Christine Fellows
Country of origin:
Canada
Type of music generally:
Indie-feeling slightly folky evocative/eclectic alternative pop
Status:
Most recent release, Roses on the Vine (2018)
See also:
Christine Fellows' site
Christine Fellows' Bandcamp page
Six Shooter Records' Christine Fellows page
Wikipedia's entry on Christine Fellows
Comparisons:
Kristin Hersh, Lisa Germano, Veda Hille, Cat Power, Robin Holcomb, rachel's
Covers/own material:
Own and covers and cowritten songs
General comments:
Christine Fellows is like a cross between Kristin Hersh and Lisa Germano with more art-folk-pop-darkness and a definite Veda Hille edge. (stone@pangea.ca)
Kind of like Cat Power or Kristin Hersh with a touch of the quieter side of Veda Hille. Very stripped-down indie feeling with quirky, evocative vocals and lyrics. (Neile)
Her music leaves me breathless and it always is such a strange journey listening to it. It's really great. (RocketsTail@aol.com)
Comments about live performance:
Christine Fellows is as lively and engaging in person as she is on album. I've only seen her once but would love to see her again (and again). Her combination of artful artlessness is a part of her personality and her music and makes for a delightful live show. (6/02, Neile)
I never thought I'd see Christine Fellows play live, and certainly didn't think I would go to NC to do it. But there we both were, at the Cat's Cradle, Christine beginning the show with just herself on keyboards and a cellist. Later two guys from The Weakerthans (the band she's touring with) came out on guitar and drums, and she played ukulele on a song or two (including "Not Wanted on the Voyage." She played for about 40 minutes, mostly stuff from the new album Nevertheless (tracks 1-4,7, 8,10,11,12) and "Souvenirs" and "Double Takes" from Paper Anniversary. It was all really good. As rich as the album even though less orchestrated. I felt like I really paid attention to and appreciated the lyrics, more so than when listening to the albums at home, which is strange, because in most concerts I find I notice the lyrics less. She didn't talk much between songs, though she made mention of enjoying North Carolina's spring and how Winnipeg probably had 2 or so more weeks to go until spring arrived. The crowd seemed to really enjoy her, and there were quite a few people who obviously knew the record which seemed to surprise and amuse her a bit. (4/9/08, JoAnn Whetsell)
Recommended first album:
They're all great, but Paper Anniversary is the greatest
Recordings:
Release info:
2000—Endearing Records
Availability:
Wide
Ecto priority:
Highly recommended
Group members:
Christine Fellows & the red letter day:
C. Fellows—singing, guitars, piano
Monica Guenter—viola, backups
Stephen Carroll—guitars, guitars
Leanne Zacharias—cello, backups
Guest artists:
Chang—drums
Paul James—bass
Greg MacPherson—vocals
John K. Samson—spoken word
Jason Tait—saw
Comments:
This is a haunting album. In my early listening, I thought some of the songs faded a bit in comparison to the best ones, but as I've listened more I've grown to appreciate the consistent tone throughout. It is subtly brilliant, understated, and emotionally affecting. Extremely promising. (Neile)
Take Veda Hille and cross her with Robin Holcomb and add just a touch of something along the lines of Rachel's, and you've got Christine Fellows' first CD. This disc is so good, I was inspired to offer to set up christinefellows.com and maintain her official web site. If that's not enough of a recommendation, check this out for yourself. If you like minimalist piano-and-strings arrangements with rather morbid lyrics, this is definitely one for you! (meth@smoe.org)
One of my favourite albums of the year. (gordoja@optonline.net)
2 little birds is a very good record and likely to be high up on my year-end list. slow, strings, piano, gorgeous. (woj@smoe.org)
It's ace throughout in my opinion. Very minimalistic and haunting. (stjarnell@yahoo.com)
I was just listening to Two Little Birds a week or two ago and thinking
again about how utterly cool it is. (burka@jeffrey.net)
Release info:
2002—Six Shooter Records—SIX04
Availability:
Wide
Ecto priority:
Highly recommended
Group members:
Christine Fellows—songs, vocals, piano, accordion, samples, guitar, organ polaroids
Guest artists:
Leanne Zacharias—cello, vocals, rhodes, bowed glockenspiel
Jason Tait—drums, percussion, tuning forks, thumb piano, saw, bowed glockenspiel
Monica Guenter—viola
Keith MacLeod—mandolin
John K. Samson—vocals, bass, guitar solo, "grrr"
Produced by:
Neil Cameron and Christine Fellows
Comments:
It's really wonderful. This is a stronger album than 2 Little Birds, but no less charming. Christine Fellows has a simple yet very effective way of singing. Recommended! (Neile)
