Lilith Boston recap in OurStage blog

Excerpt:
OurStage “Lilith Local Talent Search” Boston winners Winterbloom were the first band of the day on the Village Stage. Winterbloom, a singer-songwriter/folk supergroup of sorts, is made up of Boston singer-songwriter stars Meg Hutchinson, Antje Duvekot, Anne Heaton, Natalia Zukerman and special guest Rose Polenzani. Separately, each of these women is a musical force to be reckoned with. Together, they are on another level. The Winterbloom women and their sweet vocal harmonies greeted Lilith attendees as they filled into the Comcast Center. What did it feel like to perform at Lilith? “It felt amazing!,” said Winterbloom’s Ann Heaton, “Each day I keep wanting to know who to thank at OurStage for managing the competition and helping this come to be…Lilith itself had such a great supportive feeling of community… It was great to be around such talented, smart and kind women doing their own things in their own ways!” Bandmate Rose Polenzani echoes Heaton’s sentiments. “We had such a wonderful time at Lilith Fair… Right before the finale, one of the backstage crew members held up an assortment of percussion instruments and offered them to anyone who wanted to play them. This gesture showed such a spirit of fun and welcoming…” “Having the Lilith Fair date did give us something to work toward as a band,” said Winterbloom’s Antje Duvekot, “And the audience at Lilith Fair was really great and supportive of our performance.”

Did your judging help Winterbloom win? The women of Winterbloom put together a special video just for you! View their thank-you video here…

Read the full story and see photos at:
http://www.ourstage.com/blog/2010/8/3/ladies-first-lilith-2010-comes-to-boston

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Winterbloom featured in Lilith Boston official video

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Anne Heaton on Chronicle

Winterbloom member Anne Heaton appeared on ABC’s news program Chronicle the day before Lilith Fair to talk about her new album “Blazing Red,” the anticipation of welcoming a new baby, and the joy and excitement of collaborating with her fellow Winterbloom artists at Lilith Fair.

Anne Heaton on Chronicle

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Natalia Zukerman interviewed by The Boston Herald

“Winterbloom a budding folk supergroup”
by Dan Gewertz

Read full story with photos and video at:
http://www.bostonherald.com/entertainment/music/general/view.bg?articleid=1270637

This year’s Lilith Fair boasts some big names. But there’s major under-the-radar talent getting top billing, too.

Hundreds of female-fronted bands and solo women songwriters vied for a chance to perform at Lilith’s New England stop Friday at the Comcast Center. The winner of the prize gig was Winterbloom, a supergroup of four darlings from the local folk scene: Antje Duvekot, Anne Heaton, Meg Hutchinson and Natalia Zukerman. All four are performing songwriters with successful solo careers.

And to make their appearance even more special, Somerville-based folk singer Rose Polenzani, who played the last Lilith Fair in 1999, will perform as Winterbloom’s special guest.

Duvekot, Hutchinson, Heaton and Zukerman first played together in 2008 at a Campfire Festival at Club Passim in Cambridge. The audience response was so enthusiastic, the women came together as Winterbloom and recorded 2009’s “Winterbloom: Traditions Rearranged.” The focus was on winter and holiday songs, but not typical Christmas fare.

“We wanted to create our own traditions,” said Zukerman, daughter of famed violinist Pinchas Zukerman. “We wanted to be a throwback to a time when you got together in the dead of winter to warm yourself with song.”

Now Winterbloom will flower in midsummer atthe reborn Lilith Fair. Zukerman is thrilled to be opening a touring festival that played a historic role in the evolution of women’s music. She attended the initial Lilith Fair.

“Now there are so many more opportunities for women. Yet it’s not outdated,” she said. “We go to large events to feel a part of something bigger. Humans need contact and safe spaces. Those spaces should be celebrated and I’m hoping Lilith still will be.”

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Winterbloom sends a little thank you video message to fans

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Winterbloom to perform at Lilith Fair in Boston!

http://www.lilithfair.com/artists/winterbloom

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Winterbloom running to play at Lilith. Vote now!

Lilith update – we are in the top 20, vote for Winterbloom in Boston!
http://www.ourstage.com/judge4?channel=2..48-lilith-local-talent-search-boston

1) Sign up on Ourstage (http://www.ourstage.com/re..gister_user) with a Fan account (you can sign in using Facebook too, if you prefer). Confirm your account.
2) Go to Winterbloom’s page (http://www.ourstage.com/pr..ofile/winterbloom/fans)
3) In the right-hand column where it says “Is this your favorite artist?” click the green tab that says “Make This My Favorite Artist”
4) Then up near the OurStage logo at the top of the page, click the “Judge” tab
5) Over on the right click “Lilith Fair Channels”
6) Select “Lilith Local Talent Search: Boston” This is where it gets interesting…
7) You’ve gotta listen to at least 15 seconds of each song and rank/rate what you hear
8) Your decisions drive the best to the top of the rankings, so keep going till you get Winterbloom’s new song “The Alchemist” – you can do it. You’ll hear Antje singing and Rose Polenzani playing ukelele (special guest for Lilith!) :) Please keep clicking til you see it come up and rank it #1!
9) Tell your friends to vote too………

Thank you!!!!!!!

