Dolly Varden (band)

Dolly Varden
Background information
Origin Chicago, IL
Genres Indie, Alternative Rock
Years active 1993present
Labels Undertow, Evil Teen, Flying Sparks, Fargo
Associated acts Stump The Host, My Record Player
Website dollyvarden.com
Members Steve Dawson, Diane Christiansen, Mark Balletto, Mike Bradburn, Matt Thobe
Past members Lisa Wertman Crowe

Dolly Varden is a Chicago band built around the singing and songwriting of husband and wife duo Steve Dawson and Diane Christiansen. Their music combines elements of folk, rock and pop and country. The band has released 5 albums, along with several collections and side projects. They have recorded for Undertow Music since 2002.

Early Days

Christiansen and Dawson first came to prominence in Chicago with a twang-punk band, Stump the Host. The two founded Dolly Varden in 1993 when Stump The Host disbanded.[1] They originally started as a quartet comprising Dawson, Christiansen, Lisa Wertman Crowe (bass) and Matt Thobe (drums). This lineup recorded a 4-song cassette EP with Brad Wood at Idful Studios in Chicago. After a few months Mark Balletto was added as an additional guitarist.[2][3] This lineup recorded 3 more songs with Brian Deck and released them along with the Idful recordings as "Pet Me", a 6-song cassette. In 1994 the group recorded an EP with Doug McBride at Gravity studios in Chicago that has never been released. Lisa left the band in early 1995 and was replaced by Mike Bradburn, thus cementing the line-up that has remained unchanged to the present day (Feb 2011).

Career

The band released their first album, Mouthful of Lies in 1995. It was recorded in Christiansen's art studio on a 4-track and released on their own Mid-Fi label. 'Mouthful of Lie's' was played regularly on WXRT-FM in Chicago and was named one of the best local albums of 1995 by DJ Richard Milne. The album also got noticed by a handful of national critics and led to the band being courted by several major labels. Dolly Varden signed on with manager Bob Andrews of Undertow Music at this time. Though RCA Records offered the group a 'demo' deal, which would have had the band record songs for RCA's staff to decide whether or not they wanted to release them, the band chose to sign with New York indie label Evil Teen for their second album, which was already in progress. The Thrill of Gravity (1998) was produced by Dolly Varden and recorded by Bundy K. Brown at Uberstudio in Chicago, and features guest appearances by David Grubbs (piano), and Julie Liu on violin. The band did their first national U.S. touring for 'Gravity', supporting Whiskeytown and Gov't Mule, and headlining shows in the Midwest and on the East Coast. Dolly Varden's third album, The Dumbest Magnets (Evil Teen Records, 2000), was produced and recorded by Brad Jones (Chuck Prophet, Josh Rouse) at his Alex the Great Studio in Nashville, TN. (The Dumbest Magnets was licensed in 2001 for release in the UK on Flying Sparks Records and in Europe on Fargo Records). "Magnets" significantly raised the group's profile with rave reviews in Rolling Stone, The Village Voice, No Depression Magazine, Uncut, CMJ and many daily papers across the U.S. The band increased their touring schedule, adding dates in the U.K. and France throughout 2000 and 2001. Legendary BBC radio host Bob Harris was a big supporter of the album and the group in the U.K. For their fourth album, "Forgiven Now, released in March 2002 on the newly formed Undertow Records, the group once again recorded with Brad Jones in Nashville, TN. Pedal Steel legend Al Perkins (Rolling Stones, Gram Parsons) makes a guest appearance on the songs "There's A Magic" and "The Lotus Hour". 2002 was the group's busiest year of touring to date with shows from coast-to-coast in the U.S. (including an East Coast tour with Jay Bennett and Edward Burch) and 2 trips to the U.K.

Hiatus

After writing, recording and touring together for over eight years, the group took a step back in 2003 to pursue side projects and raise families. Drummer Matt Thobe and bassist Mike Bradburn both became new fathers and chose to take time off from touring.

