josh kramon

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Supernatural Supergirl 04:08 Tools
I'm Alive 03:24 Tools
The Maker 03:24 Tools
Shout Out 03:24 Tools
Lipstick Mama 03:23 Tools
Music Box 00:36 Tools
Beautiful Lady 00:36 Tools
Say It Now 03:50 Tools
The Mask 03:50 Tools
Soul 03:26 Tools
Gone Back Again 00:56 Tools
Gold Digger 01:27 Tools
End Of The World 01:27 Tools
Mac Mafia 01:04 Tools
That's My Girl 01:17 Tools
Guarded Hearts 00:40 Tools
Stranded 01:01 Tools
Fashion Police 00:59 Tools
Final Encounter 00:43 Tools
Liquor Store 00:57 Tools
Kane Or Able 01:12 Tools
Veronica's Truth 00:48 Tools
Note From My Father 00:53 Tools
The Return of Veronica Mars 00:43 Tools
The Truth Hurts 01:03 Tools
Duncan Didn't Do It 00:32 Tools
Poor Paris 01:47 Tools
The New Girl 00:47 Tools
Job Interview 00:43 Tools
Worth Saving 00:31 Tools
Left Behind 01:03 Tools
Up in Flames 01:31 Tools
Good Times '10 01:31 Tools
Addict Theme 00:43 Tools
Safe Lock 00:43 Tools
Things Fall Apart 00:49 Tools
Homicide 00:43 Tools
Weevil Shot 00:41 Tools
Police Corruption 00:43 Tools
The Day Carrie Died 00:43 Tools
Boat Discovery 00:43 Tools
Veronica Arrested 00:43 Tools
Sheriff Lamb Punked 00:41 Tools
The Breakup 01:19 Tools
Logan Flashback 00:41 Tools
In the Basement 00:41 Tools
Crash 00:41 Tools
DOGTAGS 00:43 Tools
Gia Flashback 00:41 Tools
Opening-Female Private Eye (Veronica's Theme) 01:22 Tools
Ruby's Apartment 00:41 Tools
On the Roof Part Two 00:41 Tools
On the Roof Part One 00:41 Tools
Random Act of Blindness 00:41 Tools
Dog Tags 00:43 Tools
Opening - Female Private Eye (Veronica's Theme) 00:43 Tools
SAFELOCK 00:43 Tools
Random Acts of Blindness 00:41 Tools
Abel's Alibi 03:25 Tools
DNA Test Results 01:28 Tools
Logan's Exit 01:19 Tools
WORTHSAVING 00:31 Tools
Lily's Death 01:45 Tools
End Credits 2010 Remix 01:22 Tools
Distress 00:34 Tools
Can't Stop 01:06 Tools
Living The Dream 01:32 Tools
Sold 00:45 Tools
Discovery 01:17 Tools
Eckels Awaits 01:11 Tools
Doubt 00:52 Tools
Birthday 01:10 Tools
FINALENCOUNTER 00:43 Tools
Rise! 01:17 Tools
DUNCANDIDNTDOIT 00:32 Tools
LIQUORSTORE 00:57 Tools
KANEORABLE 01:11 Tools
Sister 04:22 Tools
POORPARIS 01:47 Tools
Plans 04:22 Tools
THATSMYGIRL 01:17 Tools
RANDOMACTOFBLINDNESS 01:17 Tools
Waiting for ? 03:50 Tools
The Break Up 04:22 Tools
NOTEFROMMYFATHER 00:53 Tools
LEFTBEHIND 01:03 Tools
MACMAFIA 01:03 Tools
GUARDEDHEARTS 00:40 Tools
On The Roof, Pt. 2 00:40 Tools
Party Down Theme 01:01 Tools
Fountain of Lily 00:30 Tools
FASHIONPOLICE 00:00 Tools
Big World 03:23 Tools
Kane or Abel 03:23 Tools
Sun 03:25 Tools
On The Roof, Pt. 1 03:25 Tools
Truth (rollaway) 03:25 Tools
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“Set up the tables and/Let it begin now… I’m alive.” Singer-songwriter-multi-instrumentalist Josh Kramon is a go-to musician who has played for several bands and released a pair of indie albums as a solo artist. Kramon also boasts a number of impressive credits as a composer and writer of TV theme songs, including the cult hit “Veronica Mars,” for which he composed music for three seasons and which continues to generate fans of Josh’s work to this day. His new album, Say It Now, is about being honest with who you are and living your life true to yourself so that at the end each day you're left with no regrets. Touching on the spiritual, but also the joys of the material world, this is a set of songs that is both introspective and celebratory, a paean to living and surviving in these perilous times. In other words, carpe diem… Seize the day. Just what Josh Kramon has done on Say It Now. “I think that the ultimate challenge in life is stripping away the layers of illusion to get to that one ultimate truth and part of the reason that I made this record was to strip away some of that illusion to get closer to the truth.” Kramon recorded the songs which make up the new album in his home studio, recreating much of what he loved about the records he listened to growing up as a kid in L.A. Those influences include classic-rock like the Beatles, Bob Dylan, The Band and the Stones, as well as ‘70s singer-songwriters Bruce Springsteen, James Taylor and Jackson Browne, with elements of James Brown funk, Curtis Mayfield soul, OG hip-hop acts De La Soul, LL Cool J and Dr. Dre and even the lilt of old-school reggae from Bob Marley and Jimmy Cliff thrown in. "One of my the biggest songs that changed the way I looked at songs was when I heard Beck's "Loser" back in the 90's. I loved the way he mixed Hip Hop loops southern slide