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Lee Bock : Self-Made Man
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More tunes to ponder while sniffing the bouquet of an impertinent pilsner.
Genre: Folk: Alternative Folk
Release Date: 2007
Self-Made Man Record Label: New Socks Music LLC
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Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
Bicentennial 4:37 $0.99
Last First Kiss 3:12 $0.99
Self-Made Man 3:11 $0.99
Morning Drive 4:37 $0.99
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Album Notes

“Just your typical American songwriter, hardened by years in the IT sector.”

THE BOCK STORY: based on Facts, Rumors and Innuendo

He didn’t grow up in a lonesome holler, his family dog didn’t die, his father didn’t abandon the family and his mother didn’t toil and work her fingers to the bone. Still, Lee Bock and his music are intrinsically southern, both in their style and in his choice of words. Lyrically his songs are too literate to be described as country, yet the sound of his music would never be confused with that of singer/songwriters from the big city.

To describe his voice, listeners use words such as cozy, cheerful and low (which is actually only true on the low notes). But Lee himself compares his singing to a non-human “…it sounds kind of like Winnie the Pooh, if he had a two-pack-a-day smoking habit and a slight southern drawl. I myself don't smoke, but Pooh Bear would have to in order to achieve my level of gravitas.”

Lee started writing songs while he was living outside the US. Living in Germany in his 20's, he supported himself with a low-salary job as a radio sidekick named Butch, the Simultaneously Translating Weatherman. It was during that job he started writing comedy songs with titles such as “She Killed My Plants And Then She Left Me” and the seldom heard yet much discussed tribute to one of Germany’s greatest composers, albeit with less piousness than Bach might otherwise deserve:

“Johann Sebastian Bach wrote hits by the dozen
Hung out a lot in church; was married to his cousin”

Being genetically humble, it was no great feat for Lee to resist that dusky yet tempting aroma that pervades the entertainment industry. Between beers, he decided that instead of waiting for the ever capricious gust of fame to blow in his direction, he would get a real job and start a family while continuing to regularly hone his skills as a songwriter. And never one to rush anything, Lee spent over ten years writing the songs for OPPOSITE DAY.

In 2004, he began the arduous two year journey that culminated in 2006's "Opposite Day", his first release.

His follow-up EP, "Self Made Man" was recorded during the spring/summer of 2007. At the controls for this project was Jared Bartlett (producer for the Brindley Brothers and guitarist for Last Train Home). Lee was joined in the studio by some bodacious talent: Jon Carroll (keyboards), Luke Brindley (guitars), Nate Brown (percussion) and Kevin Macintyre. Vocal powerhouse Mary Ann Redmond lends her amazing voice to the effort as well.

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