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One Day International is Matt Lunson on vocals,
Cormac Curran on piano, Danny Snow on bass,
Ross Turner on drums, Eimear OGrady on
cello and they arent into cricket so dont
ask.
One Day International released their debut
album Blackbird in Ireland on October 3rd, 2008
on Independent Records. Stealing precious early
hours and extended late evenings from each of
their numerous music and theatre day-lives,
the five piece have crafted an album that gently
reveals a wealth of beautiful, simple songs.
Produced
by Brian Crosby (BellX1 and The Cake Sale),
Blackbird is an album of impressions, colours
and emotions expressed through a gorgeous layered
sound. Each note, each word, is lovingly tended
to and brought to life by five incredibly talented
friends who perform together with equal measures
of restraint and inhibition. Tales of lovers
and strangers, confidence and vulnerability,
Blackbird is simple in its story and complex
in its arrangement.
The subtle temperance and glorious crescendos
of One Day International come from a hybrid
of musical births: Lunson, a Tasmanian escapee,
began life literally tongue tied, traveled the
world, settled on Dublin and hasnt looked
back; Curran discovered the piano at age four,
turned his back on ten years of formal training
to play guitar with real men and
returned to the ivories with brand new ears
when still just eighteen years old; Snow played
bass in a young rock band, dreamt unrequited
dreams of stadium stardom, and despite being
the nonplussed owner of one singular Jazz album,
went on to complete a three year BA in Jazz
Performance; Turner cant remember a time
when he wasnt playing or studying music,
a drummer of vast experience who moonlights
with personal appearances on record sleeves
and in music videos, and OGrady, a multi
talented, multi faceted woman who has performed
all genres of music across the world and still
manages to find the time to act on stage, when
not being doused in fuel and set alight on film
sets.
Having come together through mutual acquaintances,
lovers tiffs and the barriered doors of some
of Dublins less than salubrious gin joints,
One Day International began performing and writing
together in 2007. A deep and passionate respect
for language resonates through each and every
track. Words are not wasted, each turn of phrase
demands attention. The collected musicianship
of the group affords the listener a hoard of
minds-eye treasures to call upon. One Day International
are a lean, mean songwriting team. Having all
been involved in music for many years, from
live performances and recording processes through
to the dirty business of releasing records,
One Day International played a modest amount
of live dates, then took a step back from the
live circuit to spend time making Blackbird.
Brian Crosby took a delicate hold of recording
and production duties and coaxed eleven lullabies
from One Day International. Along the way, bowed
cymbals and glockenspiels, an omnichord, a pounding
double bass, synths and a host of talented musicians
and vocalists managed to find their place in
the mix.
The album opens with the band tuning up, lures
the listener in, sweeps you away on an eleven-song
long journey, before spitting you back out on
the street, a little dazed, wondering how this
fateful meeting ever happened and why it ended
so quickly.
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