Audio Collection
Farsighted
Whit Hill and the Postcards
Literate, funny, soulful alt-country songs, hot guitars, spot-on harmonies. Great writing. Not for sissies. OK, for sissies too.
Collection Contents
| # | Title | Length | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
|
Clean My Room | 3:38 | Play |
| 2 |
|
Lotta Yer Love | 3:57 | Play |
| 3 |
|
Picture of a Girl | 5:16 | Play |
| 4 |
|
Sweetie Momma | 6:06 | Play |
| 5 |
|
Hideaway | 2:18 | Play |
| 6 |
|
Five Lanes of Traffic | 3:39 | Play |
| 7 |
|
Farsighted | 4:57 | Play |
| 8 |
|
Regimen | 3:27 | Play |
| 9 |
|
California Maybe | 4:40 | Play |
| 10 |
|
Fall | 4:20 | Play |
| 11 |
|
All These Things | 3:34 | Play |
| 12 |
|
Little Bitty Boy | 4:07 | Play |
| 13 |
|
Better | 4:13 | Play |
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Description
In the fall of 2003, Whit Hill and Postcards burst onto the Detroit music scene with the release of We Are Here 14 songs that earned effusive critical praise.
For most artists who actually manage the feat, recording a masterpiece is a career-long effort. For Whit Hill, it took a single shot said the Detroit Free Press, extolling Hills champion songcraft.
As cool and deftly done as any record to come out of Detroit in the 21st century, said All Music Guide.
And on and on. Since then, the Postcards have been pretty busy. This four-piece alt-country band led by renowned former choreographer Whitley Hill has played everywhere from Memphis Smoke to the Wheatland Music Festival. Hill racked up two awards in last years Michigan Songwriters Competition. And her husband, bluesman Al Hill, has been touring the world with soul legend Bettye Lavette.
Hill was born and raised in New York City, the only child of two actors: a WASP from the cotton fields of Mississippi and a full-blooded Armenian from the moonshine mountains of Appalachia. A child actor herself, she was a drama graduate of the High School for the Performing Arts, came to Ann Arbor to study dance at the University of Michigan and spent 14 years there as artistic director of People Dancing, a contemporary dance company. For five years, she toured North America from the Vancouver Music Festival to New Yorks Bottom Line as a backup singer with Dick Siegel and the Na Nas. A prolific songwriter, Hill formed the Postcards in 2001.
Hill's new album, Farsighted, features 13 original songs about money, sex, love, crossing I-94 on foot during rush hour (which I have actually never done admits Hill, though Ive thought about it) and Sweetie Momma the little old lady who used to live across the street from her. The title track is a waltz that explains the mysteries of eyesight.
The Postcards are:
Whit Hill (songs, guitar)
Al Hill (guitar, keyboards, backup vocals)
Patrick Prouty (electric bass, upright bass, raggedy bass and background vocals)
Chuck Navyac (drums)
Drummer Tim Gahagan was the drummer on Farsighted, then moved to California! We miss him a lot.
Special guests on the album include fiddle player Nick Reeb (of the bluegrass band King Wilkie), and singers Sue Gillis and Annie Capps.
Farsighted was recorded without the use of vocal pitch correction.
For lyrics and full information about Whit Hill and the Postcards, visit www.whithill.com
READ WHAT THE Detroit Free Press had to say...
March 2006
Whit Hill's 2003 debut album, "We Are Here," was a strikingly well-executed premiere, a rich and vivacious suite of material from a singer-songwriter who seemed to surface out of nowhere.
It also set a formidable high standard for the Ann Arbor artist and her band, the Postcards, led by husband and scene veteran Al Hill on guitar and piano. But for the most part, Hill has successfully cleared the bar with "Farsighted," delivering a sophomore effort that maintains the first record's strengths while venturing confidently into new territory.
Hill's songwriting pen remains sharp; she's a smart writer who doesn't let her intellect get the better of her emotion. Best are her evocative slice-of-life vignettes ("Clean My Room," "Five Lanes of Traffic," the title track), songs that operate on multiple levels but are graceful enough -- and playful enough -- to avoid the clumsy symbolism that afflicts so many like-minded peers.
Still, there's a musical and lyrical pointedness here ("Picture of a Girl," "Regimen") that wasn't so apparent on the first record. The whimsical feel has been toughened with a bit more bite.
The Postcards provide top-end instrumental backing, easily traversing the worlds of bluegrass, traditional folk and saucy blues. Despite what Hill has described as rush-recording sessions last fall, "Farsighted" sounds groomed with warm care -- a blue-chip album that stands on its own while firmly proving that 2003's magic was no fluke.
By Brian McCollum,
Free Press pop music critic