings
Christine





Nov 13 2008 1:14 PM

Thank you so much for the add. I love your amazing voice and your beautiful music, so full of emotion. It's such a pleasure to hearing your songs. Cheers from France.
Gláucia Oliveira





Nov 13 2008 8:03 PM

Oi Loudon!
É um grande prazer receber voce e conhecer seu trabalho!
Beijos.
JENTRI COLELLO





Nov 14 2008 4:48 PM

we cant wait to play with you in madison!

see you this weekend!
safe travels
xo
jentri
Patrick - G.R.N. Drummer





Nov 10 2008 2:55 AM

Hello Loudon ( if you ever look at this myspace LOL )

Well I went to my first LW3 show in Cerritos after 10 years of listening to your CDs. And boy it was one of the greatest concert I've ever been to. I want to thank you for the fun time. I really enjoyed "In C" and great gems like "Drinking Song", "Heaven", "IDTTYWLM", "Kick in the Head" and "White Winos".
I wish you could of played two sets. + It would be really cool if you release a DVD soon. I already have all the CDs.

Take care & keep up the great work
Patrick - Drummer of Gang Raping Nuns
Dave James Wheat (PhD Philosophy)





Nov 10 2008 7:38 AM

Dave James Wheat is probably the only philosophical alt country/bluegrass artist in the world!
Pin Rose





Nov 10 2008 7:02 AM

Thanks from a long time fan and best wishes from Denver, Colorado.
- Pin Rose
radio anydaynow


Is Online


Nov 5 2008 6:06 PM

Welcome Back, America.

Raimondo, Italy
J. P. KOESTER





Nov 2 2008 7:23 PM

GREETINGS FROM DETROIT LOUDON!! JP
joe m





Oct 29 2008 5:06 AM

YOU ARE THE HEART AND SOLE OF THE MUSIC WE ALL NEED,WISH YOU WOULD COME BACK AND PLAY IN FLORIDA,ORLANDO AREA .YOUR THE BEST I GOT TO MEET YOU TWICE AND SHAKE YOUR HAND ME AND MY WIFE LOVE YA AND HOPE WE SEE YOU AGIAN.
PLEASE ALL THE BEST JOE MARZANO
Michael Bracken





Oct 29 2008 10:47 AM

Best wished!

When are you next in England?
Steve Stapley





Oct 25 2008 8:16 PM

Hi Loudon,
Thank you very much for the add. I really appreciate it.
Steve
Doc Huckster





Oct 24 2008 12:13 PM

a friend is like the light.

a friend is like a flower that blooms just for you..and we can be our real selves when we see what's true..a friend is like a gentle rain when you thirst..and we are dancing rings around a rose called mother earth..a friend is like the moon choosing to reflect the light..and we couldn't see the beautiful stars unless it was for the dark of nights..a friend is like a flower we send to ourselves..a gift that just keeps on opening until the light of love is shown and felt.
Raymond





Oct 24 2008 6:38 PM

Hey Loudon. You Can't Fail Me Now is growing on me as one of the top 5 ever. I've got to ask this... "God knows the name of every bird that fills my mind like angry words" .... What is the meaning of "bird?" Such a touching song.
Tiana Kaczor





Oct 24 2008 6:47 PM

Your music has been great to listen to today while I'm sketching, but I've got to tell you that I love the yellow background on this site - such a happy colour, that brightens my mood on this gray day.
Tiana
katya





Oct 25 2008 6:45 AM

I've enjoyed your music for years.
Thank you, and thanks for the add:)