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Simon Joyner
Port Fairy Folk Festival 2025
Southcombe Sporting Complex
Campbell St.
Mar 7–10, 2025
12:00 AM GMT+11
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Port Fairy Folk Festival 2025 Lineup
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About Port Fairy Folk Festival 2025
March 7–10, 2025
Southcombe Sporting Complex
Campbell St., Port Fairy, AustraliaGet directions
portfairyfolkfestival.com
Port Fairy Folk Festival features an exciting and global line-up for 2025, with renowned folk musicians from around the world ready to descend upon the stunning seaside d...
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Simon Joyner Biography
Simon Joyner is a songwriter who was born in New Orleans in 1971. However, while he was still a child he moved north to Nebraska.
For those who've followed Simon Joyner's illustrious career as an outsider and underground figure relentlessly looking into the dark side of everything not for its own sake but for what it has to teach Skeleton Blues will be a surprise. Recorded with his working band the Fallen Men, Joyner's made his first honesttotheroamingghostsofallthingsthatmatter rock roll record. Those hoping for another of his quiet, sparse, introspective recordings need not fear, though they will be shocked. The set opens with "Open Window Blues," and what you hear is a younger Bob Dylan, still hungry, still trying to wrestle with his shadowy angel (muse), fronting a group as direct and nononsense as the Velvet Underground (circa Doug Yule) or the early Television; the Band's wondrous ambiguity and sense of history would have been ripped apart by these songs. Guitarists Dale Hawkins' and Alex McManus' interplay is both meaty and spooky. It feels like they don't work with the songs so much as set them apart and try to explode every last word, and they come close to exploding in reaction to: "But my smokestack eyes withholding rain, oppose/Another burning wheat field full of crows." The sung meter is just off enough to allow those wicked six strings to dig through the rhythm section and react with an open hostility, it pushes the singer and finally takes over, revealing what he's afraid to say. Think "John Coltrane's Stereo Blues" or Days of Wine Roses by the Dream Syndicate but more subtle.
Read MoreFor those who've followed Simon Joyner's illustrious career as an outsider and underground figure relentlessly looking into the dark side of everything not for its own sake but for what it has to teach Skeleton Blues will be a surprise. Recorded with his working band the Fallen Men, Joyner's made his first honesttotheroamingghostsofallthingsthatmatter rock roll record. Those hoping for another of his quiet, sparse, introspective recordings need not fear, though they will be shocked. The set opens with "Open Window Blues," and what you hear is a younger Bob Dylan, still hungry, still trying to wrestle with his shadowy angel (muse), fronting a group as direct and nononsense as the Velvet Underground (circa Doug Yule) or the early Television; the Band's wondrous ambiguity and sense of history would have been ripped apart by these songs. Guitarists Dale Hawkins' and Alex McManus' interplay is both meaty and spooky. It feels like they don't work with the songs so much as set them apart and try to explode every last word, and they come close to exploding in reaction to: "But my smokestack eyes withholding rain, oppose/Another burning wheat field full of crows." The sung meter is just off enough to allow those wicked six strings to dig through the rhythm section and react with an open hostility, it pushes the singer and finally takes over, revealing what he's afraid to say. Think "John Coltrane's Stereo Blues" or Days of Wine Roses by the Dream Syndicate but more subtle.
Folk
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