Tai Shan
Gig Seeker Pro

Tai Shan

Seattle, Washington, United States

Seattle, Washington, United States
Band Folk Singer/Songwriter

Calendar

This band has not uploaded any videos
This band has not uploaded any videos

Music

Press


"Quotes"

“Really beautiful melodies, great words.”
-Bern Herbolsheimer
Voted Composer of the Year

“Tai Shan is a poet and a seamstress of melodies, I salute this new artist”.
-Jovino Santos Neto
Latin Grammy nominee

“Simply beautiful compositions”
-first violinist Stephen Bryant of Saint Helen’s String Quartet

“Wonderful Songwriter”
-Julian Priester Jazz legend

“Don’t wander innocently into one of her shows expecting a simple folk concert. She will ambush you with her beautiful compositions, emotional lyrics, supple singing, and unique guitar voicings.”
-Randy Halberstadt

“A benefit to the community.”
-California State Representative Lynn Woolsey

“I don’t normally cry, but Tai Shan gave me one of the most moving musical experiences I’ve had in years”
-Randy Halberstadt
Earshot Jazz award winner

“The bottom line is, when Tai tells me she’s written a new song, I can’t wait to hear it.”
-Linda Waterfall
Voted Seattle’s Best Solo Artist

“In commissioning a piece from Tai Shan... she managed to orchestrate a stylistic and lyrical integrity to best suite me as a singer/performer; she then wove that genius together with a true understanding of the subject matter I wished to communicate and guided the birth of that core beauty in the song that could only be felt and not expressed.”
-Richelle Gay Jazz Singer

“…When I first heard Tai Shan I thought I was listening to an angel, her voice, lyrics, and guitar work can make you laugh or cry every time you hear it, Tai Shan is a must see.”
-First time listener Annie Martinez

“Tai is amazing. Her words are subtle, yet stab your heart like a dagger. And you are sent back to the truths both painful and beautiful of the society in which we live. Her voice draws you in like an undertow, until you drown in her meanings.”
- First time listener Ben

- Tai San


"Seamstress of Melodies in Eugene"

Seamstress of Melodies in Eugene, Oregon
26 dec
published in the Eugene Weekly (12/18/2008).
http://www.eugeneweekly.com/2008/12/18/music2.html
Seattle singer-songwriter Tai Shan has been snagging good reviews with her soprano voice, emotional lyrics and intricate guitar compositions since she came on the music scene a few years ago. Now Tiny Planet, Shan’s first full-length solo album, offers a deeper view of a talented young musician.
Shan’s thoughtful and sometimes raw lyrics are in line with the singer-songwriter tradition, but on certain tracks her breathy delivery and drawn-out vowels sound more new-agey than folky. Songs like “Tiny Planet” and “Flicker Like a Flame” evoke Sarah McLachlan at her most reflective.
At times, Shan’s songs begin to sound a little too, well, meaningful, with high notes that make the cats prick up their ears. But at other times, her clear voice is the perfect vessel for well-crafted rhythms, melodies and lyrics. On “Let it Go Dear,” Shan’s voice deftly carries the sweetness, strength and clarity of a song that is fittingly about expressing your own truth. And the song “Crickets in the Dark” will make you want to dance outside on a summer night.
Tai Shan and Jesse Meade play at 10 pm Tuesday, Dec. 23, at Luckey’s. 21+. $2. — Jessica Hirst - Eugene Weekly


"Tai Shan on the CouchSurfing Tour"

Tai Shan on the CouchSurfing Tour


Rachel Dovey of Seattle Sound Magazine interviews Tai Shan.
http://www.seattlesoundmag.com/2008/12/tai-shan-on-the-couchsurfing-tour/

Tai Shan, Seattle’s newest Americana blues singer songwriter, just left to tour the West Coast in support of her first album, Tiny Planet. But instead of racking up Motel 6 expenses, or even crashing with friends, Shan will be catching her winks on the couches of complete strangers. Her hosts have not even been recommended word-of-mouth, but are gleaned from the internet—couchsurfing.com to be more specific. (CouchSurfing.com connects travelers all over the world with willing, free hosts.) Shan has plenty of connections along the coast, but she chooses to couch surf for the sake of her craft. When welcomed into a stranger’s home, Shan finds that they often open up to her and tell her their stories, which Shan usually writes into her lyrics. In exchange for the hospitality, Shan puts on a small house show at each residence. Sound caught up with Shan on a snowy Sunday night at the Zoo Tavern and talked life on the road.

