Cinder Well / Emily Ringel

by Jalopy Theatre
Cinder Well / Emily Ringel
Sun, 19 Nov 2023 (EST)
08:00PM - 10:00PM
Event past
Jalopy Theatre
315 Columbia Street
Brooklyn, New York 112311
Open Map
$15 adv / $20 door

8pm: Doors
8:30pm: Emily Ringel Opening
9:15pm: Cinder Well Headlining

Oceans flow through the center of Cinder Well’s music. Cadence, the new album from Amelia Baker’s experimental folk project, drifts between two far-flung seas: the hazy California coast where she grew up, and the wind-torn swells of Western Ireland that she’s come to love. Written soon after the release of 2020’s acclaimed No Summer, Baker returned to her hometown in central California to record at Harlan Steinberger’s nearby Hen House Studios in Venice Beach. Inspired by this new setting, Baker expanded Cinder Well’s sound to include percussion, provided by her old friend Phillip Rogers (Haley Heynderickx), as well as trance electric guitar and expansive string parts courtesy Cormac MacDiarmada of Lankum. While there are still hints of the doom folk that Cinder Well is known for, Cadence balances heavy lyrics with a more expansive sound that nods to LA’s mythical Laurel Canyon years. Across nine epic tracks, Baker treads a sonic and lyrical path between the two coastal towns she calls home, her transcendental voice given new wings by the record’s sweeping arrangements. “Overgrown” is the first major key Cinder Well song in nearly a decade while the uneasy and pulsating title track is a love letter to the self for our darkest days. Fittingly, Baker opens Cadence with a song about selkies—seals that turn human on land. More than just a bit of folklore, shapeshifting selkies are a metaphor for Baker herself: a songwriter tied to the ebb and flow of the ocean (and humanity's) currents, whether they be half a world away or a few steps from home.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LEaTYlNHQzM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xIOblGqU_VY

Emily Ringel is an illustrator based in Brooklyn, New York. She received a BFA in Illustration and Communications Design from Pratt Institute and has been recognized by the Society of Illustrators. She is delighted by farmers markets, brownstones, and Strand's rare book room, and when not drawing, she can most often be found in the kitchen, testing new recipes, or playing folk tunes on low stages around Brooklyn.