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What
would you get if you merged Bob Dylan with Hank Williams? Odds are, you'd come
up with a quirky approach and insightful lyrics that might sound a whole lot like
Mark Brine. | |||
| Brine
was making folk music in New England in the 60s, a music which itself had fragmented
from old-time mountain music. These days they call it all Americana. In the 70s,
he moved to Nashville to take in some traditional country of the sort he already
loved, but unfortunately, he got there too late. By that time the commercialization
of "Golden Age Nashville" Countrypolitan was demanding a different sound,
and Brine was already "too country" in a time when that phrase hadn't
even been thought of. He wasn't out to be an "outlaw," so he wasn't
one of the outlaws; nor was he a California honky-tonker, so Bakersfield wasn't
his destination, and neither of those neo-traditionalist movements attracted him.
Instead, he continued forward with his own unique yet thoroughly traditional sound,
and probably single-handedly shaped the Americana genre by releasing "Return
to Americana" in 1985, a time when today's current Americana artists were
still being called "country" or "blues" artists (if, indeed,
they were recording yet!). | ||||
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