Mark Lemhouse

Mark Lemhouse is an American musician and producer known for releasing several solo albums on Yellow Dog Records, as well as collaborating with Black Francis of The Pixies serving as producer for the album, Bluefinger.

Mark Lemhouse
Genresblues, rockabilly
Occupation(s)musician
Instrumentsresonator guitar, electric guitar
Years active2002-present
LabelsYellow Dog Records
Associated actsBlack Francis
Website

Biography

Lemhouse got his professional start in music in Memphis, Tennessee playing in blues, rockabilly, and American roots bands, and he released two solo albums on the Yellow Dog Records label. His debut album, Big Lonesome Radio was nominated for two Blues Music Awards for "Best New Artist" and "Acoustic Album of The Year."[1] His song "Edwin's Lament" was used in the Oscar-winning film, Hustle and Flow. The follow-up album, The Great American Yard Sale, was more eclectic in themes than the first, with songs covering subjects from David Bowie to astronauts.

In 2007, Lemhouse produced the album Bluefinger for Alternative Rock musician Black Francis (AKA Frank Black) of The Pixies.[2] Upon the album's release in 2007, the song "Threshold Apprehension", which Lemhouse also provided backing vocals to, was picked by Rolling Stone magazine as one of the Best 100 Songs of the year.[3]

Lemhouse is currently performing solo and with his band The Sublimities.

Discography

Albums

  • 2002: Big Lonesome Radio
  • 2005: The Great American Yard Sale
gollark: Deviations of about a block.
gollark: Slightly jittery. Not perfectly. Maybe I should have said "quite well" and not "perfectly".
gollark: It turns out I actually just needed a PD controller and magic constants and it now works perfectly.
gollark: I have devised STABLE HOVER MODE. Fear it.
gollark: Impressively, TPS is still below 20 even though nobody else is online.

References

  1. "Past Winners". Blues.org. 2010-08-17. Retrieved 2013-03-12.
  2. "Bluefinger - Black Francis". Billboard.com. 2007-09-29. Retrieved 2012-02-10.
  3. "Rolling Stone Magazine The 100 Best Songs Of 2007". Popcrunch.com. 2009-06-13. Archived from the original on 2010-07-26. Retrieved 2012-02-10.
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