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Craig Cardiff : Goodnight (Go Home)
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This singer/songwriter and troubadour builds landscapes of sound using live digital loops and brings the room to a hush. Edged folk, that is simultaneously beautiful, melancholy and left leaning.
Genre: Folk: Folk-Rock
Release Date: 2007
Goodnight (Go Home) Record Label: Craig Cardiff
  • Download Album (MP3) - $9.99
  • Buy CD - $12.97
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
Revival Day 2:41 $0.99
Maybe You Should Drive 3:24 $0.99
Heaven 4:20 $0.99
Dirty Old Town 4:06 $0.99
When People Go 3:36 $0.99
Dig In 3:16 $0.99
Smallest Wingless 3:18 $0.99
Kingston 2:59 $0.99
Bird Down 4:15 $0.99
Dance Me Outside 4:22 $0.99
Dearest When You Called 2:49 $0.99
Rowantree 2:19 $0.99
God Said No 7:07 $0.99
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Album Notes

Imagine a beautiful night with a star-speckled sky and you’re watching the water roll in on the beach. You’re sitting, in perfect relaxation, by a comforting fire. It’s not cold enough to wear a sweater but you put one on because a cool wind is breezing through the autumn leaves. In this moment of ideal Canadiana, what music sets the mood just right for you? Maybe Neil Young comes to mind and probably “Harvest Moon,” or maybe Gordon Lightfoot, Hayden or The Tragically Hip. How about Craig Cardiff?
A 10-year veteran of the indie music scene throughout Canada, Craig is a traveling troubadour playing shows across the country, in small towns, big cities, neighbourhood pubs and even your living room. My lazy man reviewer comparison will yield Iron & Wine and Damien Rice. If one were to look up indie in the dictionary, before it was redefined into a genre or style, before it was hipster territory, you would find this humble yet outspoken man with an impressive word-of-mouth following.

Craig has 11 albums to date, including some self-produced and several live albums recorded at favourite venues such as The Black Sheep Inn in Wakefield, QC, Ginger’s in Halifax and The Bombshelter in Waterloo. His new album, Goodnight (Go Home) has been garnering attention even before its release for his soft folk, lush tones, and his sincere and subversive lyrics. The title track is a happy, melodic tune with a dancing piano filling in the background behind Craig’s soft voice and a simple drum beat. It builds until its climax near the end when a chorus of people sings with him, “Goodnight, go home. There is nothing more to see.” Yet there is still a lot to see here.

He’s a singer/songwriter, left-leaning political activist and a philanthropist. He wrote the album track “Smallest Wingless” for a charity that takes pictures of premature babies with their parents as their first and last memories (check out www.nowilaymedowntosleep.com). It’s a sad song with a slow and spotted piano, beautiful harmonization on the vocals and a deep, dark and smooth cello to round out the track.

He’s also a husband and a father and when his daughter started asking questions about death and afterlife Craig wrote the song, “I met God.” A deep bass line and gentle drum beat back the piano and his heartbreaking voice. The lyrics weave a hypothetical story of meeting God and asking to swap places and saying he would stop Kurt Cobain from his suicide and God will have a good time, meeting people, having some drinks and even find a lover. It’s an interesting song from an artist “cynically undecided” on his religious views.

The people involved in Goodnight (Go Home) read like a laundry list of other great people on the indie scene. The album was produced by Les Cooper (Jill Barber, Andy Stochansky) with the production assistance/musicianship of Paul Mathew (Hidden Cameras) and accompaniment of Mike Olsen (K-OS, Arcade Fire), Joel Stouffer (Dragonette, Jason Collette), Lisa MacIsaac (Mad Violet), Kieran Adams (Sarah Harmer), and Rose Cousins as well as a host of other talented musicians.

- from TorontoIndie.com

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REVIEWS

Simply Beautiful
author: Marc Bridge
I heard "Dig In" on Whole Wheat Radio and I just had to know more about Craig Cardiff. I was not disappointed with "Goodnight (Go Home)". Every song on this CD, reminded me of why I fell immediately in love with Craigs music. For me it all starts with thoughtful lyrics, but without the incredible tone and timbre of his vocals those words could not possibly be presented properly. The icing on the cake is the accompaniment which I found understated but perfectly suited to each individual story. "Maybe You Should Drive" got stuck in my brain and still hasn't made it's way out, "Heaven" and "Smallest and Wingless" are simply beautiful and delivered like a prayer. Finding Craig Cardiff, has been one of the great finds of the year for me. I'm an instant fan and hope he comes and plays in Boston sometime soon.
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Best Yet
author: Timothy Cole
A really great collection of songs and arguably his best yet. smallest wingless and God said No are memorable both in lyrical quality and performance. Well worth a listen as are the other discs. one complaint, Please continue to make available the cds to buy not just for download.
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