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evan and jaron
Michelle
Branch
Judith Owen
Date: June
11, 2001
Doors: 7:30 PM
Show: 8:00 PM
Tickets:
On Sale Now
$12 .00 General Admission
Age Restrictions:
6 and over
Kitchen:
Limited
Seating: Limited Seating
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Hellooooo Atlanta!
So began the journey of then 19-year-old musicians Evan
and Jaron Lowenstein, whose
widely naïve statement kicked off their first-ever show in a
local Atlanta club in 1993.
"Our innocence is what propelled us," says Jaron, now 26.
"We thought that was it. From here on out everyone would know
who evan and jaron was."
While things weren't quite as easy as the duo had planned, it is apparent
in even their earliest works that evan and jaron had a comfort with
music that was well beyond their years of experience.
"If you were to go back and listen to our first songs, you could
identify that we didn't suck," explains Jaron. "there was
a lot of work needed but we had our shining moments."
"evan and jaron", the
duo's debut record for Columbia,
is the culmination of seven years of those shining moments, showcasing
their mature songwriting, catchy melodies and pop hooks. Produced
by evan and jaron and John Fields
with
T Bone Burnett (Elvis Costello, Wallflowers, Counting Crows)
as the executive producer, evan and jaron features a slew of musicians
that span several generations. By a "twist of fruit" so
to speak, legendary drummer Mick Fleetwood,
would hook up with the duo at Music Bridges, (a cultural music exchange
to which evan and jaron were invited to attend alongside Fleetwood,
Bonnie Raitt, The Indigo Girls, Burt Bacharach, and others in Havana,
Cuba in April '99), and would later play drums on the introspective
"You Don't Know Me," and percussion on the groovin' "Ready
or Not."
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