Oren Bloedow

Oren Bloedow (born July 3, 1965 in New York City) is an American singer, guitarist, and composer. He founded the band Elysian Fields in 1995 with Jennifer Charles.

Oren Bloedow
Born (1965-07-03) July 3, 1965,
New York City
Occupation(s)Musician, songwriter, composer
InstrumentsVocals, guitar, bass guitar
Years active1980s–present
Associated actsThe Connotations
Pajama Garden
Dog's Eye View
Elysian Fields
The Lounge Lizards
Chocolate Genius
101 Crustaceans
La Mar Enfortuna
Websitehttp://www.elysianmusic.com/

His father, Jerry Bloedow, b. 1928, is a playwright, poet and film editor, whose theater, the Hardware Poet's Playhouse, was a fixture in the New York avante-garde scene in the 1950s and early 1960s.

Bloedow's first serious musical affiliations were with Phillip Johnston, Bobby Previte and Wayne Horvitz, all of whom worked with him in Bobby Radcliff's blues band in the 1980s. With Radcliff, Bloedow backed up Dr. John,[1] Otis Rush and Johnny Copeland, also Paul Butterfield shortly before he died. Another close collaboration was with underground guitarist Ron Anderson, later of San Francisco's The Molecules. In 1985, a friend of Anderson's introduced Bloedow to 101 Crustaceans, whose leader, Ed Pastorini, is Bloedow's oldest continuing musical associate, and was later a member of Elysian Fields.[1] Bloedow consistently names Pastorini as his favorite musical artist.

He attended New England Conservatory in 1987–88, and on returning, started gigging frequently at the Knitting Factory on Houston St. Previte, Horvitz and Johnston were all playing there, and so were many musicians Bloedow came to play with, like Samm Bennett, The Jazz Passengers, Marc Ribot, Bosho, Gary Lucas and innumerable others.

It was here in 1990 that Bloedow met Jennifer Charles, and they began working together soon afterwards. During the 1990s, Bloedow made a couple of solo records for the Knitting Factory label, one featuring Medeski, Martin and Wood, toured and recorded as a member of The Lounge Lizards for whom he played bass, as well as many other groups and projects.

From the nineties to the present, he continues to be a highly in demand player, having toured, recorded, and/or played with Chocolate Genius, Lizz Wright,[1] Meshell Ndegeocello, Martha Wainwright, and Yerba Buena either on bass or guitar. Besides Bloedow's solo work, and work with Elysian Fields, he also continues his long-term association with Ed Pastorini and 101 Crustaceans.

Another outlet for Bloedow's music, and one that also features Jennifer Charles, is the 'Sephardic Diaspora' project La Mar Enfortuna, who have played in a variety of funded-arts environments, including the Jewish Culture Festival in Kraków, where they performed for 20,000 people.

Career highlights for Bloedow include being named Artist of the Year by Greil Marcus in 2004, musical directing the Randy Newman tribute at UCLA's Royce Hall for impresario Hal Willner, performing with Lou Reed, Emmylou Harris, Steve Earle, and once with Bruce Springsteen at Carnegie Hall.

Discography

  • Oren Bloedow 1993
  • Luckiest Boy in the World 1998
  • La Mar Enfortuna 2001, Tzadik Records
  • She Goes with me to a blossom World 2011, Noosphere
gollark: I *have* heard of it. It's just an annoying sort of proverb.
gollark: That *would* be pretty cool.
gollark: Or are you doing something where you invisibly hide fingers in text with zero width character steganography or something?
gollark: Is "finger" a metaphor for "things which are not actually fingers"?
gollark: I'm not looking at any fingers. Except possibly my own, since they are in front of me when I use a keyboard. Unless you count the kermit's in the thumbnail.

References

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