Charlotte Sometimes

Charlotte Sometimes

Toggle Section Off Charlotte Sometimes's Profile Updates

Monday, October 27th, 2008
Update Charlotte Sometimes posted new tourdates. 3:21AM
Wednesday, October 15th, 2008
Update Charlotte Sometimes posted new tourdates. 2:58AM
Saturday, October 11th, 2008
Update Charlotte Sometimes posted new tourdates. 5:00AM

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First you pick the show:

Nov 20 2008

Madison, WI
High Noon Saloon
United States United States

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Nov 21 2008

Pontiac, MI
The Eagles Theatre
United States United States

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Nov 22 2008

Covington, KY
The Mad Hatter
United States United States

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Nov 23 2008

Nashville, TN
3rd & Lindsley
United States United States

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Nov 24 2008

St. Louis, MO
Duck Room @ Blueberry Hill
United States United States

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Nov 25 2008

Columbus, OH
The Basement
United States United States

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Nov 26 2008

Indianapolis, IN
Music Mill
United States United States

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Nov 28 2008

Cleveland, OH
Beachland Ballroom and Tavern
United States United States

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Nov 29 2008

Pittsburgh, PA
Diesel Club Lounge
United States United States

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Nov 30 2008

Buffalo, NY
Mohawk Place
United States United States

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Dec 2 2008

Montréal, Canada
Les Saints
Canada Canada

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Dec 3 2008

Toronto, Canada
El Mocambo
Canada Canada

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Dec 4 2008

Troy, NY
Revolution Hall
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Dec 5 2008

Portland, ME
The Station Night Club & Restaurant
United States United States

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Dec 6 2008

Hartford, CT
Webster Theatre
United States United States

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Dec 7 2008

Cambridge, MA
Middle East Restaurant
United States United States

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Dec 9 2008

Baltimore, MD
Eight By Ten / 8 x 10 / The Funk Box
United States United States

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Dec 10 2008

Alexandria, VA
Birchmere
United States United States

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Dec 13 2008

New York, NY
Bowery Ballroom
United States United States

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Dec 14 2008

Philadelphia, PA
North Star Bar
United States United States

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You have picked this show:

Nov 20 2008
Madison, WI
High Noon Saloon
701 E Washington Ave # A
United States United States
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Then you pick the set:

Pick the songs you want to hear Nov 20 2008 in Madison, WI:
Waves & the Both of Us
Waves & the Both of Us
(2008) BUY
  • Losing Sleep
  • How I Could Just Kill a Man
  • Waves and the Both of Us
  • Sweet Valium High
  • Ex Girlfriend Syndrome
  • AEIOU
  • Toy Soldier
  • This Is Only for Now
  • In Your Apartment
  • Army Men
  • Build the Moon
  • Pilot
Vote for Nov 20 2008 in Madison, WI

Top picks for Nov 20 2008:

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Toggle Section Off Charlotte Sometimes's Info

Official Site: http://www.charlottesometimesmusic.com/
Official Merchandise: Shop Now
Genres: Alternative, Jazz, Pop
Hometown: New York, New York, United States United States
Bio: Once, years ago, Charlotte Sometimes traveled out to a field in Pennsylvania to perform at a balloon festival. She had no idea where she'd ended up, and instead of the multitudes she imagined attended such events, found only a handful of onlookersâ€"festival workers, at that. "High school," she explains, and it becomes a bit clearer how this guitar-wielding, soul-bearing spark of a songstress spent her formative years.

From a children's book, she borrowed the name of a precocious boarding school student who finds herself transported 40 years into the past, into the body of another girl. This curiously dark story of time-travel and interchangeable identities, written in 1969 by Penelope Farmer, captivated Charlotte and embedded inside her restless mind the inspiration for detailing her own exploits, into that tentative space between confrontation and escape. The idea that you could actually be someone elseâ€"that people often did adopt alter egos, depending on the circumstanceâ€"fascinated her.

Maybe the fact that she was adopted had something to do with it. For a long time, Charlotte didn't have a clue about her actual birth date, or ethnic background for that matter (her mother has blonde hair and blue eyes; she does not). "The simple things that everyone else knows, you don't know," she explains. "It doesn't seem like a big deal to anyone else, but it's such a big deal when you're young and you don't know anything about where you came from."

