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Lori Carson (born 1958) is a singer/songwriter whose albums include: ''Shelter'' (DGC-Geffen, 1990), ''Where it Goes'', ''Everything I Touch Runs Wild'' (Restless Records, 1995, 1997) and ''Another Year'' (Blue Kitchen/United for Opportunity, 2012). A former member of the seminal band The Golden Palominos, she has contributed to the soundtracks of Bernardo Bertolucci’s ''Stealing Beauty'', Kathryn Bigelow’s ''Strange Days'', Keith Gordon’s ''Waking the Dead'', and others.〔(【引用サイトリンク】 Lori Carson )〕 Her debut novel, ''The Original 1982'', was published by William Morrow/Harper Collins in June 2013.〔(【引用サイトリンク】 Lori Carson )〕 ==Career history== Lori began performing in the mid-nineteen eighties at Folk City, The Bitter End, and other clubs on, or around Bleecker Street. She was signed to a development deal with Manhattan Records in 1987 and the following year to a recording contract with Geffen Records.〔 ''Shelter'' produced by Hal Willner was released in 1990 to excellent reviews.〔 It featured a duet with Gregg Allman. In support of the record Lori toured with a trio (Rachelle Garnier on accordion and Paul Pimsler on guitar) opening for Joe Jackson〔(【引用サイトリンク】 Joe Jackson Opening Acts )〕 in Canada and the U.S. In 1991, she was dropped from the label. Playing a show in New York City later that year, she was approached by drummer/producer Anton Fier to collaborate on a new project that became 1992’s ''This is How it Feels'' by The Golden Palominos. ''Pure'' by the Palominos was released the following year and featured Lori’s song 'Little Suicides'.〔(【引用サイトリンク】 Lori Carson )〕 For a time it was hard to find a hipper band than the Golden Palominos. Carson signed to Restless records in 1994 and ''Where it Goes'' (produced by Fier) came out in 1995.〔 She toured extensively in support of the record, often accompanied by Paul Pimsler and cellist Jane Scarpantoni. Solo, she opened for the Counting Crows, facing their hit-hungry audiences with only an acoustic guitar. On tour in Asia, she learned that Bernardo Bertolucci wanted to license 'You Won’t Fall' for his film ''Stealing Beauty''.〔 Also came an offer to co-write a song for Katherine Bigelow’s ''Strange Days'' with composer Graeme Revell.〔 ''Everything I Touch Runs Wild'' came out in 1997. Recorded in her New York City apartment, the record got great press. It made many top ten lists nationally and was named Record of the Year by the Long Island Village Voice. In 1998, Lori moved from New York City to Seattle and recorded ''Stars'' with Layng Martine III and Joe Ferla co-producing. Released in 1999, it was her last record for Restless. ''House in the Weeds'', a lo-fi, limited edition of only two thousand copies was made available in 2001.〔 Also Rykodisc released ''Stolen Beauty'', a compilation of Carson’s film and TV contributions that year.〔 In 2002 Janet Rienstra of Meta Records asked Lori to compose a song-cycle that would work in the context of yoga or meditation. ''The Finest Thing'' was the result. Released by Meta in 2004,〔 it was featured by NPR that summer on Echoes.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.echoes.org/de.essential.html )〕 One Little Indian picked it up for release in Europe in 2005.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://indian.co.uk/shop/lori-carson/finest-thing.html )〕 Lori’s most recent record is ''Another Year'' (Blue Kitchen Music/ United for Opportunity, 2012). In June 2013 her debut novel, ''The Original 1982'',〔 was published by William Morrow/Harper Collins. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Lori Carson」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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