cart
items
XLogin

Password lost?  

Facebook Options
Shop all Departments
download process

MP3 Paul Michel - Our Last Goodbye

Price: 8.99 USD
Download
Now
Add to cart
Instant Download from music, digital version

MP3 Album Cover Musicians use tradebit:

Learn how to make music
Pick up cool karaoke downloads
Search for sheet music!
  • Contains these products:
  • Single items of this product are available separately.
  • No John Henry
    play button
  • Swannanoa Valley
    play button
  • Those Old Days
    play button
  • Gotta Be a Wheel
    play button
  • Belly of the Mountain
    play button
  • New Red Chair/Eight Miles to the Cumberland
    play button
  • Miss You Like Christmas
    play button
  • Nobodys Mama
    play button
  • Fish Rapper Rag
    play button
  • I Looked Out
    play button
  • Secondhand Smoke
    play button
  • Our Last Goodbye
    play button
  • Time and I
    play button
  • Size: 50.7 MB   Platform: MP3 / All Pl

File Data:

Contact Seller: music, official CDbaby reseller, USA, Member since 06/19/2005
URL: Twitter this Tweet this
Embed: Create JavaScript Mobile Tag Widgets for your homepage

Description:

(ID 1384888)
Back porch tunes and country blues by a multi-instumentalist and songwriter from Seattle.

13 MP3 Songs
FOLK: Traditional Folk, COUNTRY: Country Blues



Details:
Paul Michel was born in Philadelphia in 1957. His first musical instrument was an eight-key xylophone that he played with a serving spoon. At the age of eight, after his family had moved to central Ohio, he relinquished the spoon and started learning tunes on his father's old "potato bug" mandolin. He got his own mandolin in 1967, a guitar a few years later, and an old Sears and Roebuck fiddle in 1974. He never returned to the xylophone.

During his high school years, Paul had the chance to hear and play with many great old-time and bluegrass musicians at dances, festivals and taverns around Columbus. While attending college in Gambier, Ohio, he fiddled in a country band with Howard and Judy Sacks, Bob Cantwell and Gordon Keller. He learned a lot of and about music from them, from recordings of past and present masters and from great young players like Jeff and Rick Goehring, Kerry Blech and the Maple Hill Rounders from northern Ohio, as well as from his own brother Bob. He spent summers in the late 1970's traveling and playing in upstate New York, Boston, Seattle, North Carolina and many points between, soaking up tunes, styles and songs.

After college Paul lived in the west of Ireland for a year, learning the fiddle music of County Clare. He returned to the States in 1980, and moved to Seattle in 1981. During the 1980s he headed up the Tidewater Stringband, performing old time music at festivals and fairs around Puget Sound. He was also a guitar and mandolin player for Howie and Lori Meltzer's Interstate Stringband.

Paul played less publicly during the 1990s, but in the past couple of years he has returned to the guitar and mandolin as well as the fiddle, and he's tried his hand at songwriting. The influences, inputs and errors of forty years of playing have resulted in a sound that isn't easy to categorize, but in one way or another it's all country music, nothing "alt" about it, inspired by the great ballad, blues and barn dance traditions that emerged in rural America during the early 1900s, "went to town" in the second half of the century and remain very much alive and picking today.


in partnership with CDbaby

More Files From This User