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 “His
own voice; his own path... passionate, poetic...” —The
Woodstock Times, NY
With soaring vocals and powerful-yet-delicate guitarwork,
Michael Bassett combines the raw catharsis
of modern indie, the world-wise acoustic lilt of classic folk
and the virtuosity of progressive rock on his Eschatone debut,
puddleskinwaving, and his wonderful sophomore release, Soft Verges. A native of Troy, New York, Michael
was, as the Albany, NY Times Union proclaimed, one
of the region’s “most promising and adventurous
singer-songwriters”... until he packed up and moved
to England to study his craft and compose in a more experimental,
abstract sound-sculptural style.
But you can’t keep great songs down, and Michael
returned to his stripped-down roots with Soft Verges,
tracking most of the album live in one intense session at legendary Chicago studio Electrical Audio. The album proves that Michael’s
appeal transcends generational lines: he writes some of the
most intense, challenging and grownup acoustic music
around, yet his dazzling, gymnastic voice and guitar chops
are the envy of emo kids everywhere.
Michael is now supporting Soft Verges
live in Europe, having just completed his second American tour. On his first US jaunt, in October 2006, Michael criss-crossed the States
for a month (while puddleskinwaving rocked the rotations of over 130 non-commercial radio stations nationwide)—just Mike, his guitar,
a car and the open road. It wasn’t an unfamiliar experience
for a guy who, at the age of 17, found himself living on the
streets and, eventually, in his car. Michael learned how to
play guitar on loaner instruments, and managed to get good
enough to handle lead in local bands without actually owning
an axe.
 “When
I first started gigging, I borrowed guitars from other bands
on the bill,” Michael laughs. “The folks who came
out regularly thought I owned the biggest collection of guitars
in the world!”
It was Michael’s grandmother who granted him the angelic-sounding
Taylor acoustic on which he wrote puddleskinwaving
and Soft Verges. “All my life, the elders in my family discouraged me
from pursuing music. At some point my brother let my grandmother
listen to a tape of a band I was recording with. She must
have been taken by it. My grandmother made mittens and got
my aunt to sell them at flea markets... she saved up the money
to help me buy the guitar I have today. I carry a pair of
the mittens in the guitar case wherever it goes.”
In recent years, that guitar—and the mittens—have
accompanied Michael all over the UK and Netherlands as he’s
performed and collaborated with some of Europe’s finest
avant-garde artists, including Maja Bugge, Jean Abreu and
Liu Ding. The one-time street kid is now a noted college lecturer
and experimental composer, and halfway to his PhD. And these two powerful albums map his journey.
Michael Bassett links
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