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Nathaniel Rateliff
Biography
The first things you notice are the voice and the space. That voice belongs to Nathaniel Rateliff, a man who’s earned the twang and hard-knock weariness that shines through on his Rounder debut. The space comes courtesy of producer Brian Deck (Califone, Iron & Wine, Modest Mouse), who helped transform 8-track bedroom demos into miniature epics of contrast, beauty, and yearning.
Nathanial grew up of modest means, the son of devout Southern churchgoers. The family sang together throughout his childhood. At age 7 Rateliff learned the drums. As a teenager, he stumbled across a cassette of Led Zeppelin’s IV abandoned in a local barn; he wore the tape out listening to it on headphones, drumming along with “When the Levee Breaks” and “Misty Mountain Hop.”
Nathanial is at home in what may be called, for lack of a better term, the neo-folk revival. His voice is so confident that you can occasionally imagine the music dropping out entirely, a song propelled solely by Rateliff’s a capella strengths—equal parts church spiritual and TV on the Radio riffing on the Pixies’ “Mr. Grieves.”
Catalogue
BMG ChrysalisLatest Releases
In Memory
CD
Released: 12 November 2010
Tracklisting:
- Once in a Great While
- Early Spring Till
- We Never Win
- Brakeman
- Longing and Losing
- Oil & Lavender
- Shroud
- You Should've Seen the Other Guy
- Whimper and Wail
- Boil & Fight
- When We Could
- A Lamb on the Stone
- When You're Here
- Happy Just to Be

