Tracy Shedd

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Whatever it takes 00:00 Tools
Never Too Late 00:00 Tools
Wednesday's The New Thursday 00:00 Tools
Faint Pale Smiles 00:00 Tools
Not Giving Up 00:00 Tools
Plastic World 00:00 Tools
Inside Out 00:00 Tools
Valentine 00:00 Tools
Paris 00:00 Tools
Won Past Ten 00:00 Tools
Hardest Part Of Good-Bye 00:00 Tools
City at Night 00:00 Tools
End Of The Night 00:00 Tools
So Sick 00:00 Tools
Circles 00:00 Tools
If You Really Cared About Me You Would Have Kept In Touch For All Those Years 00:00 Tools
Go On 00:00 Tools
Try And Get Some Rest 00:00 Tools
Remember The Time We Set The Highway On Fire? 00:00 Tools
Home 00:00 Tools
Something Out There 00:00 Tools
Jumping Waves 00:00 Tools
One By One 00:00 Tools
Rise 00:00 Tools
Brighton 00:00 Tools
Falling On Ice Hurts 00:00 Tools
Sugar, Please 00:00 Tools
People are Changing 00:00 Tools
Opposites Attract 00:00 Tools
How Your Eyes Affect Me 00:00 Tools
calm sea 00:00 Tools
Living in an Abandoned Firehouse With You 00:00 Tools
Encourage Me 00:00 Tools
What's on Your Mind 00:00 Tools
I Wish We Were Still Friends 00:00 Tools
Sweet Talking 00:00 Tools
Blue [The Blues Explosion Version] 00:00 Tools
You Remind Me of Someone 00:00 Tools
He Hangs Gently 00:00 Tools
Long Day 00:00 Tools
Conley 00:00 Tools
Blue 00:00 Tools
Tear it Up 00:00 Tools
Sister 00:00 Tools
I Wanna Know 00:00 Tools
Something Good 00:00 Tools
Conley [The Flying Kite Version] 00:00 Tools
Cliche [The Correct Tempo Version] 00:00 Tools
Hesitate 00:00 Tools
Somersault [The Offbeat Vocals Version] 00:00 Tools
Airplane 00:00 Tools
Red Pillow 00:00 Tools
End of Spring 00:00 Tools
Somersault 00:00 Tools
Broken Arrows 00:00 Tools
soft pillow 00:00 Tools
Never Too Late (Version) 00:00 Tools
White Pillow 00:00 Tools
Sing To Me 00:00 Tools
Tokyo Rose 00:00 Tools
Eleven 00:00 Tools
Catching the Breeze 00:00 Tools
Take A Ride 00:00 Tools
West Inn Love 00:00 Tools
Kissing and Romancing 00:00 Tools
Holding On 00:00 Tools
Cliché 00:00 Tools
You're No Fool 00:00 Tools
Husbands & Wives 00:00 Tools
Teenage Riot 00:00 Tools
Control 00:00 Tools
Boats 00:00 Tools
Candy 00:00 Tools
Ninety-Five to Ten 00:00 Tools
Free Love 00:00 Tools
Letters 00:00 Tools
All The Little Things 00:00 Tools
Tinder Heart 00:00 Tools
Friday Night at Einstein's 00:00 Tools
The Rest Will Follow 00:00 Tools
4: 00 A.M. 00:00 Tools
Santa Fe 00:00 Tools
Good Times 00:00 Tools
Million Pictures 00:00 Tools
Airplane (US2G90435205) 00:00 Tools
Valentine {LIVE} 00:00 Tools
Conley MP3 00:00 Tools
wednesdays the new thursday 00:00 Tools
Plastic World {LIVE} 00:00 Tools
Never Too Late {LIVE} 00:00 Tools
I Can Make You Love Me (by Death Kit) 00:00 Tools
Paris {LIVE} 00:00 Tools
Firehouse 00:00 Tools
cliche 00:00 Tools
Cliché [The Correct Tempo Version] 00:00 Tools
I Will Keep You Warm 00:00 Tools
if you really cared 00:00 Tools
Conley [The Flying The Kite Version] 00:00 Tools
Wake Up 00:00 Tools
Teenage Riot (by Sonic Youth) 00:00 Tools
Sugar Please 00:00 Tools
If You Really Cared About Me You Would Have Kept In Touch For All Those 00:00 Tools
Never Too Late - Version 00:00 Tools
