Lullaby Baxter

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Fontana Fontaine 03:08 Tools
Rattled Little Clam 02:22 Tools
Little Song 02:40 Tools
What's Wrong With You? 03:35 Tools
Sugar 03:42 Tools
Cardboard Armoured Car 03:22 Tools
Let The Fun Begin 01:23 Tools
Dumptruck 04:42 Tools
Mr. Golden Happiness 02:49 Tools
Lord, I Won't Fight You Anymore 02:31 Tools
Jet-Pack 04:34 Tools
Antarctica 04:41 Tools
Knucklehead 04:41 Tools
The Anyway Song 04:41 Tools
Antartica 04:41 Tools
Spacegirl 04:41 Tools
Hopscotch 04:41 Tools
Horsey Don't Snore 04:41 Tools
Mr. Powder-Blue Breadbox 04:41 Tools
Rooster in Love 04:41 Tools
The Chatterbox Chronicles 04:41 Tools
Lullaby 04:41 Tools
Ding-A-Ling 04:41 Tools
Morty-Mort-Morton Showstopper Calhoun 04:41 Tools
Mama (Should I Bake a Cherry Pie and Hide You Inside?) 04:41 Tools
Ding-A-Ling (Reprise) 04:41 Tools
What's Wrong With You 04:41 Tools
Mama (Should I Bake a Cherry Pie and Hide You Indside?) 04:41 Tools
Fontana Fontain 04:41 Tools
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Montreal, 1997. Lullaby Baxter is waiting tables at Jello Bar. Coaxed on stage for an impromptu number, she sings Billie Holiday's signature song "Lover Man (Oh, Where Can You Be?)". This, her first public performance since grade school, brings down the house. She buys a green guitar and learns "Leaving On A Jet Plane". Someone at the laundromat says, "Anyway, try writing songs." So, she and friend Lutwidge Sedgwick write songs. For example, "The Anyway Song". Before long Lullaby Baxter is putting on shows around town. Bewitched studio owner Howard Bilerman runs backstage and offers to record a demo free of charge. Baxter's jazz-singer sister Anna-Lisa meets with Atlantic Records staff producer Yves Beauvais (Madeline Peyroux, Olu Dara) and hands over said demo. Beauvais flies to Montreal, catches Baxter's show, and offers her a recording contract on the spot. Baxter flies to San Francisco and records her debut with Tom Waits's session players Oranj Symphonette. Atlantic Records releases Baxter's debut album, Capable Egg, in 2000. Critics are effervescent. There is a far-flung tour, all manner of interviews, and money for plush new towels. When the clamour winds down, Baxter scratches her head and says, "J'ai vu tomber tant de choses que j'avais crues éternelles" (I have seen the fall of so many things that I had thought eternal). Time to disappear. Time to meet a painter (Jean-Pierre Morin) and bear a son (Lorenzo Wolfgang). Time to mother. Time to take the towels out of the dryer. Time to hum. Time to think about a new album. Time to write a 111-page manifesto entitled Sing Songs for People. Time to work on new material with Lutwidge Sedgwick. Time to hire obscure pop duo Hercules to produce this new material into something splendiferous. Time to fire Hercules. Time to shamefacedly re-hire Hercules. Time to fold time fondly forward. Time to thoroughly re-work every track. Time to line up various guest musicians, including drummer Jeffrey Clemens (G. Love & Special Sauce) and vocalist Susan Cowsill (of legendary troupe The Cowsills). Time for unorthodox -- why not say it? -- Herculean recording techniques. Time for a flute quartet, a flügelhorn, a Wurlitzer, a Mellotron. Time for theorems, mirrors and domes. Time for Vienna, Tokyo and Rome. Time to open up the archives (Satie, McCartney, Morricone). Time for the hum and ping of fate...the clang and bang of wait. Time to sew you into the lining of my coat. Time to break your cardboard heart. Time to squirrel the day away, okay? Time to hatch that Capable Egg. Time now, for Garden Cities of To-morrow. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.