Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

    • American alternative country band

      • Freakwater is an American alternative country band from Louisville, Kentucky, with one co-founding member living in Chicago. Freakwater is known for the lead vocals of Janet Bean and Catherine Irwin, who mix harmony and melody in idiosyncratic dissonant country-folk that is reminiscent of the Carter Family.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freakwater
  1. People also ask

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › FreakwaterFreakwater - Wikipedia

    Freakwater is an American alternative country band from Louisville, Kentucky, with one co-founding member living in Chicago. Freakwater is known for the lead vocals of Janet Bean and Catherine Irwin, who mix harmony and melody in idiosyncratic dissonant country-folk that is reminiscent of the Carter Family .

  3. FREAKWATER, a fan site - Welcome. Freakwater lives! Their 2016 release, Scheherazade, has enjoyed universal critical praise, and ranks #63 on Metacritic's list of the best albums from that year. Not too shabby! Buy the record from Bloodshot now.

  4. Freakwater knows what must be the most fruitful long-distance relationship ever: Three hundred miles of interstate have lain between Janet and Catherine, the main creative forces of the band, since soon after Freakwater's inception.

  5. Oct 24, 2016 · The cult status of Freakwater is something that endures, from their debut in 1989 through to the current collection of songs on the new Scheherazade release. The girls are both very amiable, open and full of fun and dove-tail regularly throughout our conversation.

  6. Freakwater. Chicago indie duo that defied the alt-country pigeonhole with their aching, prairie-echoing songs of heartbreak and sorrow. Read Full Biography.

  7. Freakwater. This Carter Family-inspired duo began as a side project for Eleventh Dream Day drummer/vocalist Janet Beveridge Bean and childhood friend (and fellow Kentucky native) Catherine Irwin, a songwriter who’d done cover art for Dream Day albums.

  8. Freakwater is propelled by what has been called "acerbic harmonies", a wrenching but wonderful sound that goes straight back to Sara and Maybelle Carter's original prescription: Keep it plaintive, rough, and real.