Driftwood Singers
L.A.’s Driftwood Singers have taken a very un-contemporary route. The duo of Kris Hutson and Pearl Charles play a simpler kind of folk that one might’ve heard on the southern front porches of 1930’s America. Kris, in suspenders and all, rotates between guitar, banjo and mandolin while harmonizing along with Pearl, dressed in garb fit for hanging sheets out to dry in Appalachia, who strums her autoharp. The pair of 19 year olds has already logged more than 100 shows since they began playing last fall, with tours up and down the west coast and trips to Nashville and New York City. Not ones to turn down many shows, they recently played 3 in one day across the greater Los Angeles area. That determination to play whenever and wherever possible has started gathering them attention from music fans and critics alike. No Depression posted some of their earliest home demos and they were recently (and fittingly) featured on a Carter Family tribute alongside Calvin Johnson and Kimya Dawson. Their debut EP, Look! carries on where their demos left off. Recorded at home on a handheld cassette recorder, that was then cleaned up in mastering, the resulting 5 songs are showcased in a way that lets you feel the warm crackle of the phonograph they appear to be coming from. Inspired by beat poetry and murder ballads, songs like “Coco Ellis,” “Come Across the Tracks,” and “Rosalee Little” are irresistible gems for anyone with an old soul and an ear for the yester year.




1 Comment
The Driftwood Singers “Knoxville Girl” – The New Los Angeles Folk Festival
November 12, 2010[...] The Driftwood Singers performed”Knoxville Girl” at The New Los Angeles Folk Festival’s MURDER BALLADS event for Halloween. Oct 26, 2010, at the Echoplex. [...]