In 2003, Steve and Diane released an album together called Duets.[4]

In 2004, guitarist Mark Balletto formed a band called My Record Player and made a self-titled pop rock album reminiscent of the music that originally inspired him to play guitar.[5]

In 2005, Dawson recorded a solo album, Sweet Is The Anchor (Undertow Records), heavily influenced by early '70s soul and singer-songwriters.[6]

Return

The band released their fifth album, 2007's The Panic Bell (Undertow Records), to great reviews in the U.S. and the U.K. and toured the East Coast and the UK in the same year.[7][8] In 2008 Dolly Varden celebrated the 13th anniversary of their debut album, "Mouthful of Lies", by releasing a limited-edition 2-CD set (disc 1: "The Best of Dolly Varden", Disc 2: "Rarities") and hosting a sold out show at Chicago's Old Town School of Folk Music with special guests Lisa Wertman Crowe, Robbie Fulks, Edward Burch and others. In 2009 and 2010 the group played sporadically in Chicago and St. Louis as Dawson focused on his second solo album, "I Will Miss The Trumpets and the Drums" and Christiansen focused on a large art installation project, "Notes To Nonself" with collaborator Shoshanna Utchenik. The band released its sixth studio album, For A While, in 2013.[9] Steve Dawson has said that For A While is notable in that all the songs were written by him or with Diane and that this is the first album in which he has "followed my own songwriting advice."[10]

Members

Past Members:

Discography

Early Demos

Dolly Varden

Steve Dawson & Diane Christiansen

My Record Player

Steve Dawson

Reception

References

  1. Rothschild, David (March 26, 1993). "Road-ready Stump the Host gets a new bass player". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved February 14, 2011.
  2. Puls, Eric (April 22, 1994). "Dolly Varden Hooks Listeners". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved February 14, 2011. Our bass player quit and when we auditioned Lisa (Wertman, ex-Get Smart!), we felt a chemistry. The three of us began playing quite a bit and it was obvious that we needed to start a new outfit. Stump had become standardized and somewhat boring. Now joined by drummer Matt Thobe and guitarist/keyboardist Mark Balletto, Dolly Varden rocks harder and leaner than the ambling Stump the Host.
  3. Brotman, Barbara (April 17, 1994). "Creating A New Life Need Not Be The End Of Yours". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved February 14, 2011.
  4. Houlihan, Mary (July 30, 2003). "Going through life as a duet works just fine for Dolly Varden leaders". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved February 15, 2011.
  5. Guarino, Mark (May 21, 2004). "My Record Player is the auspicious solo debut of Mark Balletto". Daily Herald. Archived from the original on May 21, 2004. Retrieved February 15, 2011.
  6. Meyer, Bill (Aug 26, 2005). "Steve Dawson ; Sweet is the Anchor (Undertow Music)". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved February 14, 2011.
  7. "Dolly Varden Official Site".
  8. Jenkins, Mark (August 17, 2007). "DOLLY VARDEN "The Panic Bell" Undertow". The Washington Post. Retrieved February 15, 2011.
  9. Johnson, Steve (January 17, 2013). "Music story isn't over yet for Dolly Varden - Chicago band takes stock at the release of 'For a While'". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  10. Powers, Calvin. "Ep#136 Dolly Varden". Americana Music Show. Taproot Media. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  11. Margasak, Peter (May 25, 2000). "Dolly Varden". Chicago Reader. Retrieved February 17, 2011.
  12. Hage, Erik. Dolly Varden at AllMusic. Retrieved April 7, 2011.
  13. Jurek, Thom. Dolly Varden - Mouthful of Lies at AllMusic. Retrieved April 7, 2011.
  14. Smith, Michael B.. Dolly Varden - Dumbest Magnets at AllMusic. Retrieved April 7, 2011.
  15. MacNeil, Jason. Dolly Varden - The Panic Bell at AllMusic. Retrieved April 7, 2011.
  16. Williams, Kevin (January 26, 2012). "Dolly Varden wears like a comfy quilt". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved January 29, 2012.

External links

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