Started listening to Christine Fellows' new album on the way to work. Of course, several songs I knew from mp3 downloads from her site. The main thing that strikes me so far is the difference in the percussion on the album—there's a lot more of it, particularly drum-kit type stuff. This is not a bad thing, just a different thing. (burka@jeffrey.net)
Release info:
2005—Six Shooter Records—SIX022
Availability:
Wide
Ecto priority:
Highly recommended
Group members:
Christine Fellows—vocals, piano, glockenspiels, loops and samples, field recordings, accordion, Casion SK-1, Casiotone MT-20, bells, prepared piano, music boxes, rhodes
Guest artists:
Leanne Zacharias—cello, vocals, cello arrangement (14), chorus vocal (8)
Jason Tait—drums (1, 4), wineglasses, tuning forks, vibraphone, glockenspiel, programmed drums (2)
Barry Mirochnick—drums (2, 5, 11), vocals
Keith McLeod—mandola, mandolin
Monica Guenter—violin
John K. Samson—electric guitar, vocals
Slap—throat singing (6)
Produced by:
Christine Fellows
Comments:
One of the great albums of 2005. Go. Buy. Now. It's unbelievably good. (meth@smoe.org)
Quirky, often delicate, sometimes dark, folk-art songs. In other words, this is Christine's best album yet. If you like Veda Hille's Return of the Kildeer, you should run, not walk, to buy Paper Anniversary. (JoAnn Whetsell)
I would say this album is shockingly good, except the last one standing prepared me for how terrific she can be. Deceptively simple, highly affective, amazing songwriting, and understated, powerful performances. (Neile)
Release info:
2007—Six Shooter Records—SIX034
Availability:
Wide
Ecto priority:
Highly recommended
Group members:
Christine Fellows—vocals, piano, ukulele, Nord Electro, glockenspiel, typewriter, Casio SK-1, pigeon recordings and found sounds
Guest artists:
Barry Mirochnick—drums, vocals; choir (9)
Ed Reifel—xylophone, percussion; choir (9)
Greg Smith—bass
Cristina Zacharias—violin; choir (9)
Leanne Zacharias—cello, vocals, glockenspiel; choir (9)
Monica Guenter—viola (13)
Cam Loeppky—banjo and vocals (2)
Keith McLeod—mandola and banjo (15)
John K. Samson—backing vocals (4, 10)
Jeannie and Howard Zacharias—choir (9)
Produced by:
Christine Fellows
Comments:
This is brilliant, absolutely brilliant. Many of the songs have a
strong folk influence (that's folk as in folk songs, not folk as in person-with-an-acoustic-guitar-and-not-much-else. Folk as in timeless.) Quirky, rich, beautiful, and literary. Did I mention brilliance? I'd go into more detail but I don't want to spoil it, and there are definitely a few moments one can classify as 'spoilers'.
When coming in, it definitely helps to be familiar with poetry (specifically, that of Marianne Moore), but if you aren't, the last page of the liner notes contains all of the references. (lotterose @ gmail . com)
Beautiful. Occasionally strange, haunting, even surprising. (JoAnn Whetsell)
nevertheless, i have to say, may be one of my favorites of 2007, even as a late entry in the race. (woj@smoe.org)
Not as interesting as I hoped. While it's not a bad album—in fact it's a pretty damn good album—it's just that Christine Fellows is among my favourite artists and has shown in previous albums how much deeper she can be. ((Neile)
Release info:
2011—Six Shooter Records—SIX057
Availability:
Candaa
Ecto priority:
Recommended
Group members:
Christine Fellows—vocals, piano, ukulele, accordion, organ, Casio SK-1, bowed bells, prepared piano, field recordings
Guest artists:
Femmes de chez nous:
Shawn Dealey—additional percussion
Gilles Fournier—double bass
Micah Heilbrunn—clarinet
Cam Leppky—additional percussion, whistling
Todd Martin—harn Flugelhorn
Ed Reifel—marimba, drum kit, percussion
John K. Samson—backing vocals, electric, additional percussion, skating
Jason Tait—drums, backing vocals, electric bass, guitar, Juno-60
Cristina Zacharias—violin
Leanne Zacharias—cello vocals
Reliquary/Reliquiare:
Shary Boyle—overhead projection performance
Lise Brémault—guest vocalist
Cam Loeppky—live sound
Alex McMaster—cello, vocals
Leann Zacharias—cello vocals
Produced by:
Christine Fellows
Comments:
This is an dual release of a CD album, Femmes de chez nous, and a DVD live acoustic performance, Reliquary/Reliquiare. It's an odd, idiosyncratic song cycle. Charming and lively, though not my favourite of Christine Fellows' work. (Neile)
It's a lot like Veda Hille (they've worked together for years), specifically her commissioned works. Their career trajectories are actually dovetailing pretty exactly at this point. Anyway, if you liked This Riot Life you'd definitely like this; it's the same feel, piano-based art songs in English and French. I'm not sure it holds up as a through-composed *work* like Nevertheless did (you always run that risk when you're including commissioned and non-commissioned works on the same album). But it's still well worth listening. (lotterose @ gmail . com)
Might make my best of the year list. (omg.its.a.female@gmail.com)
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