When the stars align, it can seem downright magical. Celebrate Brooklyn offers a unique opportunity for the musicians and audience to bond in a way that is only possible during the easy, breezy nights of summer. And Dawn Landes is the perfect performer for this type of introduction.
On a July evening, Park Slope resident Dawn Landes took the stage at the Prospect Park bandshell. She was the opening act for Jason Isbell, as part of the Celebrate Brooklyn! concert series. “Her band was tight, like they have played together for a long time,” an audience member described. Dawn’s voice and musicianship were beautiful. If you haven’t already experienced it, Prospect Park is the perfect place setting for a performance–moonlight bouncing off the grass and the trees, and the skyline of Park Slope’s beautiful architecture in the distance. By Florence Wang
If you weren’t in attendance that night, or are not familiar with Dawn Landes, she has been a busy bee buzzing around Brooklyn since alighting here eight years ago, releasing five albums and three EPs as a solo artist. Her most recent solo album, Bluebird, with songs are windows to quiet, thoughtful moments, received a nomination for “Folk Album of the Year” by MRG from its 14th Annual Independent Music Awards. Her spirited 2010 release, Sweetheart Rodeo, extends an invitation for hand-clapping and a foot-stomping. There’s something that feels very participatory in her music; and that must be due to her collaborative nature. In addition to her solo albums, she has taken the stage with an array of musicians, including Will Oldham, Sufjan Stevens, and Justin Townes Earl. These alliances have led to her expanding into new areas such as an album devoted to the French song style Ye-Ye (a pop of the 1906s), and an interactive graphic novel. She also performs as Dawn Split, one third of the all-girl pop trio, The Bandana Splits, who are incredibly reminiscent of the Andrews Sisters, and are oodles of fun.
Her love of music started at a young age. “I started making up songs before I could play any instruments. Somewhere there’s a cassette tape of a four-year-old me cooing rhymes into my dad’s recorder.” Growing up, Dawn was drawn to Linda Ronstadt, Bonnie Raitt, and Lucinda Williams, who she aptly refers to as “the truth tellers.” These influences shaped her style, which could easily be described as a perfect marriage of these sounds: Ronstadt’s gorgeous soprano, Raitt’s wit, and Williams’ whimsy. An accomplished multi-instrumentalist, her exploration with sound also began at home. “We had a piano that kept changing colors. My mom kept painting it. I guess I’m drawn to acoustic instruments,” she muses. “I love the sound of the banjo and a good honky-tonk piano.”
Moving to New York City from her native Kentucky, Dawn cut her teeth working at various recording studios around the city while attending NYU. She learned the ropes of production and engineering, and met other like-minded musicians. “I’m often drawn to the people first and the music second,” she says. During this time worked with the Brooklyn-based, Americana musical group Hem, playing glockenspiel. “I met Hem in the studio early on when I was assisting at Stratosphere Sound. I love collaborating, it’s like the periodic table…you take a bunch of elements and throw them together and they create a whole new thing.”
Perhaps her biggest undertaking is writing the music and lyrics for the upcoming musical, Row, commissioned by Joe’s Pub/The Public Theater. Row recounts the true story of Tori Murden, a fellow Kentuckian, who in 1998 left her job and endeavored to become the first woman to row across the Atlantic Ocean. Dawn followed Tori’s progress as it appeared in the news, and the story stayed with her. “I was really inspired by Tori’s memoir, A Pearl in the Storm, but it wasn’t until I met with (writer/director) Daniel Goldstein that I ever considered turning it into a musical.” Goldstein, a fellow Park Slope resident, is writing the book and she has greatly loved this process. You can find Dawn’s TED talk about Tori’s story online. Her recounting of the voyage is riveting and the song she performs is a gorgeous reflection of her thoughts and feelings. A work in progress, she debuted some of the songs in a performance at Joe’s Pub over the summer, “It’s still in development with the Public Theater and I’m very excited to share it with the world when it’s ready.” Given her previous albums, it makes perfect sense for Dawn to sing about Tori—she is a woman of strength, it must be the Kentucky spirit shining through.
Dawn is currently on tour as part of Sufjan Stephens’ quartet that The Huffington Post described as “stellar;” further writing that Dawn is a, “charming singer-songwriter whose quiet elegance added even more charm to his already class act.” When touring is complete, Park Slope is where she hangs her hat. “I moved to Brooklyn about eight years ago. As a native Kentuckian, the tree-lined streets in Carroll Gardens and Park Slope really made me feel at home. I grew up near Cherokee Park in Louisville…which is also an Olmstead park, so Prospect Park somehow feels familiar. There’s a great community of musicians and songwriters in Brooklyn.”
2016 looks to be another busy year for Dawn—in January, look out for her EP of duets on Sixth Degree Records, titled Desert Songs. As you’re thinking about gifts this season, The Bandana Splits have a holiday album coming out—the perfect soundtrack to any party. You will find it in her online store, which is stocked with fun, rodeo-themed merchandise, as well as her music on both CD and vinyl. It has been a busy year for Dawn, and I for one am looking forward to her return to Brooklyn and Joe’s Pub, and a chance to hear her live.
You can learn more about her, listen to music, and find her performance dates on her website, dawnlandes.com.