The Stray Birds

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Dream in Blue 03:37 Tools
Give That Wildman a Knife/ Bellows Falls/ Waitin' On a Hannah 00:00 Tools
Shining in the Distance 00:00 Tools
25 to Life 00:00 Tools
Best Medicine 00:00 Tools
Heavy Hands 00:00 Tools
Railroad Man 00:00 Tools
Down in the Willow Garden 00:00 Tools
No Part of Nothin' 00:00 Tools
Light as a Fire 00:00 Tools
Wildflower Honey 00:00 Tools
My Brother's Hill 00:00 Tools
Harlem 00:00 Tools
Wind & Rain 00:00 Tools
Just Sayin' 00:00 Tools
Birds of the Borderland 03:48 Tools
Hands of Man 00:00 Tools
Sabrina 00:00 Tools
Black Hills 00:00 Tools
Sparrow 00:00 Tools
Nothing to Say About It Now 00:00 Tools
Third Day in a Row 00:00 Tools
Adelaide 00:00 Tools
Feathers & Bone 00:00 Tools
My Horses Ain't Hungry 00:00 Tools
Come Sunday 00:00 Tools
San Antonio 00:00 Tools
Where You Come From 00:00 Tools
When I Die 00:00 Tools
The Bells 00:00 Tools
Pallet 00:00 Tools
Simple Man 00:00 Tools
Never For Nothing 00:00 Tools
All The News 00:00 Tools
Stolen Love 00:00 Tools
Distant Shore 00:00 Tools
Radio 00:00 Tools
Sunday Morning 00:00 Tools
Loretta 00:00 Tools
Might Rain 00:00 Tools
Ask Me a Personal Question 00:00 Tools
Fossil 00:00 Tools
Sleep with My Window Open 00:00 Tools
Who's Gonna Shoe 00:00 Tools
Mississippi Pearl 00:00 Tools
The Bridge 00:00 Tools
Somehow 00:00 Tools
Feathers and Bone 00:00 Tools
I'll Be Your San Antone Rose 00:00 Tools
I Wish It Would Rain 00:00 Tools
When I Stop Dreaming 00:00 Tools
Blue Yodel #7 00:00 Tools
Quicksilver Highway 00:00 Tools
In My Time 00:00 Tools
Welcome, Mother Jones 00:00 Tools
Better Than Bone 00:00 Tools
Miles and Miles 00:00 Tools
If Time Is Not Enough 00:00 Tools
Truth in the Night 00:00 Tools
Long Table 00:00 Tools
I Dream in Blue 00:00 Tools
Give That Wildman a Knife / Bellows Falls / Waitin' On a Hannah 00:00 Tools
Before We Go Down 00:00 Tools
White Wine Like Water 00:00 Tools
The Stray Birds - Pallet 00:00 Tools
Give That Wildman A Knife/Bellows Falls/Waitin' On A Hannah 00:00 Tools
She Runs 00:00 Tools
Do Ya 00:00 Tools
Loretta (Townes Van Zandt cover) 00:00 Tools
Paper Heart 00:00 Tools
A Thought 00:00 Tools
Cool Down 00:00 Tools
Oh Hell 00:00 Tools
I Wish It Would Rain (Nanci Griffith cover) 00:00 Tools
New Shoes 00:00 Tools
Dream In Blue (FolkAlley.com) 00:00 Tools
Blue Yodel 7 00:00 Tools
Time in Squares 00:00 Tools
Mississippi (Bob Dylan cover) 00:00 Tools
Mississippi 00:00 Tools
Best Medicine (live) 00:00 Tools
Welcome To Daytrotter/Never For Nothing 00:00 Tools
Feathers Bone 00:00 Tools
Blue Yodel No. 7 00:00 Tools
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The Stray Birds, an American folk band, started as a duo of acoustic buskers in early 2010 when Maya de Vitry and Oliver Craven (originally from Lancaster, Pennsylvania) met with their instruments, their voices, and their songs When the band take the stage, the spotlight falls on three voices raised in harmony above the raw resonance of wood and strings. It is a sound drawn from the richness of American folk music traditions, spun with a stirring subtlety and grace. From bustling street corners to silent halls, their performances speak to an uncompromising reverence for songs. Raised within a few miles of farmland from each other in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, their flight began with friendship. With miles of music already behind them, Maya de Vitry and Oliver Craven first shared a song in January 2010. A snowy Pennsylvania winter welcomed collaboration between the two creative flames— and inspired the collection of seven songs found on the Borderland EP. Grounded in the unshakeable groove of bassist Charles Muench, the trio landed their signature sound. An ambitious touring schedule reflects their embrace of the experience of live music. “Music exists in a time and place, not just in a digital format,” says Charles. Reveling in