Dead set on coming from somewhere, she threw herself into the rigors of dance and musical theater until age 14, when she traded in her leotard for a guitar. It was a relief, she says, to no longer be forced to stare into a mirror all day and told to suck in this and suck in that. Instead, she began writing songs and playing them for people in her small town of Wall, New Jersey (just north of Brickâ€"no joke), eventually making treks to New York and, on at least one occasion, to a poorly attended Pennsylvania balloon festival.

Charlotte Sometimes' enchanting debut full-length, Waves and the Both of Us, is a product of insomnia, airplanes, and bodies of water, not to mention countless hours of daydreaming to the mesmerizing sounds of Billie Holiday, the Everly Brothers, Jeff Buckley, and Fiona Apple, among others. An allusion to the year to which Farmer's protagonist travels, the title isn't so much an overt reference to the book as it is a recognition of the fact every one of us is stuck somewhere, trying to be someone else, or at least play the role of one of our personalities. Also named for one of its songs ("Waves and the Both of Us"), the record tells a story of the currents that pass through our lives, some more uplifting or traumatic than others, Charlotte says. "It's about all the different waves that live inside my head and heart, and how they affect others, myself, and the person I want or pretend to be."

It's difficult to say whether Charlotte's onstage persona is an outlet from these personalities or just one of them. Probably both. As a performer, she's flippant and seductive, and as a songwriter, she gravitates toward the shadier elements in life, like spiders and Valium ("Sweet Valium High"), using the eclectic imagery to dissect the dynamics between women and men. "The whole idea of the power struggle between a man and a woman entertains meâ€"the idea of what a woman's role is, if it's to be submissive to a man, or if it's to be in charge of a man, if it's to be equal to a man."

Leave it to a Cypress Hill lyric to score one for the girls. On "How I Could Kill a Man," Charlotte reinterprets the refrain of a rap classic, graciously turning male bravado on its head. It's a disarmingly upbeat and happy song colored with darkness and condescension. Her warm, amber voice isn't murderous, per se, but you believe it when she says she's "killed" men, metaphorically speaking. And still, you smile and move your feetâ€"proof once again that dancing and misery are not mutually exclusive.

"It's almost like you can dance your troubles away," Charlotte says. Take another rosy song, "Ex-Girlfriend Syndrome," which digs relentlessly inside an ex-boyfriend's head. "I always imagine teenage girls in their car on a summer day just dancing around in their car listening to the songs, and being, like yeah, 'Fuck you!' A lot of the record is about getting those kinds of feelings out, but you don't have to mope about it." Throughout the album, beatsâ€"both instrumental and electronicâ€"are a vital part of the drama, pushing the record forward and allowing the music and stories to pulsate underneath your skin.

Meanwhile, the somber, piano-laced "Pilot," tells a different story, filling in the unspoken space between two people. Charlotte readily admits she's not terribly successful at relationships, and this disheartening recollection is just one example. "I feel like, sometimes, people pretend to be so much more connected than they really are." It's a beautifully patient, if melancholy, glimpse into a familiar and hopeless situation.

While her high school years yielded a few homemade EPs and one live CD, recorded when she was only 14, Waves and the Both of Us is Charlotte's first fully realized albumâ€"call it a graduation of sorts. Having poured so many of her influences into the album, she's not entirely sure which genre it's intended for, except that it pulls liberally from throughout her own personal arsenal of loves and neuroses, including dark poetry, dance beats, and indie folk. Her brain buzzes constantly, and she confesses to an obsessive streak. Why limit herself to one genre, she figures, when she can draw from everything she's ever done? Music is mood, first and foremost, and in the midst of diversity, her songs remain alluringly bare and revelatory.

"I want to make sure that whole emotional connection is in each and every word and in each and every note of my songs, because if that's not there, then what's the point in music? Music is supposed to transport you somewhere. It's supposed to make you feel connected to something," she says. ""I would hope that I'm making a connection with people because if not, it's almost like masturbating when it comes to music. That's fun, but sex is better."
 

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