Sound: How did you start couch surfing?

Tai Shan: I toured Spain by couch last summer. This other girl and I were heading off on this bus into the hills of Granada, and we’d heard that this man we were staying with had a wife and kids, but I asked my friend, “Have you talked to his wife,” and she was like, “no.” So we were like, “Shit. We don’t know anything about this guy. He could be a serial killer.” But the guy turned out to be part of this group of Sufis, who had this leader that was the real deal, I mean you could not turn your back on him, you couldn’t interrupt him… But we stayed with these Sufis and talked to their leader until four in the morning one night.

Sound: So that was your first couch surfing experience. But what prompts you to want to tour like this? Why take the risk?

TS: There’s this great story about the Knights of the Round Table. They went to look for the Holy Grail all together and couldn’t find it. They realized that they would all have to go the darkest part of the forest, alone, and then they would find the grail. That’s how I practice my craft—I look for the scariest, darkest moments I can find, the moments when I’m insecure, and then I write a chord or a lyric out of them. So that’s also how I try to tour. I sleep on these strangers’ couches and I’m terrified, but I feel like I need to live by heading into the forest. The fact of the matter is we’re all gonna die someday—I could die driving down the freeway—so I can surrender just a little bit here. I mean, getting up on stage is fucking terrifying but the best stuff that comes out is the stuff you could never have predicted. So why not live like that?

Sound: So you push yourself to the edge of your comfort zone. But does the edge seem to stretch further out as you do more?

TS: Yeah, about a year ago if I was couch surfing on my tour I would be scared shitless, but now I’m okay with that. I’m always asking, “Okay, what’s the next step? What’s the next thing I can be okay doing?”
Sound: So this is a tenuous connection to make a point, but what you just said reminds me of Kerouac in On the Road. That’s the iconic novel about taking a thrilling, dangerous adventure to the edge, literally, through travel, and with sex, drugs, alcohol etc. That’s how Kerouac lived, and the man basically drank himself to death. Don’t you worry that as you push yourself further away from your safety zone you’ll get into a really dangerous situation?

TS: I couldn’t make it through On the Road. He’s so into the fact that you can get stoned and have orgies. But for me, you have to understand that life is precious. I mean, how fortunate are we that we get to be born as women in the U.S. in this century, and go to college, and do something we’re passionate about. So I feel like I can’t waste this precious gift. So yeah, I’m gonna be sleeping on strangers’ couches, but does that mean that I’m gonna get really drunk and stoned off my ass while I’m there and not use my good judgment, no?
Sound: Who’s the craziest person you’ve met touring?

TS: I went to Colorado to master my CD a little while ago. I ended up hanging out way up in the Rocky Mountains with a bunch of total strangers, jamming until four in the morning, all weekend. Two of the guys were drug dealers, one was named Scrappy and the other was Chicken Little, and Chicken Little looked exactly like Seth Rogen, with these dreads and everything. The other guy, Scrappy (they wouldn’t tell me their real names) rode trains for like seven years. He told me things like, you know, you have to wear this “scrag rag” when you ride trains; you have to piss on a rag and then put it over your face so that when you go through a tunnel you don’t die from the exhaust. I mean, how precious to sit here listening to this guy tell me how to not die riding trains. I’m never gonna do that.

Sound: So you’re living vicariously through the people you meet. You’re doing it as a writer; you get a taste of someone’s life so you can get a story, but you don’t suddenly go out and make up a scrag rag and hop on a train. You come back to your apartment, your job. But you use the material in your songwriting.

TS: Yeah. Hedonism isn’t my mantra. If today is the last day of your life you listen while someone tells you a story. Over and over again we find the most beautiful things in life are the subtle, mundane details. So when I tour, I just try to pay attention to those, because that’s what those stories are made up of. - Seattle Sound


"Jazz Blog CD concert Review"

I had the pleasure recently to meet Seattle singer-songwriter Tai Shan. This month she released her first full length album, Tiny Planet, and launched the album with a show at Egans Ballard Jam House December 6th.

