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Lauren Braddock : Lauren Braddock
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Psychedelic-pop meets alternative in a coffee house in Nashville.
Genre: Rock: Folk Rock
Release Date: 2002
Lauren Braddock Record Label: Lost Dawg and Love Child Records
  • Buy CD - $15.00
  • Download Album (MP3) - $15.00
SPECIAL: 10% discount if you buy more than one copy of it today!
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
Don't Turn Away 4:39 $0.99
Ignorance Is Bliss 3:57 $0.99
D-i-v-o-r-c-e 0:42 $0.99
A Walk Down Sesame Street 3:34 $0.99
Four Letter Word 0:48 $0.99
If I Was Your Girl 4:26 $0.99
Someone I Don't Know 3:24 $0.99
Alibi Lounge 4:31 $0.99
Lost Dawg 2:53 $0.99
Where The Wild Things Are 4:36 $0.99
Plows In Our Field 3:19 $0.99
Hearts O' Steel 3:47 $0.99
What Am I Gonna Do With You 4:00 $0.99
Let Me Be Your Layla 3:26 $0.99
The Missing Peace 2:49 $0.99
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Album Notes

"story songs that brim with spunk, wit and passion...if you want to know what happened to that kid born at Woodstock, Lauren Braddock is your answer."
- Eliot Wilder, Amplifier Magazine

"intelligent and creative songwriting style is no surprise considering her background...voice reminded me of Melanie...it's fascinating to listen in on her musical exploration...strong debut and really kinda fun!"
- Jennifer Layton, indie-music.com


LAUREN BRADDOCK's self-titled debut album is a versatile collection of songs that draws on influences from 60's/70's pop to alternative to country.

The 15-song CD, produced by Grammy-winning songwriter and critically-acclaimed recording artist Don Henry, touches on issues ranging from the environment ("Don't Turn Away") to animal kindness and world peace ("If I Was Your Girl") while exploring darker issues such as childhood angst ("A Walk Down Sesame Street"), infidelity ("Lost Dawg"), and murder ("Alibi Lounge") -- often in a tongue-in-cheek manner.

It is kind of a "hey...remember this?" to that generation who grew up on the Brady Bunch, just missed the Beatles phenomenon but LOVED them anyway and for the girls who romanticized what it must have been like to be the love interest of both George Harrison and Eric Clapton ("Let Me Be Your Layla") but came of age during an un-free love era ("Ignorance Is Bliss").

Lauren is the product of America's three major creative centers, having spent nearly all of her life in Los Angeles, New York and Nashville. From L.A. comes the cultural awareness so essential to today's pop music. New York gave her the street wise rough edges -- the tough 'n tender oxymoron that makes Manhattanites so fascinating and complex. And from Nashville comes the song craftsmanship that refuses to let her get away with a musical or lyrical phrase that's less than what her taste demands.

Born and raised in Nashville, Lauren is the only child of immortal country songwriter Bobby Braddock, famed for meaty country hits like "D-I-V-O-R-C-E," "Time Marches On," "I Wanna Talk About Me," and "He Stopped Loving Her Today" (voted "All Time Favorite Country Song" in a BBC England poll and "Country Song of The Century" in R&R.) Bobby exposed Lauren to all sorts of music from Hank Williams to the Beatles, and never panicked when his daughter took adolescent journeys into the world of punk rock and other extra-Nashville music forms.

Her dream in high-school was to go to New York to be an actress. So she went north and studied at the American Musical and Dramatic Academy and surprise, while she was in New York she started writing songs. After drama school she headed out to L.A. where she secured film and television roles. "But while I was chasing a movie career by day," she recalls, "at night I was playing coffee houses with a band." She also did some early demos out there with Jeff Buckley and rock engineer Michael Clouse. One day one of her old buddies, Don Henry, heard those demos and vowed that someday he would produce an album on her.

When a publishing deal with Sony/ATV Tree brought Lauren back to Nashville, she and Don got busy writing and recording. Don, who collaborated with Lauren on 10 of the CD's 15 songs, says, "Writing with Lauren is so easy and we always get something really good and fascinating, and in the studio she is wonderful and thoroughly unique."

Along with Don, who sings or plays something on every song, many noted guest artists and musicians shared their talents on this project. Country's Blake Shelton (whose debut gold album contains a D. Henry/L. Braddock song), Deborah Allen and Matraca Berg contributed background vocals and noted musicians gracing the tracks include pop-rockers Bill Lloyd and Will Kimbrough on guitar, legendary pedal steel player Dan Dugmore, harmonica guru "Jellyroll" Johnson, ace percussionist Mickey Grimm, multi-talented John Mock and, last but not least, Lauren's dad, Bobby, on keyboards.

Media/Radio contact: Jim Havey, jhavey@jimhaveypr.com

© 2002 behavey music

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REVIEWS

Catchy pop songs from the 60's/70's
author: VitoM
No customer reviews yet! But it’s not an awful album, as this seems to suggest, on the contrary. It’s a very pleasant pop album, with a lot of catchy songs. If I look for a comparison, Louise Goffin comes to mind. As Louise, Lauren is the daughter of a famous songwriter. Bobby Braddock penned a lot of country hits, included D-I-V-O-R-C-E, that Lauren briefly covers here as a homage to him. But don’t expect a country album, even though her daddy is a country songwriter and the guests list includes country heavyweights like Matraca Berg, Bill Lloyd, Will Kimbrough, Dan Dugmore, Blake Shelton and many others. Rather, it’s a pop album with influences from the 60’s and the 70’s. The country ingredient pops up here and there to spice things up, but the core is psychedelic pop (the bubbles and the colours in the cover aren’t there for nothing). From this point of view, Lauren seems musically closer to Louise’s father, Gerry Goffin, a master composer of now-classic pop songs than to her own. Besides, it’s not an accident that the Beatles are listed in the the album booklet’s “Thanks to” section. Songs like “A Walk Down Sesame Street”, “Someone I Don’t Know” and “Let Me Be Your Layla” are clearly influenced by them. However, my favourite numbers are the energetic “Don’t Turn Away”, the tongue-in-cheek “Ignorance Is A Bliss”, the Celtic “Plows In Our Field”, the ABBA-esque “Hearts Of Steel” and the airy “Where The Wild Things Are”. But the potential radio hit is without doubt “Lost Dawg”, a song so catchy that you’ll love it after the very first hearing. Why the Nashville majors are not putting this song in their divas’ repertoire is a mystery. But it’s useless to continue this list of good songs: they are all good! You can really listen to the whole album without skipping a song – and they are 15 for more than 50 minutes of music!! This debut CD is 3 years old and Lauren’s site has not been updated for two years. That’s really a pity! Buy this CD and maybe we’ll have a chance to see Lauren back with a new album.
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