SWF Press Photo by Devin O'Brien

Stevie Weinstein-Foner

New Album: Wondering

Release Date: June 18, 2021
Label: Wild Kindness
Pre-order: https://ffm.to/swf-wondering

Tracklisting:
1. Good Medicine
2. Promised Land
3. Give Me A Song
4. Wondering
5. I Just Can’t Wait
6. Lionhearted
7. My Friend Guitar
8. I Feel You
9. Havasu
10. Echo

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BIO

Boston-bred, LA-based musician and artist Stevie Weinstein-Foner offers songs of sincerity, optimism, and cosmic perspective on new album Wondering, which features contributions from Jared Samuel, Jolie Holland, and Adam Brisbin, among others.

An introduction to Wondering (Wild Kindness), by Stevie Weinstein-Foner

“What we need is some good medicine,” sings Stevie Weinstein Foner on the opening track to Wondering — specifically, “a dose of something strong and bright.” For those feeling battered, fatigued and discouraged after a globally tough year, it’s an apt sentiment; and the real joy and balm of Stevie’s sophomore album is that it supplies exactly what it seeks. Its songs are edifying, reassuring like a post-bath hug in a towel—from Levon Henry’s languorous, breathy saxophone on “Good Medicine” to the glass-half-full strut of “Promised Land,” and the guileless chime of “My Friend Guitar.”

Above all, these are songs that are designed to be shared—“campfire rock songs”, in Stevie’s words—with choruses that feel like home. Considering Stevie’s own family history, steeped in socialism, it’s hardly surprising. His grandfather, Philip Foner, was a labor historian whose friends included Pete Seeger and Paul Robeson. Stevie’s own artistic awakening began at Camp Thoreau-in-Vermont (described affectionately in the Wall Street Journal as “a nudist colony with kayaks”)—via afternoon “Sing” sessions, with giant lyric cards for songs by Pink Floyd, REM and the Indigo Girls, plus his camp counsellor’s love of Pavement and the Flaming Lips. Where Stevie’s debut album, 2013’s Let It Be Told, offered fuzzy, lo-fi grooves, Wondering is gloriously fully-realized, honed over years of playing and touring with partner Jolie Holland.

Recording on the album began in earnest in fall 2018, in the Brooklyn, NY studio of co-producer Jared Samuel (Kevin Morby, Karen O., Aldous Harding & more), whom Stevie describes as a “song midwife,” with relaxed, easeful sessions continuing over the course of the year. Friends who appear on the record include Samantha Parton (Be Good Tanyas), Adam Brisbin (Buck Meek, Sam Evian), David Ivar (Herman Dune) and Joanna Sternberg. Its arrangements trade in the warm sounds of mellotron, Wurlitzer, piano, guitar and accordion; in “ooh-la-la-las”, irresistible harmonies, and, at its close, the haunting call of loons on a lake.

The fact that these songs connect so powerfully is because they’re lived-in and real. “I’m always reaching for vulnerability in my songwriting,” says Stevie. You can hear it on “Give Me a Song,” which, with Blythe Gruda’s harmonies, has all the tenderness of a Gram Parsons/Emmylou Harris duet.  Elsewhere, there are echoes of musical heroes Daniel Johnston and fellow New Englander Jonathan Richman, as well as nods to mystic poet Kabir and American romantic Mary Oliver. Alongside its many rousing moments, there is room for reflection on Wondering, culminating in the album’s gently heartbreaking elegy, “Echo.” 

This album was seven years in the making—paraphrasing Oliver’s poem “Don’t Worry,” Stevie sings, “Things just take the time they take”—and it arrives now with perfect timing.

SHORT BIO: Musician and artist Stevie Weinstein-Foner offers songs of sincerity, optimism, and cosmic perspective. Where Stevie’s debut album, 2013’s Let It Be Told, offered fuzzy, lo-fi grooves, 2021’s Wondering is fully-realized, honed over years of playing and touring with partner Jolie Holland. Produced alongside veteran session musician Jared Samuel, the album trades in warm sounds, irresistible harmonies, and songs that are probably best sung around a campfire.

PRESS QUOTES

“Throughout Let It Be Told, SWF’s blend elements of 1960’s rock, ‘70s riffs, and lo-fi bong anthems of the ‘90s. Still, even amid the slack-stringed strumming and coarse-grained guitar distortion, SWF’s distinctive shredded and yelping vocals — which somehow falls between Neutral Milk Hotel’s Jeff Mangum and Galaxie 500’s Dean Wareham — give the songs some emotional heft.” – John Schaefer, WNYC Soundcheck

“We have a sneaky feeling that young SWF might just end up a rock star. The charismatic Brooklyn song man makes the kind of warm, mellow, scruffy rock & roll that you can’t help but fall for on first listen.” – Time Out New York

“SWF is bringing out a 1970s vibe on a 1990s tip with his debut album Let It Be Told … packed with one meaningful, uplifting, and impassioned track after the other, SWF is clearly an artist to watch.” – Huffington Post


MUSIC

Buy/Stream/Watch “Give Me A Song” here: https://ffm.to/swf-give 

Buy/Stream “Good Medicine” here: https://ffm.to/swf-medicine 

PHOTOS

SWF Press Photo by Devin O’Brien
SWF Press Photo by Devin O’Brien
SWF Press Photo by Devin O’Brien

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