Matthew Shelton's Picnic
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Matthew Shelton's Picnic

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"Skilled wordsmith releases new CD and single inspired by Visionaries and Voices"

http://citybeat.com/gyrobase/Content?oid=oid%3A140927


BY C.A. MacConnell
8/15/2007


Recently, Matthew Shelton and I braved a treacherous, mountainous hike through wild, wolf-ridden woods, getting lost in the tangled trees.
Kidding. Actually, we walked on a well-tread path through Burnet Woods. But there was some difficulty: Shelton's pole-lean, long legs eat up ground with each sweeping stride, making my steps look like, well, picture a miniature poodle next to a thoroughbred.

Originally from a small town in South Carolina, Shelton says, "I grew up in a swampy, rural area, a five-stoplight county."

Drawn to Simon and Garfunkel early on, Shelton dreamed of artistry, drawing comics and taking guitar lessons from Jim Ashley, "a withdrawn, misfit kind of guy. I've known a lot of amazingly talented people who are too hard on themselves." Ashley shaped Shelton's future by introducing him to legendary Blues songsters such as Mississippi John Hurt and Robert Johnson.

In college, Shelton poured himself into painting: "I was a young Picasso at that point, and my goal was to learn to play Bob Dylan songs."

Moving here in 1994 for the Art Academy of Cincinnati, he says, "Fate brought me here. Art school was some kind of cosmic bait. All through my 20s, music and art were on this see-saw."

Soon after, Shelton and Victor Strunk formed the popular duo Me or the Moon. Concentrating on music, Shelton home-recorded six albums in four years.

In 2005, interest in Zimbabwean music led him to another passion altogether. Shelton plays the shekere (African percussive instrument) and the mbira (African thumb piano) with the Image Afro-beat Band. Another side project involved collaboration with local duo The Sheds, as Shelton played kalimba (modern mbira) and sang on a couple of their releases.

In 2006, Shelton formed the group The Cat Lovers. Although they played 25 shows in six months, one member recently returned to Germany and two others will move soon. Shelton doesn't seem worried.

"It's amazing to have been blessed with such amazing musicians to work with," he says. "With folks leaving, I'm going to let it rest a while rather than replace people. I do have something else in the works."

Shelton and The Cat Lovers recently released Cold Water, Hot Blood, a lyrically intricate Folk album. A follow-up release, tentatively called The Vine, a more orchestral creation, will be polished and out soon. Shelton's wordsmith talent shines on Cold Water; he delivers well-crafted poems, mixing nature with sensuous humanity, creating classic lines such as "I had a tattoo of your face drawn inside my eyelid" and "Wrap your thighs around the lovely moonlit sky."

One of his greatest influences is Visionaries and Voices, a local non-profit art studio/gallery created for individuals with disabilities. He and other area musicians each selected a Visionaries artist's work, writing related songs for Sound and Visionnati, a compilation CD to be released in conjunction with the Visionnati Festival Aug. 25-26.

Choosing artist Barb Moran as inspiration, Shelton wrote "Gayla" for the project, a peaceful tune about assembly lines, planes and southern skies.

"We finished tracking it last night," he says. "It's as good as anything I've ever done."

Then, due to the skeeters, Shelton and I began our trek downhill, swimming through skyscraper-sized spider webs all the way to the Clifton Avenue sidewalk, his tall strides eating up ground and mine falling behind.



Shelton seems at home in the quiet woods, at ease with the green, silent moments, smoking a hand-rolled cigarette. Planting our positions near the hilltop gazebo, we relax on separate park benches facing each other.

Here, Shelton announces, "It'd be nice if I had a bottle of wine up here waiting for us."

I smile at his charm, emphasized by his baritone voice and the slightly apparent drawl buried beneath the low tones. Shelton breathes a certain air, moving and talking gently, like a Southern gentleman. And his laid-back attitude hints of his music -- poetic Folk driven by the feel of vast land, deep roots and spacious, curious love. - Citybeat


"Cincinnati Entertainment Awards Nominees, 2007"

http://blogs.citybeat.com/spill_it/2007/09/you-2007-cincii.html

Matthew Shelton nominated for Singer-songwriter category. - Citybeat


"Writing sparkles on new Matthew Shelton cd"

Writing sparkles on new Matthew Shelton cd.

