TEEMCO: Services & Press Magazine Summer 2014 | Page 62

Publish Date: 03/25/2014 Samantha Crain Playing Free Show July 4 at Myriad Gardens; John Fullbright Joins Gardens’ Free Lineup Aug. 1 If you want to celebrate the Fourth of July with some great indie folk-rock, the Myriad Botanical Gardens has a great free show for you Friday. The Myriad Gardens will be the site of two big free, public concerts presented by TEEMCO: Samantha Crain will perform July 4 and John Fullbright will perform Aug. 1. Both concerts will start at 8 p.m. and the Gardens will have a festive atmosphere with food trucks, and cold beer from Coop Ale Works. Ice House will be open, ser ving Nic’s burgers, fries, beer and milkshakes. The concerts are in addition to the weekly Acoustic Thursdays presented by TEEMCO at the Gardens. On Friday, I’ll bet you can see the Bricktown fireworks from the Gardens, too. A Choctaw Indian, Samantha Crain grew up in the small town of S h a w n e e l i s t e n i n g t o h e r f a t h e r ’s Dylan and Grateful Dead records, dabbling in painting (a pursuit she took seriously en ough to later land a gallery exhibition in Oklahoma City) and trying her hand at writing short stories. When she became 62 TEEMCO Meet TEEMCO intrigued by the notion of writing songs, Crain reworked a series of stories she’d written while taking creative writing classes at Oklahoma Baptist University into the songs she then recorded for her self-released E P, “ T h e C o n f i s c a t i o n : A M u s i c a l Novella.” The quality of the material and the bold way in which she delivered it inspired North Carolinabased Ramseur Records to sign the fledgling artist to a deal; the indie label gave the EP a more formal release in 2007. Crain made “Songs in the Night” (2009), her debut LP —and her first proper recording—with the Midnight Shivers, a band she’d formed not long beforehand. It got the attention of Rolling Stone reviewer Will Hermes, who wrote, “Her voice is gorgeously odd—all fulsome, shape-shifting vowels that do indeed billow like fog.” She followed it a year later with the stripped-down “You (Understood)” (2010), recorded in a converted barn in W ichita, exposing the primal extreme of her sensibility. “Like a prairie-bred, meat-and-potatoes Joanna Newsom, Crain’s vocals are quivering, emotive and visceral,” noted Liz Stinson in Paste. Her third LP, “Kid Face,” was released last year. Born and raised in Bearden, near Okemah,singer/songwriter John Fullbright was barely out of high school when he began playing the festival circuit. Raised on the songs of hometown hero Woody Guthrie and steeped in the rich Americana artistry of genre-hopping mavericks l i k e To w n e s Va n Z a n d t , R a n d y Newman, and Steve Earle, Fullbright started his music education on the piano at the age of five. He later added guitar to his arsenal, and in his late teens he began honing his craft at the legendary Blue Door in Oklahoma City, eventually releasing a live album with the venue’s founder, Greg Johnson.