guitar and Dobro. Kid Rock has done that pretty well too. After a pair of indie releases, Forward and Big World, Say It Now is Kramon’s most accomplished work yet. “I’ve kind of blocked everything else out to focus on this album,” he says. “I felt I had a group of songs that deserved more than just throwing them on iTunes to see which ones would stick.” From the urgent declaration of the opening track, “I’m Alive,” and the plea to speak your mind in “Say It Now” to the sing-song, tongue-in-cheek critique of the modern rat race in “End of the World” and the religious entreaties of “The Maker,” Kramon touches on all the things that affect every one of us in a world that is more fragile, yet interconnected, than ever. “The songs are about finding peace of mind and solace from the hustle and bustle of modern society,” he says. “I’m trying to look for the best in things, offer a positive vibe, hope and optimism. And it’s also about finding truth and meaning in our lives.” Kramon says, musically, the new album is based on “acoustic guitar, melody and groove,” ranging from The Band-like R&B funk of “Soul,” the Latin-gospel flavor of “Say It Now” and the Springsteen circa Greetings from Asbury Park lyricism of “End of the World” to the loping reggae beat and playground chant of “Beautiful Lady,” the sensual Beatlesque Rubber Soul of “Lipstick Mama” and the horn-punctuated, elemental blues of “Shout Out.” “It’s a very different process writing songs than it is composing themes and scores for TV,” explains Josh. “I have to concentrate on either one or the other at any one time. Ideas for songs come to me all the time, so I carry a recorder to get them down. Making songs happen is a much less rushed, methodical process than scoring. Sometimes I have just three or four days to write 35-40 minutes of music for a TV show. Creating songs isn’t as cerebral. It’s a more instinctual, subconscious way of working.” “For television, I really have to strop out of myself to serve the project and in making records I have to step into myself, it’s a totally different experience but I love them both.” Kramon’s TV credits include composing the themes and scores for network shows such as UPN’s critically acclaimed Veronica Mars, ABC’s Cupid, October Road and Big Shots, MTV’s Making the Band and, most recently, the noir-ish ‘40s jazzy main title song to Starz’ Party Down. He has also had several of his original songs licensed for use on both Veronica Mars and October Road, but he feels Say It Now, for which he wrote every track and played every instrument, deserves to be heard as a coherent whole. Kramon has been working on the new album for over a year. “I go into this tunnel vision,” he says about his songwriting and recording process. “Sometimes it’s hard to see what I’m doing. When the individual songs start coming together, that’s when I switch hats to become more of a producer and editor. That’s the cognitive part.” Tracks like “I’m Alive,” “Say It Now,” “Good Times” and “Shout Out” are about living life to the fullest and being true to your own passion, no matter what anybody else says. “They’re not only about accepting who you are, but having the people around you accept who you are, also,” explains Josh. “End of the World” tries to make sense of what’s going on in society with a grain of salt, while “The Mask” is about the various guises and personalities we hide behind, “becoming who you really are and not pretending to be who you’re not,” according to Kramon. “Beautiful Lady” and “Lipstick Mama” are unabashed love songs and paeans to sensuality and romance, the latter in particular “a composite of different women I have known,” acknowledges Josh. “The Maker” speaks to his spiritual yearnings with a Dylanesque ambiguity. “Like any type of religious text, it can be interpreted in different ways,” he explains. With Say It Now complete, Kramon is ready to play his material for audiences, and is currently putting together a band to accompany him on live dates. “I’m very comfortable with these songs,” he says. “I want to share them. I want them to be heard. There’s a great deal I feel I can do with them live. I’m confident they will connect with people because they deal with things everybody’s experiencing and going through right now.” On “Shout Out,” Josh Kramon sings, “I want to show you that I’m here.” Say It Now does just that. Contact: Deborah Radel or Heather Lindner, DRPR, 310.360.3997 or email pr@drpr.us Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.