Awful Purdies
Hiatus
www.awfulpurdies.com
The women of the Awful Purdies combine many years of musical experience, compounded by six years of playing shows together. They all sing, play and write, staying close to the modern folk music vernacular. What gets me about the Awful Purdies is that they come together and create something seamless and unique, despite their other musical projects and busy lives as womenโmothers, teachers and a waitress. Without any overt feminist subtext to what they do, I canโt help thinking of them as being uniquely successful because theyโre women. Thereโs no gimmick to it, no individual agendas or ego trips to act out. I suspect that theyโre too busy outside the group to have time for the usual intra-band dramaโthey become Awful Purdies as a way to play hookie from their lives for a few hours; perhaps thatโs why itโs called Hiatus.
Each of the singers brings something different into the sound. Katie Rocheโs voice has an appealing hoarseness, with a jazz singerโs behind-the-beat phrasing. Sarah Cram sings a bit smoother, but can muster a brassy rock tone when called upon. Nicole Upchurch sounds a bit reedy, with a subtle, rapid vibrato. Marcy Rosenbaumโs voice has a raw, slightly nasal quality that is disarmingly open and unaffected.
Katie Roweโs cello is only infrequently in the foreground, but holds down the bottom end of the arrangement. In fact the sound of her celloโrecorded with remarkable warmth and presence by engineer Peter Beckerโis the linchpin to the AP sound. When they come together in a chorus behind whoever is singing lead, they sound somewhere between a church choir and a female Beach Boys. Their ensemble sound completes the song; you wish there was more of it even when itโs exactly the right amount.
When Upchurch sings โshe believes in perennials, she collects old thingsโ she might be describing the groupโs artistic mission. Thereโs plenty thatโs original about these songs, but they stay rooted in the folk tradition without being over-constrained by it. Hiatus commands attention without ever raising its voice, it invites without ever trying too hard.

