IL GATO (album release)
Immanu El, Wolf & Crow
Wed, October 10, 2012
8:00 pm
Rickshaw Stop
$10.00
Tickets Available at the Door
This event is all ages
There's a 6 ticket limit for this event per household, customer, credit card number and email address. Patrons who exceed the ticket limit can have their order cancelled automatically and without notice.
http://www.rickshawstop.com/event/160827/IL GATO (album release)

"The current quartet plays with an abundance of stringed instruments - guitars, mandolin, banjo, upright bass - and adds to the mixing pot piano, drums, harmonica, horns and melodica. The band's compositions fuse with mildly estranged vocals that have a storytelling style plucked from country-folk. When asked to describe its music, Holiday Scott coins the genre 'indie-Baroque folk-rock,' which he explains as 'folk-rock with classical instruments and a liberal use of repetition.'" --SF Chronicle
Immanu El

”Swedish postrock romanticism or hauntingly whispering hover-pop. Sigur Rós without fairy-tale forest.” --ROLLING STONE
"One of the biggest Swedish pop-hopes right now." –-METRO
"Immanu El is not only a project but - as sentimental as it might sound - an affair of the heart." – VISIONS
"One of the biggest Swedish pop-hopes right now." –-METRO
"Immanu El is not only a project but - as sentimental as it might sound - an affair of the heart." – VISIONS
Wolf & Crow

Wolf & Crow is a music duo from San Francisco playing in the American roots, blues and folk tradition comprised of Zachary "Crow" Vieira and Mathieu "Wolf" Stemmelen. While their music shares the acoustic intimacy of folk revival veterans Nick Drake and Bob Dylan as well as neofolk contemporaries such as Iron & Wine and Bon Iver, their sound is set apart by its influences from mid-century bluesmen like Leadbelly, Fred Mcdowell, Skip James, Bill Landford, and Mississippi John Hurt. Vieira's silvery mid-to-high-ranged vocals and laid-back guitar picking peppered with Stemmelen's memorable slide-guitar riffs and even loftier vocal harmonies create a contemporary artifact of something haunting and timeless.
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