Antje Duvekot
(born 1976 in Heidelberg, Germany) is a singer-songwriter and guitarist based in Somerville, Massachusetts. Duvekot holds three top songwriting awards, including the Kerrville New Folk Competition's Best New Folk Award, Boston Music Award for Outstanding Folk Act and Grand Prize in the John Lennon Songwriting Competition. [1]
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ANTJE DUVEKOT TICKETS
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Biography
Duvekot moved to
Delaware at the age of 13, when her mother remarried. Duvekot writes songs that are often dark and personal, and she frequently records and performs with little accompaniment besides her
acoustic guitar.
She began recording music on her own at the age of 16, producing limited-edition cassette tapes for her friends. At 18 she won the first
open mic competition she entered, at the Sam Adams Brewpub in Philadelphia. Within a year, she had recorded a number of songs on a borrowed
4-Track tape machine, and released a self-produced full-length cassette entitled
Waterstains"
which she sold at gigs in and around
Wilmington, Delaware, where she was enrolled in school.
In 2000, her song “Soma” won the grand prize in the rock category of the
John Lennon Songwriting Contest.
Duvekot often tours with
Ellis Paul, who sings on her first studio album,
Big Dream Boulevard
.
Big Dream Boulevard
was produced by
Séamus Egan of the Irish-American band
Solas. Solas has previously recorded five of Duvekot's songs: "Black Annis," "The Poisonjester's Mask," "Erin," "Reasonland," and "Merry Go Round."
"I think it’s fair to say that over all I turn to music in times of trouble and need as a therapeutic tool to get me through sadness," said Duvekot in an interview. "That’s why I tend to turn to music. So my songs tend to be a little darker, because that’s where I tend to go for solace. So themes like personal struggle with relationships and existential issues."
[2]
Duvekot's first two albums,
Little Peppermints
and
Boys, Flowers, Miles
, are based on recordings of live performances, although some tracks include studio overdubs as well. Both albums include spoken anecdotes from Duvekot.
In 2007, Duvekot's song "Merry-Go-Round" was featured a large-scale marketing campaign for
Bank of America, including a high-profile spot during
Super Bowl XLI. Duvekot performed for the first time as a professional in Europe, in August 2007, as part of Denmark's Tonder Festival, accompanied by Karan Casey, John Doyle, Liz Carroll, Julie Fowlis, and Mick McAuley.
Duvekot released her second studio CD,
The Near Demise of the Highwire Dancer
, on Black Wolf Records in March 2009. The album, which features 11 tracks, most of them originals, was produced by singer-songwriter Richard Shindell.
[3]
Discography
|Antje Duvekot on life as a folk singer, her family and her music}}
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- Little Peppermints
(2002)
- Boys, Flowers, Miles
(2005)
- Big Dream Boulevard
(Black Wolf Records, 2006)
- Snapshots
(Black Wolf Records, 2008)
- The Near Demise of the Highwire Dancer
(2009)
References
- Signature Discoveries: Antje Duvekot
- Interview with Antje Duvekot, David Shankbone, ''Wikinews'', November 11, 2007
- ''The Near Demise of the High Wire Dancer'' Is Now On Sale