Anders Parker

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
So It Goes 03:54 Tools
Tell It To the Dust 06:16 Tools
Under Wide Unbroken Skies 03:44 Tools
Coming Down Again 03:55 Tools
Goodbye Friend 03:51 Tools
Don't Worry Honey, Everything's Gonna Be Alright 04:56 Tools
Keep Me Hanging On 00:00 Tools
Feel the Same 00:00 Tools
Innocents 04:55 Tools
So Far Away 04:19 Tools
Easy 06:06 Tools
Go Alone 00:00 Tools
Into the Sun 03:34 Tools
Falling Snow 03:20 Tools
Circle Same 05:03 Tools
No Place to Fall 03:26 Tools
Come On Now 00:00 Tools
Dear Sara 05:52 Tools
False Positive 04:18 Tools
Something New 00:00 Tools
Calling Out to You 04:08 Tools
Missing 03:44 Tools
Airport Road 03:39 Tools
High Flying Bird 03:44 Tools
72nd St. Horses 02:06 Tools
72nd St Horses 02:08 Tools
Proof 03:19 Tools
Pink Clouds 03:04 Tools
Oh, Monkeywrench 03:33 Tools
Winter Coat 04:03 Tools
The Wounded Astronaut 06:09 Tools
Belated 03:52 Tools
Pajarito 04:34 Tools
Unspoken 04:34 Tools
Everyone Will Shine 04:48 Tools
The Road 02:40 Tools
Pools 05:17 Tools
The Smile 02:40 Tools
Silver Yonder 02:40 Tools
I Found You 03:36 Tools
Epic Life 03:53 Tools
Fast And True 03:57 Tools
Doornail (Hats Off To Buster Keaton) 09:44 Tools
Come Off 03:38 Tools
Feel It 03:53 Tools
Glass and Mirror Strays 03:53 Tools
Animals 03:13 Tools
Lemon Tree Road 03:13 Tools
South Bay 02:28 Tools
Water 02:37 Tools
The Long Way Home 04:26 Tools
See You On The Other Side 03:28 Tools
Jackbooted Thugs (Have All The Best Drugs) 04:03 Tools
Don't Let The Darness In 03:05 Tools
My Bird 02:04 Tools
Second Skin 03:26 Tools
From a Northern Shore 02:50 Tools
Canadian Heart 03:16 Tools
Slow Clouds 03:28 Tools
Soemthing New 03:59 Tools
We Walked On 03:05 Tools
Farewell Old Love 04:03 Tools
The Sun Is Almost Gone 06:08 Tools
You Moved Me 03:04 Tools
Here We Are 03:33 Tools
In the Wind 03:04 Tools
Fly High 03:46 Tools
Horses Running Over the Hills 03:48 Tools
Blackbird Fields 03:25 Tools
So It Goes (Amazon Original) [Explicit] 03:01 Tools
Valley Lights 04:26 Tools
White On White 02:13 Tools
You're Not Alone 02:38 Tools
The Sun Is Gone 02:02 Tools
Val Blizz 02:00 Tools
Infinite - Us 03:01 Tools
Doornail (Hat's off to Buster Keaton) 00:00 Tools
The Man Who Fell from Earth 03:01 Tools
(hats off to Buster Keaton) Doornail 07:41 Tools
Eagle Rock 07:07 Tools
Going Up North 07:07 Tools
Doornail 00:00 Tools
Song 03:33 Tools
As The Stars Fell Down On Me 03:33 Tools
Infinite (Us) 03:01 Tools
Don't Let The Darkness In 07:41 Tools
Skin On Skin 07:41 Tools
On Flying Hill 03:03 Tools
Old L.A. 03:03 Tools
I Got My Spoonful 04:12 Tools
Angel's Blues 04:38 Tools
Our New Blood 04:12 Tools
Endless Blues 04:12 Tools
Gulf of Mexico 09:09 Tools
I Don’t Do That Anymore 04:12 Tools
Animal 04:38 Tools
Difference 04:12 Tools
Talking Empty Bed Blues 04:12 Tools
Comme off 04:12 Tools
Sweet Baby, Sweetest Thing 04:12 Tools
72nd street horses 04:12 Tools
No Regrets, No Turning ‘Round, No Looking Back 04:12 Tools
Song (Live) 04:50 Tools
I Don't Do That Anymore 07:41 Tools
(hats Off To Buster Keaton) - Doornail 07:41 Tools
Unspoken (Live) 04:50 Tools
Your Smile Cured Me 02:40 Tools
Jackbooted Thugs 07:41 Tools
Tell It to the Dust (Live) 07:41 Tools
So It Goes (Amazon Original) 07:41 Tools
Sweet Baby Sweetest Thing 07:41 Tools
fast amd true 02:40 Tools
I Was A Goner 03:42 Tools
Goodby Friend 02:50 Tools
Hoping Machine 04:52 Tools
No Fear 03:36 Tools
Indian Summer Takedown 03:36 Tools
Still Dream 03:36 Tools
Whereabouts Can I Hide 02:50 Tools
New Multitudes 02:47 Tools
Careless Reckless Love 05:01 Tools
The Drunkard's Wish 04:44 Tools
Down The Street 04:44 Tools
Dopefiend Robber 04:41 Tools
Around New York 00:51 Tools
When I Get Home 03:50 Tools
My Revolutionary Mind 04:44 Tools
Green Eyed Stars 04:50 Tools
Let It All Come Down 04:50 Tools
Following Your Sound 04:50 Tools
Changing World 03:48 Tools
Chorine My Sheba Queen 04:50 Tools
Coming Down Again - Anders Parker 04:50 Tools
Blue Flowers On The Highway 04:50 Tools
Anything From Now 04:50 Tools
Broken Song 04:50 Tools
Sister And The Chrome Waves 04:50 Tools
I Don't Want 04:50 Tools
02 - Goodbye Friend 04:50 Tools
11 - Feel the Same 04:50 Tools