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Twenty years after taking her first steps recording vocals for Sella, a high school band from Jacksonville, FL, and twelve years succeeding the launch of a solo career with Teen-Beat Records, Tracy Shedd has delivered the most honest, forthright, and insightful album of her career. Arizona, Shedd’s debut with New Granada Records and fifth full-length recording, presents the slowcore songstress with guitarist, James Tritten, as an acoustic duet. As Shedd reports in the opening lines, Arizona is a walk “down memory lane” and “may take you by surprise,” but leaves you with a yearning to be “near the ones (you) love.” Tracy’s competence displays a wisdom far beyond her years, and is evidence to her growing popularity as an American songwriter. Stripped of all things percussive, distorted, and nearly anything digital, Arizona is a first for the multi-instrumentalist on many accounts. Most notably, Shedd herself is the cover star; photographed by Emily Wilder, who was also responsible for Blue (Teen-Beat 312) and Cigarettes & Smoke Machines (Teen-Beat 442). Arizona is Shedd’s acoustic premiere, something fans have desired for years. The husband/wife duet not only delivered unplugged, they left the guitar picks at home and plucked away with bare hands for added simplicity. The album offers Shedd’s interpretations of work by two of her favorite artists for the first time on a full-length album (“Candy” by The Magnetic Fields and “Teenage Riot” by Sonic Youth) displaying her keen sense of respect and ability to maturely employ such masterpieces. Until now, Shedd has always managed her own vocal harmonies. Arizona features guest vocalists Ivan Howard (The Rosebuds), Denison Witmer, Naïm Amor, and Howe Gelb (Giant Sand) who had a recording session with Steve Shelley (Sonic Youth) the same day he went to record with Shedd. Arizona is introduced with melancholy and deliberation, reminiscent of her 2001 Teen-Beat release, Blue; declaring Tracy Shedd as the female Mark Kozelek and indie rock’s Sade. We learn from Shedd that her favorite songs are heartfelt, and her favorite words are truthful, as she transcends juvenescence to savoir-vivre. A new leaf is turned with the song “Ninety-Five to Ten.” The tempo gets turned up a bit with a little pep in her step, and glisten in her voice. “Broken Arrows” and “All the Little Things” make up the doubleheader, both comprised of male vocal accompaniment grand-slams. With a full backing band, Big Muffs, and Shedd’s classic red Fender Tele, “Million Pictures” would have fit right in on Louder Than You Can Hear (Devil In The Woods) or Cigarettes & Smoke Machines; it’s quite possibly the fastest song on the album. However, Shedd conveys this acoustic lil’ rocker with such poise, you are simply left with a smirk, happy to know she hasn’t lost her punk. Speaking of racketeers, the crème de la crème of Arizona is her rendition of Sonic Youth’s “Teenage Riot.” Howe Gelb (Giant Sand) blends his whiskey with Shedd’s sweet vermouth for her homage to the Manhatten idols. Additionally, Gelb adds his ivory signature, while Chris Schultz gives a Grandaddy-esq style of Omnichord sprinkled throughout. It is the most sui generis for Arizona, but quite possibly has the greatest importance. Sonic Youth has had the largest influence on Shedd, and “Teenage Riot” represents the epitome of her own recollections. Besides, how can you go wrong with a song about J Mascis being president? Arizona is a true album, documenting Tracy Shedd’s own experiences of life in Tucson, AZ. Like your family’s own photo album that gives proof you were once carefree in your Underoos, and brings back that first love through prom photos. It recalls a time of growth for Shedd in The Old Pueblo, with many life-lessons. Arizona is Shedd’s gift to us: her consciousness, her principles, her judgment, and her understanding of life. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.