Tuesday 4 May 2021

Jake Xerxes Fussell - London show rescheduled to September 1st!


 

 

Very pleased to announce that Jake Xerxes Fussell’s concert on May 7th at The Lexington has now been rescheduled. The new concert will take place on September 1st at Oslo Hackney.

Upset The Rhythm presents…

JAKE XERXES FUSSELL
Wednesday 1st September 

OSLO Hackney
1A Amhurst Rd, Hackney Central, London E8 1LL


7.30pm - 11pm | £9.00 |  https://link.dice.fm/fUuBdCfJD3

NB. This show is rescheduled from May 12th & Sep 8th 2020 & May 7th 2021 at The Lexington, original tickets valid, refunds available too.

JAKE XERXES FUSSELL is a singer and guitarist from Durham, North Carolina. Jake's 2015 self-titled debut record, produced by and featuring William Tyler, transmutes ten arcane folk and blues tunes into vibey cosmic laments and crooked riverine rambles. Collaborating with Tyler and engineer Mark Nevers in Nashville was a conscious decision to depart cloistered trad scenes and sonics for broader, more oblique horizons. In 2017 Fussell followed his debut with a moving new album of Natural Questions in the form of transmogrified folk/blues koans. This time these radiant ancient tunes tone several shades darker while amplifying their absurdist humour, illuminating our national, and psychic, predicaments. What in the Natural World features art by iconic painter Roger Brown and contributions from three notable Nathans: Nathan Bowles (Steve Gunn), Nathan Salsburg (Alan Lomax Archive), and Nathan Golub (Mountain Goats). On his most recent album for Paradise Of Bachelors 'Out of Sight', his most finely wrought album yet, Fussell ushers up an utterly transporting selection of traditional narrative folksongs addressing the troubles and delights of love, work, and wine (i.e., the things that matter), collected from a myriad of obscure sources and deftly metamorphosed, Out of Sight contains, among other moving curiosities, a fishmonger’s cry that sounds like an astral lament; a cotton mill tune that humorously explores the unknown terrain of death and memory; and a shanty/gospel song equally concerned with terrestrial boozing and heavenly transcendence. Always compelling and deftly impressive, Jake’s live shows have become must attend events, so its with great honour that we welcome him back this May to London. 


https://www.jakexerxesfussell.com/





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