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Shelley Short

Shelley Short

Slowly Appreciating Warm Hands And Cold Days

Dec 4, 2008

Words by Sean Moeller
Illustration by Johnnie Cluney
Sound engineering by Patrick Stolley

  1.  
    Welcome to Daytrotter
  2.  
    25 original version appears on Water For The Day A short lullaby about getting old, and letting your teeth turn black.
  3.  
    A Canoe unreleased I was experimenting with not having a chorus and verse. This melody reminds me of the wake you feel from a bigger boat if you're in a canoe out in the bay.
  4.  
    Swimming original version appears on Water For The Day Before moving to LA from Chicago for 6 months, I had reoccurring dreams about water. Buckets of it, Oceans of it. I think I was worried about living in a place that was so dry, and where the river is not really a river. Growing up in Portland, water was a big part of my life. Rivers, Oceans, rain, leaky roofs. On the record, Alexis Gideon plays a beautiful guitar solo that makes me feel like I am actually swimming.
  5.  
    Tap The Old Bell unreleased I wrote this song up in the attic on a rainy day here in Portland. When i play it now, it makes me think of someone traveling by train or by horse and leaving a loved one behind. Maybe sleeping on a pile of hay in the back of a horse drawn buggy, as the sun is setting in a town you've never been to before.
  6.  
    The Get-Along original version appears on Water For The Day "The Getalong" is a group of friends who all live in different cities and towns. This song is a waltz to them! "Shelley Short Official Site":http://www.shelleyshortmusic.com"Hush Records":http://www.hushrecords.com

Shelley Short is a woman you'd build a fire for. Even if she didn't need one. Even if she already had a good, popping and orange one reaching out to her from the front of a cold and imposing room. You'd always find her as a welcome recipient of an alarmingly strong fire that was crackling its head off. One would think that she'd accept them all, humbly and with a bit of a blush, adding, "It's what I've always wanted and what a lovely colored one you've found for me.

It's just perfect, really, just perfect. I will use it every chance I get." And then she'd very carefully store it in her closet with all of the other superfluous fires that men had given to her over the years, so as not to raise suspicion that the gift was not the ideal one for her - unique and a genuine surprise. Short doesn't necessarily need the warmth from any of these fires as it seems to burn from inside her petty piping hot already, giving her a likely thermos quality, with her fair skin having the touch of toastiness, as if its temperatures were being retained somehow by invisible means. All the same, you feel impelled to make sure she has a fire because you know, or think you know, that she would not treat it poorly. She makes them herself and would spot a good one when she saw it. There is in her what sound to be all of the elements of the classic homebody, crafting, making things with her hands, mending her own sun dresses, grinding her own coffee beans, caring for countless windowsills of potted plants, helping random bugs that have found their ways indoors safely back out of them, occasionally uncorking a new bottle of wine to slowly appreciate and hearing her own voice sparkle against the hardness of the walls and the wooden floors.

There is also in her something just as classic and instantly gratifying that speaks to nothing of the sort. It's the mood and the countenance of a restless beat poet (who just so happens to look more like your favorite babysitter or the person you can count on to always remember your birthday and never fail to recommend to you great books to read), even one of those train hoppers, seeing the sights out of a rearview mirror, living out of a rucksack, subsisting on day-old bagels and the misty memories that a folded photograph kept in a hind pocket bring back. Short sings, "Oh what a day, oh what a day," and it feels like exhaustion, but it feels a bit like some sort of bragging as well, as if she were a gluttonous king who's reclined back on a soft and extravagant divan after a hearty meal, buttons about to pop and sleepy from the amount of joy that just came that way.

Age has no way of stopping or slowing down her interesting way of shaping song material, as it borders on the wondersome wanderings and folk-tale-ish ways that Joanna Newsom gently plays with and makes into her personalized planets, with their own moons and rings, all suitable for gazing. Age is referred to here only in that Short tends to incorporate a good amount of the bygone trimmings, of the child-like deciphering and imaginative structure to her songs, letting them do just as they please, but making sure that the end result is something of a seasoned casserole - of young amazement and learned circumstances. They go together to make a subdued, but rich broth that fills the air with a mothy, dewy and cinnamon-y scent. Short is an extremely talented writer and dazzlingly breathy singer who should be spoken of in the same sentences as the great Jenny Lewis, making ballads to send big, goosey shivers down the spines of balladeers and tuck us in at night when the drafts are attempting to find us, just when we think what a genius thing a fire would be right about at this moment.

Session Comments

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  1. Randomly saw Shelley Short in Baltimore at the Metro Gallery and was quite impressed. Picked up a copy of the album on vinyl...I highly recommend it! Anonymous Wednesday, September 30, 2009 8:10 pm

Artist Albums

  1. Shelley Short - Jul 12, 2009 Artist: Shelley Short Album: A Cave, A Canoo Tracks: 10 Release: 2009 Buy Now : $9.98 Preview Tracks:
    1.  
      Canoo
    2.  
      Familiar
    3.  
      Time Machine / Submarine
    4.  
      Mockingbird
    5.  
      Hard To Tell
    6.  
      A Cave
    7.  
      Racehorse
    8.  
      Tap The Old Bell
    9.  
      Interlude
    10.  
      How Was The Water?
  2. Shelley Short - Jul 12, 2005 Artist: Shelley Short Album: Captain Wild Horse (Rides The Heart Of Tomorrow) Tracks: 11 Release: 2005 Buy Now : $9.98 Preview Tracks:
    1.  
      Tomorrow Night
    2.  
      Like Anything, It's Small
    3.  
      On The Waterfront
    4.  
      Sweet Heart Said
    5.  
      Lupine Manner
    6.  
      All Eyes On The Skyline
    7.  
      Goodbye Old Morning
    8.  
      Pullin' Pullin'
    9.  
      Roaring Roars
    10.  
      The Sunny Side
    11.  
      Wild Wild Horses
  3. Shelley Short - Jul 12, 2008 Artist: Shelley Short Album: Water For The Day Tracks: 11 Release: 2008 Buy Now : $9.98 Preview Tracks:
    1.  
      Silver & Gold
    2.  
      Swimming
    3.  
      How Grand
    4.  
      Godamn Thing
    5.  
      Further & Farther
    6.  
      25
    7.  
      The Getalong
    8.  
      Single Minded Hero
    9.  
      Bells Of Hell
    10.  
      Pony
    11.  
      May Song
 
 
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