Cincinnati Post, June 28, 2007
by Rick Bird

Matthew Shelton calls his sound "chamber folk". Indeed, his new cd, "Cold Water, Hot Blood", is just that with his soothing bass vocals and wry playful delivery, buoyed by elegantly subtle arrangements of cello, violin, and piano.

For Shelton, a veteran on the local singer-songwriter scene, previously with the duo Me or the Moon, this is his first full-length album showcasing his great storytelling and experimental sound.

"It's the sort of thing I've been looking to play for years and finally got the right people together," Shelton said.

Shelton and his group, the Cat Lovers, perform at a CD release party 7:30pm, Saturday, at the Imago Earth Center in Price Hill.

Shelton's sound is indicative of the exciting fractured and decentralized indie music scene where there are fewer "rules of rock". He notes young people are more receptive to non-traditional instruments in the rock, pop, and folk world.

"There is an openness," Shelton said. "When I was 20 years old they might have been considered stuffy conservatory type of instruments. They've become a lot more accessible; 16-to-21-year-olds that see me play really seem to get it- a lot more than I would have when I was that age."

It's Shelton's writing that makes the project a fun listen with his quirky mix of humor and heartbreak, at times bleak, but usually playful. The opening cut, "Tattooed Eyelid", is typical of Shelton's delightfully demented style, a whimsical love song about tattooing a woman's face on eyelids that takes some dark turns.

"I try to take all the emotions into account when I'm writing. It gets complicated, for sure," he said. "Everyone knows the one you love the most is the one you are going to hate the most, eventually."

Shelton has already recorded a second cd with his Cat Lovers contingent, more orchestral than the current stripped-down release.

His full six-piece band will be together for Saturday's gig although Shelton admits it's a bittersweet event since three key band members are leaving. Nora Barton, whose elegant, pensive cello often becomes a lead instrument on the cd, is moving to Illinois; tenor sax player Clark Wheeler is planning various travels, and alto sax player Geraldine Kovari is moving to Germany. The group is rounded out by keyboardist Sharon Udoh, violinist Annette Christenson and Shelton on guitar. - Cincinnati Post


Discography

MShelton & the Cat Lovers: The Vine, coming soon, 2009.
Cold Water, Hot Blood.........full-length cd, 2007.
several self-released home recordings....1995-2002.

Sound & Visionnati......compilation, 2007.
Twisted Roots: Live from the Comet....comp., 2000.

Photos

Bio

Matthew Shelton has consistently stood out in his performances and songwriting as a musician who has absorbed and assimilated a myriad of styles to create his own unique voice. Folk music was his first musical love. As a young boy, his heroes were Simon & Garfunkel, Gordon Lightfoot, Jim Croce and others. Simultaneously, he was enamored with Prince and early hip-hop as well. These disparate musical appetites have continued for years as Shelton has worked at his own music.

Like so many others, Shelton began writing songs after a prolonged fascination with Bob Dylan. Combining this influence with his love of punk, hip hop, rock and avant-garde music, Shelton recorded hundreds of songs at home, as he finished college. The songs saw limited release, as they were mostly intended simply as an outlet for self-expression.

In 1999, Shelton discovered the mbira (aka kalimba, thumb piano) music of Zimbabwe. He began writing songs on the instrument, and performed for 3 years with his band Me or the Moon. The band was very well-received, and opened for many national acts including Antibalas, Daniel Johnston, and Animal Collective. In recent years, Shelton has applied his mbira talents with The Image Afro-beat Band, a 10-15 piece ensemble led by Baoku Moses.

Currently, Shelton is performing and recording as a solo artist, and with his woodwind-driven chamber ensemble "The Picnic". With his songwriting fully matured, he holds captive audiences with songs about love and sadness, frustration and transcendence. His songs these days are known for their combination of humor and melancholy, and an overriding hopeful and romantic nature, even when the songs seem full of despair.

His hard-driving finger-picking style has garnered praise and comparisons to Nick Drake, John Fahey, and Delta blues masters like Charley Patton and Mississippi John Hurt. His current work fits nicely into the recent popularity of newer indie-folk acts such as Devendra Banhart and Iron & Wine.