Roger Greenawalt

Roger McEvoy Greenawalt
Background information
Born Berlin, Germany
Genres Rock, Pop, Acoustic Rock, Reggae, Dance, Film/TV Scoring, Electronica, Sound Design
Occupation(s) Record Producer, Composer, Performer
Years active 1978- Present
Associated acts Ben Kweller, The Pierces, Rufus Wainwright
Website beatlescompleteonukulele.com
Notable instruments
Ukulele, Bass, Guitar, Banjo, Mandolin, Pedal Steel, Lap Steel, Percussion, Programming

Roger McEvoy Greenawalt is a music producer and musician known for carrying a ukulele at all times everywhere he goes. Greenawalt has worked with Iggy Pop, Rufus Wainwright, Nils Lofgren, The Pierces, Ben Kweller, Ric Ocasek, Branford Marsalis, Joe Strummer, Philip Glass and many others. A story on Greenawalt's discovery of Kweller appeared in the New Yorker on April 7, 1997.[1][1] Greenawalt is currently focusing on his multimedia project incorporating poetry, music and photography entitled 366 Visions.

Background

Greenawalt studied at Berklee College of Music in Boston from 1978-1980. In 1980 Greenawalt formed the "Sarcastic Post Punk No Wave Death Disco" band The Dark who, after gaining a loyal East Coast following, drew the interest of Ric Ocasek, lead singer and guitarist of The Cars. Ocasek produced The Dark's second EP, Darkworld, in 1982. A single, "Judy",[2] became a local hit in Boston.[3]

Over the last 30 years, Greenawalt has produced a wide variety of music, including records by bands such as Nils Lofgren, Ben Kweller, The Pierces, Eve's Plum, Anya Marina, Iggy Pop, Nellie McKay, Julian Velard and Eric Hutchinson. He is particularly known for mentoring young artists as they become mature professionals. Stylistically he is known for his experimental approach to pop music and careful attention to lead vocals. Allison Pierce: "I credit Greenawalt with opening our minds to new possibilities of what our music could and should be."

366 Visions - Origin and Scope

In October 2010, Greenawalt was diagnosed with laryngeal cancer. He suffered a recurrence in 2013. Despite his successful treatment by Dr Michael Pitman of New York Eye and Ear Infirmary, Greenawalt suffered complications causing him to lose his speaking voice in November 2013. During this period of enforced silence, Greenawalt conceived the idea of 366 Visions.

366 Visions is a multimedia project that combines exactly 140 character Twitter Poetry married to a square Instagram image and original song (often in collaboration with another artist) using the Twitter Poetry as lyrics and inspired by the image. The pieces are released on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 4.20pm. 366 Visions is in the final stages of development and will be launched in March 2015: www.366visions.com

Beatles Complete On Ukulele

On December 8, 2004, Greenawalt first performed his Beatles Complete On Ukulele concert by playing all 185 original Beatles songs in one day on ukulele with 60 guest singers at Elizabeth Streb's SLAM Action Lab in Brooklyn, New York. In 2008, he did the same show again at Brooklyn's Spike Hill. Since then, Greenawalt has performed the marathon show three more times at Brooklyn Bowl and three years running at SXSW in Austin, Texas (2010,[4] 2011). Greenawalt performed an abridged version near San Francisco at The McEvoy Ranch Harvest Festival in November 2010. Performers at these various concerts have included Nellie McKay, The Naked Brothers Band, The Pierces, Adam Green, Ryan Miller of Guster, Jeremiah Birnbaum, and Freedy Johnston. Greenawalt has an accompanying web site Beatles Complete On Ukulele where he is rerecording original Beatles songs on ukulele. He releases a new track periodically with an original essay about the song. See link to site here...

Discography

References

  1. Seabrook, John (April 7, 1997). "A profile of Greenawalt's role in the discovery of Ben Kweller". The New Yorker. Retrieved 2009-06-22.
  2. Dark, The. "Judy". song. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  3. Belm. "Living in This Darkworld". Belm Blog.
  4. Carr, David (2010-03-19). "SXSW: The Beatles Meet the Ukulele". The New York Times. Retrieved 2011-05-20.
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