the energy of each room, a connection to the audience is the essence of their show. Their tangible passion for acoustic music is certainly a testament to three musically rich childhoods. Shortly after beginning classical violin lessons, Oliver began performing on the fiddle alongside his parents in the Craven Family Band. Their repertoire of folk, bluegrass, and country tunes included many of his father’s original songs. Maya first performed during “show & tell” in kindergarten. She strummed three chords on a tiny guitar and sang Iris DeMent’s “Our Town”—a song in frequent rotation in the family car. She took piano lessons with her grandmother, who was a gifted composer. And alongside public school violin lessons, she learned fiddle tunes from her father, who performed in several local bands. The highlight of each year was the family's annual trip to West Virginia's Appalachian String Band Music Festival. Inspired by his bass-playing father, Charles started bass lessons in a public elementary school string program. As he gained fluency on this large and versatile instrument, his passion and interest in music education heightened—culminating in a Music Education degree from West Chester University. In the midst of this classical music education, Charles found another musical outlet—a weekly bluegrass pick in the woodshed of a nearby horse farm. “When the bridge wasn’t out, it was only 4 or 5 miles to Joe’s house,” Charles remembers. While his college music courses focused on the technical and theoretical aspects of music, “playing music with Joe was more about the spirit—and the social nature of music.” Joe also called upon Charles to work up another skill that he would carry with him—bluegrass harmony singing. Drawn to a region saturated by traditional music, Maya began at the University of North Carolina-Asheville, but left after one restless semester. During her travels through Europe as a fiddling street performer, she was startled by the poetry she discovered in the songs of Townes Van Zandt and began listening to songs with fresh intent. For someone who had loved songs for as long as she could remember, “suddenly, writing songs seemed inevitable,” she says. She spent a year and a half at Berklee College of Music in Boston, where she studied under Mark Simos, Darol Anger, and John McGann. She has since received national recognition for her songwriting, including 4th place in the 2011 Telluride Troubadour Competition and 3rd place in the BMI/John Lennon Scholarship Awards. Oliver also struck a balance in his musical education. Upon graduating high school he turned down several football scholarships, picked up the mandolin and guitar, and headed to Philadelphia to attend Temple University. While studying African American Literature and History, he wrote songs, played a few open mics, and began to record his original music. After three years, he realized that what he wanted to learn wasn’t within the hallways of a university, but rather along the roadways of North America. “I can do my learning in the front seat of a Subaru while crossing state lines,” Oliver says. “I listen to people I like, and then find the people they like, and then pay attention to that.” Experience has served him well—he has logged thousands of miles, played in forty states and four countries, and played for honky-tonks, folk festivals, and listening rooms. Along the way he spent two years as a harmony vocalist, fiddler, and guitarist for the Grammy-nominated Americana artist Adrienne Young, and one year as a member of the Virginia-based quartet The Steel Wheels. “I think music is the best thing about our country,” Oliver insists. “It is undeniable that if nothing else, we sure figured out how to make good music.” The Stray Birds released their wholly original debut full-length album on July 21, 2012. Read more on Last.fm. 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