Jen Starsinic
Nashville, Tennessee, United States | Established. Jan 01, 2014 | SELF
Music
Press
While you are most likely to see Jen Starsinic toting a fiddle or open back banjo, hallmarks of her old time roots, The Flood and The Fire is certainly not an old time record. While there are vestiges of vintage Appalachia throughout the recording, there are hints of country heartache, droning Irish folk, cello, and haunting pedal steel. Each tune represents an aching, a longing, and the snapshot the record offers into the musical soul of Jen Starsinic is startling; this young woman is most certainly a rising voice in contemporary Americana. - Blue Ridge Outdoor Magazine
The Flood and the Fire is a beautiful mixture of modern songwriting and American roots music. - Hearth Music
A renowned, soulful singer-songwriter and fiddler. - Examiner.com
The stunning album is a Cash & Carter-like country duet of timeless nostalgia-inducing Americana and modern folk-pop that positions her as the next great voice in folk music. - Atlas and the Anchor
Jen Starsinic really stood out for me... Talented, versatile, very clean leads- she just seemed to be filled with the joy of music- a huge smile, the way she held herself seemed to say, 'I'm having a great time.' - North Beach Sun
Jen Starsinic is a young musician making her way through the music business in compelling fashion. - The Herald-Dispatch
Judges with no inherent preference for roots styles are recognizing her songs on the musical and lyrical merits. They hold up... and reveal the emergence of an intelligent and insightful songwriter of note. - Mark Simos
Discography
The Flood and the Fire - May 27, 2014 Dangerous You Records
(all songs written by Jen Starsinic, Be My Spirit Animal Music BMI)
produced by Brady Custis
- Time to Lose
- Stay
- The Only One Who Can Break a Heart
- Six Foot Three
- It's a Foreign Thing
- Birdie in a Cage
- Move in Time with Me
- Ragdolls
- Dive a Little Deeper
- Wildfire
- Since You've Come Around
Photos
Bio
Emerging fiddler and songwriter Jen Starsinic may have gotten her start as a fourteen year old bluegrass fiddler busking on a street corner, she may have gotten her training at the prestigious Berklee College of Music in Boston, and she may be touring with some of the biggest Americana bands in the land (David Mayfield Parade), but her immersion in American roots music is as much a story of fire halls and bonfires. Of the people and stories and miles she's picked up as a young, but well traveled, touring musician. And of all night jam sessions at old time festivals across the nation such as Clifftop, West Virginia's Appalachian Stringband Festival, the historic and eponymous home of old time music. “I discovered an older, purer, more satisfying way of experiencing music. There's a certain moment after playing wild music all night when the sun is about to come up and the night is quiet again, and you're with new friends you've made through this mayhem, and you know you're going to carry that moment with you, and that moment and those songs are going to be like friends to you.”
The trance-like communal music making that's the hallmark of American roots music is at the heart of her anticipated debut album The Flood and the Fire. Jen wrote every song on the new album, tapping into her love of old time, bluegrass, country duets, folk rock, and old-school twang. On the album she combines a beautiful voice, powerful guitar, and virtuosic fiddle skills with her stunning talent as a songwriter. And yet the album doesn’t feel like anything created by your typical “singer-songwriter.” It feels more like a celebration of the way music draws people closer together, forming new friendships with each song.
A Pennsylvania native transplanted to the center of the Nashville scene, Jen is joined on The Flood and the Fire by a host of notable musician and friends from across the US. David Mayfield himself lends his vocals, and Charlie Rose and Eric Law bring their pedal steel and cello. Canadian banjo player Allison de Groot of the band Oh My Darling joins in on the song “Six-Foot-Three”, and Molly Tuttle, of the Tuttles with AJ Lee, brings her guitar to the song “Ragdolls”. The album was produced by fellow Berklee grad Brady Custis, and recorded in Somerville, MA at a home studio in August (in 100 degree weather with no air conditioning and no fans!). You can hear the vibrant intimacy of the moment, and you can hear this is the kind of risk-taking music making that can only be done with the help of great friends and a strong community.
The Flood and the Fire is a beautiful mixture of modern songwriting and American roots music. The first number, “Time to Lose”, opens with folk-pop vocals reminiscent of Lisa Loeb or Kimya Dawson, but the powerhouse guitar and banjo backup propel it to something far more. The same is true of track four, “Six Foot Three”; it’s a reminder that the old time sound need not stay stuck in the past. “The Only One Who Can Break a Heart” is a perfect honky-tonk tear-jerker worthy of Patsy Cline, but it is followed by the haunting “It’s a Foreign Thing”, performed with solo voice and fiddle. It’s a touching lament in a performance that brings to mind the playing of Bruce Molsky.
The Flood and the Fire is a marriage of old and new, a blend of harmony and poetry, and the debut of a powerful new voice in American folk music.
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