Archives by Month February 2010

 
 

New Video from The Conjurer: “Enough”

17. February 2010 •Category:NEWS, VIDEO • Comments: View Comments

Days of shooting, weeks of editing, hours of uploading and it’s here at last: the first video of the first single from The Conjurer:

The player above is the YouTube “standard def” (SD) version… here’s a “High Definition” (HD) version too. Which ever version you’re viewing, try to get the sound into a decent set of speakers or headphones… it sounds great!

While we’re at it, we’ve also added “Enough” to the “free downloads” section of the website (caveat browsor: it’s a “Fan Exclusive,” you have to be on the e-mail list to  download the whole track – no such restrictions with the video).

Good Place to Begin – Roddy Tree

13. February 2010 •Category:VIDEO • Comments: View Comments

Here’s a video of my performance of “Good Place to Begin” — one of the tracks on The Conjurer – recorded at the Roddy Tree Ranch in Kerrville, TX, back in January by Tony Galucci:

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NoDepression.com (January)

12. February 2010 •Category:MEDIA, NEWS, STUFF • Comments: View Comments

NoDepression.com writer “Rebel” Rodney Ames visited Dana before his 2010-year opening performance at the Roddy Tree Ranch in Kerrville, Texas in January, 2010. Read Rod’s coverage of the event:

Nashville recording artist, Dana Cooper gives an extraordinary performance last Saturday at The Lazy Days Canteen at Roddy Tree in Hunt, Texas

Jimmy, Neil, Pants

12. February 2010 •Category:STUFF, VIDEO • Comments: View Comments

I thought this was pretty funny so I thought I’d share with you all (though I suspect most of you have already seen it).  It’s Jimmy Fallon doing Neil Young singing the American Idol hit, “Pants on the Ground.” Click the image to open the YouTube page:

fallon-young-pants

Jimmy Fallon as Neil Young, "Pants on the Ground"

We’re Up

09. February 2010 •Category:STUFF • Comments: View Comments

Thanks for visiting the new Dana Cooper website.

We’ve just located to new servers and set up a new site using the Wordpress “Content Management System.” That should make for a highly interactive site so that fans can communicate with Dana and each other as Dana travels about the country and the world.

Bear with us while we rearrange the furniture, hang the photos and get the stereo set up.  Should be fun once we get it all together.

Dana Cooper: The Conjurer

09. February 2010 •Category:MUSIC, NEWS • Comments: View Comments

Dana Cooper Works “Magic” On His New Album*

Dana Cooper: The Conjurer

The New CD by Dana Cooper

NASHVILLE, Tennessee — “The idea of a conjurer, of someone who pulls something out of the air, makes me laugh,” says Dana Cooper. “It definitely describes how I see myself as a songwriter and performer. There’s a mystery and magic in songwriting. You have to keep believing you can pull the next idea out of a hat. In another way, someone who performs for the public has to be a conjurer, too. You have to be able to stand there and believe you can dazzle people with your next trick.”

Cooper has customarily named his albums after song titles. The Conjurer departs from that tradition, and rightly so, as it’s a singular album within the veteran singer-songwriter’s canon.

The title was inspired when the album’s art director, Jeff Thorneycroft, envisioned a CD cover designed to look like an old magician’s poster. It displays Cooper in a turban gazing with concentration into a crystal ball, while small images of travel, time, musicians, money, wine and a midnight moon swirl in the crystal light. On the road for more than three decades, Cooper recognizes that stepping on stage in front of a different crowd night after night takes no small amount of trickery.

But here’s where the metaphor ends: Cooper’s new set of songs prove once again that there’s no sleight of hand involved in crafting and presenting music this powerful and meaningful. The seasoned singer-songwriter has grown into a master craftsman where every word has a purpose, every chord has a reason. The Conjurer represents his best work because, with each album, Cooper has grown more incisive in his songwriting and more confident and nervy in interpreting his own material.

Understandably, improving one’s craft comes with age. What’s remarkable about The Conjurer is how inspired and energized Cooper sounds. Like any great artist, he has responded to his times, penning uplifting songs about perseverance and about finding the positive in life during an era when economic pressures have once again made many lives tougher. Of course, Cooper’s gift is in finding fresh, often personal ways to speak to universal feelings, as he does in “Good Place to Begin,” “Leave a Little Mark” and “Enough.”

“I’ve always liked songs about hope,” he explains. “I think particularly in times like these, you want to uplift people. There’s plenty of darkness in the world, it’s all around us. I don’t avoid that in my writing, but I like to point out that there’s light even amid the darkness. I’ve found people respond to those songs, they want to hear about others who make it through and who look for the positive in everyday things.”

Similarly, The Conjurer deals with being alive during wartime, and a moment in history fraught with uncertainties and unforeseen dangers. Cooper deals with these themes with inventive allegories and with age-old tales of men who deal with the problems brought on by the adversity of doing battle.

“I wanted this record to be less polished and more reckless in a way,” he said. “I wanted to get a live sound, something really ragged and rough at times, and my co-producer and guitarist Thomm Jutz proved perfect for that. It really worked well for this set of songs.”

Cooper praised Jutz’s preparation, saying his thoroughness in working up the songs ahead of time, and in setting up the musicians in the studio, helped provide a comfortable atmosphere where Cooper and his collaborators could be spontaneous. “I can be a perfectionist and drive everyone crazy in the studio,” Cooper relates. “But this time I let that go, and we cut every song in two or three takes. In the end, I like how in-your-face it sounds. It’s wonderfully engineered, it has a nice balance to it, but there’s also a real live upfront energy to it, too.”

(The Conjurer goes on sale to the general public (mostly through various online retailers) on March 25. 2010.  It is available only at Dana Cooper’s live performances until then. Check the schedule in the sidebar (on the right there) to see when he’s playing at a venue near you. Click the “Free Downloads” link at the top of the page to listen to our download the latest free release from the album.)

Dana’s Next Scheduled Performance

08. February 2010 •Category:NEWS • Comments: View Comments

Some Old Photos

06. February 2010 •Category:PHOTOS • Comments: View Comments

These are the photos that appeared on Dana’s old website… standby while we figure out how to put them to some music…

Press the little “play” arrow on the lower left to start the slide show.

More to come, including a place on flickr.com where you can share your own Dana Cooper photos.

Enough

06. February 2010 •Category:VIDEO • Comments: View Comments

Here we will post the video of “enough”

This is News

06. February 2010 •Category:NEWS • Comments: View Comments

that’s fit to print