Tai's music has a home grown feel. She borders somewhere in the realm between Jeff Buckley and Tori Amos, nostalgic of Norah Jones sophomore jazz record. Taking the stage with her guitar, she filled the room with her richly layered take on soulfood backed by an amazing band.

She opened the show with the rousing spiritual anthem to love Day by Day. Bringing the whole chasm of grit and melody into it, she told musical story with the candor of a friend by the fireside. From there she kept the show upbeat, flowing through the first set, combining a strong mix between her album and the wealth of other material she has written. It closed out with a rendition of the symphonic rich arrangement Tiny Planets, which will be featured in an HBO documentary later this year.

Tai's big heart is striking, and her warm personality comes out in her candor with the audience. In a scene where it's hard to make your way as a musician without accepting every dollar given to you, Tai is breaking that mold and pledging her profits of Tiny Planets to The Puget Sound.

The evening closed with an intimate second set, weaving the themes of love, growth, and risk in beautiful songs. Her strong voice, with clear lows and easy soprano swells, highlighted the songs Crickets in the Dark and the sweet Flooded Wonder. The night closed, and the smiles on everyone's faces said it all: She's got some joy.

- Jeni Wren


Discography

2014 Tai Shan releases Living Fiction

2009 -Tai Shan released Tiny Planet CD
2006 - Tai Shan and Blue Dawn EP released
2005 - "Love Will Kill You in Time." Original song featured on the Cornish College of the Arts promotional CD distributed nationally
2004 - Tai Shan Live Radio Show on PBS
2003 - Tai Shan's Debut CD released

Photos

Bio

Described as one of Seattle's finest emerging songwriters Tai Shan has earned a reputation as a "seamstress of melodies" and a first rate composer. Her soprano voice and orchestrated guitar parts have been recognized in the Pacific Northwest folk/pop world. She is described by jazz pianist Randy Halberstadt as "dangerous." "Don't wander innocently into one of her shows expecting a simple folk concert. She will ambush you with her beautiful compositions, emotional lyrics, supple singing, and unique guitar voicings."

Her songs have been featured on several promotional CD's. In 2005 she was chosen to represent Cornish College of the Arts with her song "Love Will Kill You in Time," recorded with jazz bassist Chuck Deardorf and distributed nationally. In May 2007 she graduated Magna Cum Laude with her B.A. in music composition from Cornish College.

Tai Shan has been featured on San Francisco Bay Area Television and radio shows including a live 1-hour interview on PBS's "Our Roots are Showing". In 2004 filmmakers used her environment song "Tiny Planet" for the HBO documentary "The Search for Turtle Island." Her music has also been featured on more than 100 Hewlett-Packard videos CDs, which have been distributed in Southeast Asia and China. She has also appeared before audiences at festivals and clubs up and down the West Coast and has developed a strong following and fan base.

Tai Shan
www.taishanmusic.com
www.myspace.com/taishanmusic
taishanmusic@gmail.com

Recordings
- Composed "Tiny Planet" for upcoming environmental documentary "The Search for Turtle Island" to be featured on HBO 2008
- Debut CD released 2006
- "Love Will Kill You in Time." Original song featured on the Cornish College of the Arts promotional CD distributed nationally
- Original song featured on Birds & Whistles - a Seattle Artist promotional CD
- Received a recording scholarship for 48 hours with Grateful Dead's recording engineer

Achievements
- Graduated Magna Cum Laude with B.A. in music composition from Cornish College of the Arts
- Recipient of Cornish College of the Arts President's and Kisemhimer Scholarship
- Composed and performed theme music for over 100 Hewlett-Packard videos distributed in Southeast Asia and China.

Performances
- Seattle Symphony's Benaroya Hall
- Egan's Ballard Jam House
- PONCHO Concert Hall, Seattle
- Tula's Night Club, Seattle
- The Rendezvous, Seattle
- Sonoma State University, CA
- Live 1-hour radio showcase and interview aired on KRCB (Bay Area Radio)
- Democratic Convention, CA
- Martin Luther King Jr. Festival, CA
- Health and Harmony Fair, CA
- Verd's Requiem Mass Performed for Pope and Italian President Outside the Walls Basilica, Italy

Band Members