Alyssa Altschul
and Doug Graham met in grade school in
a small town north of New York City. As teen-agers, the two celebrated their
love for American roots music by singing and strumming guitars by many upstate
mountainside campfires. The duo founded an Ithaca-based six-piece psychedelic
rock band during
their college years in the 1990s, but after five years, Altschul broke away to
pursue studies in jazz voice and contemporary improvisation at the New England
Conservatory of Music. The now married Grahams moved back to New York City in
2003, where they entered the jazz and singer-songwriter circuit. Billed as a
solo artist, Alyssa Graham released
an album of jazz standards in 2005, a second album featuring folk, jazz and pop
influences in 2008 and a third folk-country-inspired album in 2012. A recent life-changing
Mark Twain-style adventure through America's
backwoods led the Grahams back to who they were way back by the campfires -- a
country music act with bluegrass roots. The result was the Grahams' Riverman's Daughter
album.
At Chez Andre in
the Standard Hotel East Village tonight, the Grahams showed no sign of a criss-crossing
musical journey. The Grahams presented a 60-minute set of Americana-rooted
original songs. Perhaps there was a lingering remnant of jazz training in Alyssa
Graham's powerful voice, but coming from underneath her wide-brimmed cowboy
hat, it sounded pretty country tonight. Alyssa is a small woman, but her voice was
big, evidenced by her acoustic-guitar-playing husband Doug repeatedly asking
the sound engineer to lower the volume of her vocals on his stage monitor. Doug
flamed the campfire feel by adding rich lilting harmonies, and a fiddle player
ramped up the barn dance feel, particularly on the sing-along "Revival
Time." The quintet, steeped in ageless backwoods sensibilities, skillfully
brought a blissful set of earthy rural sounds to a city of hipsters.
Visit the Grahams at www.thegrahamsmusic.net.

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