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Anders Parker is a modest man who lives in Burlington, Vermont and works as a musician. People who are into American songwriters know him as the frontman of Varnaline. That band enjoyed the support of so many enthusiastic reviews and high-profile fans (most recently Steve Earle, who released the last Varnaline record on his own boutique label ESquared/ Artemis) that it became a widely held consensus that they were underrated. Which was impossible, though not the fault of the listening public, who actually really do have a bit of an ear, sort of. Parker grew up on an old farm in New York’s Hudson Valley, amid apple orchards, strip malls, and liberal arts colleges, listening to The Beatles, Bob Dylan and ABBA. Later, his interest flowed to R.E.M., The Replacements, Husker Du, The Smiths, etc. … “Anyone who can write a song,” as he once put it, had a fan in Anders Parker. During his twenties, he moved to Portland, OR, bought a four-track and entered the lofty ranks of real-deal troubadours. 1996’s Man of Sin (an Anders Parker solo album released under the name Varnaline) introduced Parker’s knack for new chord structures that feel lived in, and lyrics that delicately illustrate our world’s myriad variations on the sadly beautiful and beautifully sad. The next year Varnaline became a band, as Anders’ brother John Parker got on board as bassist. Drummer Jud Ehrbar, an old friend of both Parkers, joined on the condition that Anders help out with Ehrbar’s other band, Space Needle. 1997 saw the release of Varnaline's self-titled sophomore effort, the acclaimed second Space Needle album The Moray Eels Eat the Space Needle and the acoustic Varnaline EP A Shot and a Beer. The new trio came off surprisingly low-slung and heavy. They made Parker’s sturdy songs so rugged you could leave them in your pocket for a few days, run them through the laundry and in the morning they’d work just the same. Varnaline was compared to Crazy Horse and the Minutemen. They toured with Metallica that summer. And they earned a following in the alt-country scene. This was probably due more to Varnaline's old-fashioned musical values (e.g., songs that work) than their sideburns. By 1998’s Sweet Life, the band was proving impossible to categorize, except by saying, as many did, Damn this Anders Parker guy can write a song. Sweet Life captured Varnaline's brilliance the way glimmering ice can capture a tree. Production became as much a part of Parker’s vision as his words and melodies. The characters he sang through started conveying poignancy beyond their own comprehension. Around the turn of the century, the label that released the first three Varnaline albums folded, and the band’s rhythm section executed a graceful bow to the pull of career and family. Anders, now relocated in North Carolina, signed to E-Squared/Artemis Records, but, unlike his labelmate Kurupt, continued to work with his former crewmates. Nonetheless, 2001’s Songs In a Northern Key was pretty much an Anders Parker solo record released as a Varnaline record. Sprawling and varied, somber and gorgeous, it earned a crop of praise for all that and, of course, its songwriting. No Depression gave it a rave, calling it “cinematic in its imagery and intimate in its feel.” Magnet honored it with a spot on its year-end list of the 20 best albums of 2001. London’s Daily Mail called it “a minor masterpiece.” In making his new album, Tell it to the Dust, Parker mastered the semi-solo approach of Songs In a Northern Key. Or maybe the first official Anders Parker album is better than the others because he had so much time. Take a guy who writes countless great songs every year and give him three years…you don’t need an abacus to calculate what’s coming. The project was initiated with monies received upon voluntary release from Artemis (a year was long enough to wait for the chance to record a follow-up) as well as contributions from his Management Company, Undertow and donated studio time from friends and believers. Parker reunited with key collaborator Ehrbar in an old Brooklyn firehouse. The two laid down 22 songs in four days. The initial recording was by producer/engineer Adam “Red” Lasus (whose credits include work with Helium and Clem Snide, in addition to Space Needle and Varnaline). Then, Anders took it on the road, recording in sundry settings with friends one at a time, including Jay Farrar (Uncle Tupelo, Son Volt), Bo Taylor (Motocaster, Dish, Bandway), Kendall Meade (Mascott), Greg Elkins (Vanilla Trainwreck), Joan Wasser (Dambuilders, Those Bastard Souls) and John Parker (Varnaline). John Agnello, (whose credits include Varnaline’s “Sweet Life” as well as work with Dinosaur Jr. and Mark Lanegan) mixed the songs and then stepped up to offer the final piece of the puzzle by agreeing to release the album on his record label, Baryon Records. It worked. “Tell it to the Dust” will move and please all who listen to it. Its release is a major story. Consider it the performing songwriter’s equivalent of getting shot nine times in a botched drug deal and living to brag about it. For people who like songs, big news. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.