A Fine Frenzy Tickets – Tickling International Fans
She’s got a fiery personality and a bubbly voice to boot, synchronizing her orange hair with her pop rock hits. The indie artist based in Los Angeles recently wrapped up her residency in her home city’s Largo at the Coronet Theatre as she gears up for this summer’s Lilith Tour. Just barely a quarter of a century old, the sparkling youngster Kamagra Soft epitomizes today’s feminist moment with singles that read like a story book.
In all literal sense, her self-penned tunes are actually just that – little stories in which A Fine Frenzy, aka Alison Sudol, recently combined to create her first children’s book. Much like her affliction for everything childlike, as evident in the recent Los Angeles Style Section shoot where she dons ballerina shoes and tutus, Sudol’s music is still based in the whimsical innocence of childhood. “I have a thing for ballet stuff,” she said during the shoot. “I never quite grew up.”
A constant seller of A Fine Frenzy tickets, she is one of the main attractions for Lilith Fair’s return, so be sure to catch Sudol as she tours the West Coast with other likeminded female industry powerhouses. Opening in Seattle and making her way down the coast, Sudol adds that “it’s an honor” to participate in the Sarah McLachlan created event.
Supporting Bomb in the Birdcage from 2009, the album’s latest single “Electric Twist” recently saw its music video premiere. Unlike her debut, 2007’s One Cell in the Sea, Sudol’s sophomore effort provided audiences a much more sultry, neo-pop new wave effort that shred her of the stereotype that she was driven by the piano.
“On tour I discovered that while I love being behind the piano and having quiet moments with the audience, I also love rocking out and having a good time. I started expanding my tastes, listening to as much music as I could get my hands on: Johnny Cash, Bob Dylan and the Talking Heads changed my life,” she says on her website. Bomb in the Birdcage was a nearly effortless result as material flowed like water.
Working again with producer Lukas Burton, Sudol found basing her work in nature was all she needed to complete an album worthy of her name. Recording singles like “What I Wouldn’t Do” when she was sick, she changed her former mellow theme into something with a bit more bite when she wrote “Stood Up.” Eventually with hits like “Electric Twist” and “Blow Away” the album turned into something with unexpected sparkle.
Born in Seattle and raised in Los Angeles, Sudol started recording her piano musings as a teen, influenced by Coldplay and Keane. It didn’t take long for Jason Flom of Capital Records to flock to Sudol’s home, offering a recording contract and festival date for South by Southwest. Naming her “musical collaboration,” as she deems it, after a line from Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, she released her debut in 2007. Praised critically, the album made it to Billboard’s Top Heatseekers chart as she opened for Rufus Wainwright. She returned with Bomb in the Birdcage in September with the EP Oh Blue Christmas closing out the year.
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Category: Music
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