Back To Artist
django haskins : over easy smoke machine
Log in to add to your wishlist
A touring rock songwriter in the tradition of genre-defying artists like Beck and Elvis Costello.
Genre: Rock: Modern Rock
Release Date: 2003
over easy smoke machine
django haskins
Record Label: alyosha records
  • Download Album (MP3) - $9.99
  • Buy CD - $12.00
SPECIAL: 20% discount if you buy more than one copy of it today!
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
talk talk 4:50 $0.99
ex-best friend 3:51 $0.99
art of losing 5:13 $0.99
solo 4:14 $0.99
know it all 2:53 $0.99
state road valentine 2:51 $0.99
sunflower eyes 2:59 $0.99
got it good 3:32 $0.99
planesong 5:22 $0.99
evergreen 4:48 $0.99
preview all songs

Album Notes

Born in Gainesville, Florida, Django Haskins' musical journey has taken him to some strange corners of the world. A childhood in a family of musicians exposed him to Cole Porter, the Beatles, Dylan, Motown, Thelonius Monk, the Replacements, and Elvis Costello to name a few, and created in him a deep-seated love for pop music in its many forms. After a string of middle- and high-school bands with such bound-for-glory names as The Music Butchers and The Robot Bunnies From Hell, Django headed north to study literature on the other side of the Mason-Dixon line. He then set off for China, living in Hangzhou teaching English, and performing his songs at the local pub. It was a crucial experience for his development as a songwriter, as he recounts, "I gained a lot of insight into what makes a song work with an audience that can't understand a word...it takes away all opportunities for in-references, clever lyrics, etc. and boils it down to melody, rhythm, feel, and sound. And when it comes down to it, it doesn't matter what goes into it; it's the sound that hits you or doesn't."

Continuing with his penchant for Third World bases of operation, Django relocated to New York City in 1996. After the release of the album Folding Stars and a series of increasingly successful solo shows at NYC downtown institutions such as CBGB's Gallery, the Bitter End, the Fez, and the Mercury Lounge, Django formed a band which eventually developed into the present lineup of Django & the Regulars with Byron Isaacs on bass and Neil Nunziato behind the drums. With the Regulars, Django teamed up with legendary producer Don Fleming (Sonic Youth, Teenage Fanclub, Pete Yorn) as well as NYC producer Andrew Holander and Mike Daly (Whiskeytown) to record another album of his tunes, Laying Low and Inbetween in 2001, which garnered an impressive amount of radio play and critical acclaim and was subsequently picked up by NYC indie label ModMusic Records for national distribution and use in several TV & film projects.

Django's latest album, 'overeasysmokemachine' was recorded in NYC with Andrew Hollander producing and Robert Smith engineering (David Bowie, Rickie Lee Jones), with some additional recording in Django's newly adopted home base of Chapel Hill, NC with Dan Bryk and Robert Sledge (Ben Folds Five) at the mixing board. The album was recorded with the Regulars but also includes several solo acoustic tracks, presenting a more complete picture of Django's music as it is heard by live audiences on him many tours throughout the U.S. and Europe. His live shows are the laboratory in which his new compositions are sculpted into shape and his classic tunes are given a new life night after night. It is the mark of a true artist that, no matter how good the records are, the live shows are always indescribably better, and are different each time. This is what Django's fans know and everyone else will soon understand. Until then, by all means pick up the records and find out what you've been missing.

Read more...

REVIEWS

Sigh of pleasure for the entire album.
author: E. McGrand (www.myspace.com/ellizam)
Django Haskins... every album is amazing and yes, Django Haskins is even better live if you can imagine it. OverEasy Smoke Machine manages the delicate feat of balancing and honoring multiple, loved roots. You can hear homage to Tom Waits, Elvis Costello, Joe Jackson, Squeeze, The Beatles, Billie Holiday, Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Nina Simone. But the music and singing is always Django, not some young white guy trying to sound like Tom Waits, etc. The music is so rich, fun, complex, and just plain gorgeous that I've listened to it for days straight. "Ex Best Friend" manages the impossible task of saying something new about a breakup. "Plane Song" -- to get a sense of how gorgeous this song is you just need to read the first few words: "I've made a list of the people I'd miss in the next life as the plane went down: mother father sister." The entire song has the same haunting directness, tenderness, beauty. "State Road Valentine" is fun, an interesting story-song, and total dancing music. "Talk Talk" is a major earworm. "The Art Of Losing" is sad, beautiful, complicated, just like losing. This feels to me in a wierd way like Django's coffee house record, but that is probably my own subjective wierdness. In any case, it's a great CD.
Read more...