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“The women of Winterbloom find the simpler joys of the holidays”

“The women of Winterbloom find the simpler joys of the holidays”
The Boston Globe by Scott Alarik

Read the full story with photos at:
http://www.boston.com/ae/music/articles/2009/12/18/the_women_of_winterbloom_find_the_simpler_joys_of_the_holidays/

Could your holiday traditions use a little rearranging? Move the office party until that accountant who thinks he’s Brad Pitt is on vacation, Facebook Grandpa’s fishing stories so he can enjoy them by himself, or find a carbon-neutral way to dispose of Aunt Emma’s fruitcake. Perhaps we could just put the whole thing off until July, when the weather’s better and we have some time to deal with it.

If thoughts like that disturb your holiday cheer, four decidedly 21st-century songwriters may have the balm. Winterbloom: Traditions Rearranged is a seasonal ensemble of rising folk stars Meg Hutchinson, Natalia Zukerman, Anne Heaton, and Antje Duvekot. Offering fresh takes on holiday standards, and original songs about the season’s modern pitfalls, they’re on a 12-city tour that visits Club Passim Sunday.

The tour has the quartet pondering what tradition means in the age of Twitter. The old rituals were designed for such a different time, when December was not only the darkest but the slowest time of year. In a wired-to-the-world society, it is often the most hectic, stressful time. Silent night indeed.

“We have so many devices now,’’ Hutchinson says. “We’re constantly checking our e-mail and social networks and blogs. That translates to family gatherings, too; everyone has their little gadgets they’re busy with. When we used to go to my grandmother’s house in the Vermont woods, there was this timeless feeling. We’d all be in the house for days, and what was special was just lying around the fire, picking through old magazines, finding some old book on the shelf. That downtime was so restoring, and brought us so close. I think we’re forgetting that.’’

For Winterbloom’s eight-song EP, Zukerman updated an old Jewish riddle song, in which women line up to be quizzed by a prospective husband. But in this version, the woman who knows the answers also knows a jerk when she sees one.

“I thought, yuck, I’m so sick of that Cinderella thing of lining women up and auditioning them for the role of wife,’’ Zukerman says. “So I wanted to find a way to share the fun of the riddles, without making young girls feel like they have to prove themselves to be loved.’’

Heaton sings a bluesy wish that we will be seen as we really are at family reunions, and not perpetually as the brats we were. Duvekot contributes a Christmas kiss-off song, for those moments when the wrong gift finally convinces you he’s the wrong guy (“When have you ever seen me wear a thong?’’).

Hutchinson wrote a song updating O. Henry’s holiday story “The Gift of the Magi,’’ about a poor man who sells his watch to buy his wife expensive combs, only to find that she’s sold her long hair to buy him a watch fob. But Hutchinson’s version ends uncertainly, reminding us that love needs steady attention more than dramatic gestures.

“When I took inventory of the relationship that inspired me to rework that story,’’ she says, “none of the beautiful things were physical gifts; they were just the feelings we had, the time we shared. I also wanted to capture that it’s never just a jolly holiday for me; it’s always bittersweet, a time I contemplate the things I love, which are magnified by the things that I miss.’’

This way of updating old traditions used to happen all the time. Much of our American holiday, from “Season’s Greetings’’ to Santa Claus, revamped older religious rituals, so that everybody felt included, regardless of faith or background. Maybe the trouble is not that we don’t honor old traditions, but that we don’t rearrange them to fit our lives today.

“I think it’s harder to fight for time in our lives, to not just get together as a family and start showing each other the latest app on our iPhones,’’ Zukerman says. “On the other hand, you can get Grandma on iChat now, which is great. But at some point, I hope we can turn the machines off and get back to people around the table, sharing a meal. It’s such an elemental thing – like harmony.’

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Share your holiday stories and traditions on the Winterbloom facebook wall…

Share holiday stories, traditions @ facebook.com/winterbloomholiday

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Press – “going to replace Bing Crosby”

12/7/09 – Ron Olesko’s Folk Music Notebook, WFDU FM Traditions

“The show started with what is quickly becoming my favorite song of the season (and maybe the entire year!) – Antje Duvekot’s “Thank’s For the Roses(Merry Christmas”, part of the new Winterblom project. Winterbloom: Traditions Rearranged is the enw 8-song EP from the collective team fo Antje Duvekot, Anne Heaton, Meg Hutchinson and Natalia Zukerman. Each of these extraordinary singer-songwriters brings something to the table – using their different backgrounds and musical styles, they have created a unique seasonal offering that is going to replace Bing Crosby in my house!”

www.ronolesko.blogspot.com

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