A
quick look at Mark Brown
When you first listen to Mark Brown, you might find yourself wondering
where he’s been and why it took him so long to get here. Combining
a sharp eye with a sly sense of humor reminiscent of John Prine, Mark
makes songs that hail from everywhere, incorporating ballads, cowboy
songs, jigs, sideshow melodies, and field hollers. His songs give
voice to craftsmen, broken-hearted mechanics, heavy equipment operators,
squatters and girls with their dirt bikes. Like many of his characters,
he’s been around: after growing up in Maryland, Mark’s
done some farming, worked as a mechanic, spent years as a commercial
fisherman in the northern Pacific and worked as a carpenter in the
northeastern US. These experiences have influenced his music the way
an oak cask influences good whiskey.
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Mark got his first Johnny Cash record when he was 6 years old, and
wore it out in short order. A farrier took him to his first Tom Waits
show in 1975, and that set fire to the barn, flipped the car in the
ditch, and started Mark on his own musical career. Mark has been writing,
playing and performing for the last 15 years – writing interesting,
carefully crafted songs that maintain a soulful integrity while never
taking themselves too seriously. After years of solo work, Mark is
currently working with his band, Uncle Buckle. Backing up Mark is
pedal-steel player extraordinaire Fooch Fischetti, bassist John Hughes,
and the versatile Dean Jones on everything else. When the band begins
to play the room fills with dust, tarpaper shacks and decrepit farm
machinery. Mark also does occasional solo tours around Ireland, where
his singing and songwriting skills are drawing notice. |