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Frank Fairfield

Jan 22, 2010


Frank Fairfield

Tracks

  1. 1 Welcome to Daytrotter
  2. 2 Bo Weevil
  3. 3 Cannonball
  4. 4 Chilly Winds
  5. 5 The Girl I Left Behind
  6. 6 When The Roses Bloom Again

Living Elsewhere, Forever

Words by Sean Moeller, Illustration by Johnnie Cluney, Sound engineering by Brett Allen and Nick Luca at New Monkey Studio

Frank Fairfield is hard to speak to. He is consumed with a feeling that most of us cannot speak to. We cannot get to it for we can only imagine a very loose-fitting replication of that place where he lives. He lives in Los Angeles, California, sure, but it's full of fakers. It's full of make-believe and of highly-paid professional and amateur actors struggling to figure out what their motivations are in getting to the heart of the character they're trying to play in front of the watchful cameras. Fairfield is not of that part of LA, where Hollywood spoils things into a constructed farce whose goal is to be profitable and quotable first and foremost. This fey man, with a slightly hunched back and a bony handshake, to go with his Dapper Dan pomaded hairstyle, comes from a time that none of the living have ever seen. It exists more than a century again, a time that no person alive today ever saw. The oldest man alive is a young buck in Fairfield's dated and antique gaze. The jackets and trousers that he wears seem to be of the Civil War era and he's not thinking contemporary thoughts. He knows nothing of modern worries. In his head, even though he must know different, coffee costs a quarter and a gallon of milk is a dime. A four-course meal is expensive at $5 and horses and buggies are all the rage. With him, there is no denying that time has stood still for a long, long time. His mind hasn't moved beyond the days when life expectancies were considerably lower and therefore life more tragic and desperate. The hard toil of days, the hard work of getting everything to work for you - love, food on the table, a roof over heads and death not arriving until you were ready - is fastened to Fairfield's very specific sound. His is the sound of a man relying on old practices, of being live in one room with a cheap microphone and the idea that one take will do it. He embodies more the purpose of a recorded piece of music when they were first made - as a chance to hear a performer do exactly what they did live because traveling to everywhere was not an option. His self-titled album from last year is a gritty and rough take on the pride and tiredness of a good and faithful, god-fearing man and the pains of living. These are simple, but unbelievably true to the grain ballads of lesser times, but of more wholesome times, when things were cleaner, harder and in many ways more appealing because of it. Fairfield's voice and his stories of sorrow seem to come from the grave. They seem to bound - actually amble - from the dirt, pulling their legs from the soil and shaking the brown specks of earth out of the cuffs at the bottom of the pant legs. The earthworms have chewed holes through his already spotty stockings and all of the rest of him is decades upon decades past being out of date. He sings about coming home to his woman with $10 in his pocket and having the act be enough to suddenly get her to not call him a dog anymore, but become grateful for the hard week's work and the modest earnings that he makes. It's enough to keep the biscuits in the oven and the eggs in the pantry - not to mention clothes on the kids' backs. Fairfield is such an intriguing writer and performer, one who doesn't take anything of late into account. The newspapers that are printed and thrown onto the stoops every morning must seem so foreign to him, as if they were written by H.G. Wells - the work of a hoax, one of a far-off time that seems implausible, with issues unfathomable. His songs work as easy medicine, a glance into the mind of the long gone past, when most of the country was still wild and rich with unfound gold, majestic scenery in every direction, plentiful and roaming bison herds and with land uncharted to the west. It's a body of work that's intrigued with the thought that we don't have to be of this era. We can live elsewhere, in a time when are great grandparents weren't even a glimmer in their mother or father's eyes.

Frank Fairfield MySpace Page
Tompkins Square Records

Session Comments

Older Comments

Session Comments

Older Session Comments

  1. I saw Frank a few weeks back at the Topanga banjo and fiddle competition. After the show I had the opportunity to meet Frank and have him sign my copy of his new record "OUT ON THE OPEN WEST" As we got to talking about some of his banjo pieces I asked him about the origins of his fiddle and banjo. It turns out the banjo is a 1931 Kay and he picked up the fiddle somewhere for $40 and wasn't to sure of the brand and year. He "Recon'd" it was pretty old seems how it always goes out of tune. Either way a 1931 Kay banjo holds quite the story. Anyone whose interested should definitely go see Frank you wont be disappointed. moviemaker5 Friday, June 10, 2011 9:39 pm
  2. Amen to everyone hear praising the talents of Frank Fairfield. Saw him in Denver last week and it was a night I'll remember for a long time ... I walked into a makeshift "theater" which was really a small sideroom with a stage in a converted church (another concert was going on in the main hall), and there were about four people in the room that seated about 100, with Frank just sitting in the back as I entered. I thought the set had been canceled but then he got up to play and in front of a crowd that maxed out at about 6-7 (a couple of folks kept coming in and out), he put on an amazing, full 12-song set. He played with incredible passion, just shredding his bow... telling funny stories about the songs and about the futile attempts to find their origins... sometimes you'd seem him so locked into the stories he's singing about that he'd pause after it ended and just laugh. I couldn't believe this show wasn't promoted more. Afterward I thanked him and he said he's happy to play for anyone who will listen. Each of his instruments look pretty old so I'm sure he's got some good stories for those. If you see him live, ask him about them and let us know.

    I guess the points of this post is to confirm that Frank is the genuine deal. He deeply loves the music he plays, truly believes it's pop music ("the music of the people") and you've got to find a way to see him live. The Denver show was the first on his first-ever full U.S. tour, so check out the dates on his myspace page. Can't believe he's only entering his mid-20s.
    echosmyron Tuesday, July 13, 2010 9:30 pm
  3. Hey,what a talent on those strings! It reminds me very much of the performer Honne Wells from Brooklyn. It would be great to hear these guys play together! http://www.myspace.com/honnewells VICTORIA k Friday, February 12, 2010 10:09 am
  4. Frank Fairfield opened for Fleet Foxes when they played The Echo 6/08 and he blew everyone away (including Fleet Foxes). Thanks Mr. Fairfield! Anonymous Wednesday, February 03, 2010 7:20 pm
  5. I saw Frank Fairfield open for Fleet Foxes at the Echo here in LA. The guy rolls up on his bike with his guitar on his back and his stool under his arm. Quietly ambles on stage and blew the crowd away, then grabs his stool gets back on his bike and rolled off. Kolby Vaughn Wednesday, February 03, 2010 7:13 pm
  6. i agree with jziebell...the world would sound much nicer if both fairfield and parr were played more. My previous comment was perhaps inflammatory. Nevertheless, there's something ironic about a guy that dresses in 19th century clothing AND has a myspace page. Nevertheless, the music's good and that's all tha matters. :) kylewknight Tuesday, February 02, 2010 12:05 am
  7. Can't wait for summer. This is prime sittin'-on-the-front-porch music. Homer Sexual Saturday, January 30, 2010 12:22 pm
  8. frank is new to me and really a gem to come across... this is the kind of music that i seek out and is often difficult to find - it is reminiscent of another time - and how beautiful that frank and people like him carry it on, even in our american idol culture. i will turn as many people on to his music as possible. thanks frank and thanks daytrotter. made my day. bullockphoto Thursday, January 28, 2010 10:14 pm
  9. i downloaded the whole thing. this is my favorite kind of music. i wish i could do what this guy does. i wish everyone would check this guy out. rote.campbell Wednesday, January 27, 2010 7:53 pm
  10. It is ridiculous to say that either parr or fairfield are overrated. In fact I would say that both are grossly under appreciated. jziebell06 Wednesday, January 27, 2010 7:43 pm
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