Tickets from Compound will be honored
Fri
Jun
1
DONAVON FRANKENREITER
SHAWN JOHNSON

To create his fifth full-length album Start Livin', Hawaii-based singer/guitarist/songwriter Donavon Frankenreiter holed up in a Southern California studio for seven days with his longtime bassist Matt Grundy - and no one else. The follow-up to 2010's Glow, Start Livin' is a nine-track selection of folk-infused songs that sweetly reflect the simplicity of their recording. With its smooth showcasing of Frankenreiter's rich, honey-thick vocals and masterful guitar work, Start Livin' bears all the intimacy of an impromptu back-porch performance and the tenderness of a treasured love letter.
"Start Livin' is basically a love album," says Frankenreiter, who co-produced the record alongside Matt Grundy and Adam Ableman. "Most of the songs are about my wife and our two boys, and the life that we've built together in Hawaii." Thanks to Frankenreiter's infectious warmth and finely honed pop sensibilities, each of those songs has the singular effect of drawing the listener into that bright and breezy world for a blissed-out moment.
Essential to the record's playful feel is Frankenreiter's inspired use of instrumentation. "This album's completely unlike anything I've ever done before, in that we skipped the basics and went for a whole lot of different instruments," he says. "We never brought in a drum set-instead there's handclapping for percussion, or the two of us banging on pots and pans. We were using everything from bells to singing bowls to Zippo lighters; at one point we put some beans and salts in a can and shook it around." Grundy played a key role in the wildly varied sounds on Start Livin', according to Frankenreiter. "Matt was playing ukulele and lap steel guitar and banjo - he'd grab an instrument and we'd do a take live and just build the track up from that. It was a real fun vibe." Despite that kitchen-sink approach, Start Livin' never comes off as cluttered. Each of the songs shines with a crisp, clean sound perfectly suited to the album's sunny spirit: "You" achieves a hypnotic dreaminess by layering lap steel over beautifully crooned harmonies and a twinkling acoustic riff; "I Can Lose" matches its island-breezy guitars with shimmering mandolin; and a gracefully plucked banjo backs up Frankenreiter's hushed, heart-on-sleeve lyrics on the quietly epic "Together Forever." On "Shine," meanwhile, ocean-wave-like effects merge with a swaying melody and smitten lyrics ("You and I, girl, are like a sun and moon/Lately you've been in orbit in my head like a good summer tune").
While love songs serve as the album's centerpiece, Frankenreiter also explores non-romantic love throughout Start Livin'. The gloriously ragtag "Same Lullaby," for instance, makes a sweetly hopeful plea for world peace. "I wrote that song a little while after the tsunami in Japan, thinking how lucky I was to have a family and be alive," Frankenreiter recalls. "The line that goes 'I believe the world could be fine if we could all sing the same lullaby'-that's me hoping we could all just get together and be on the same wavelength even for just one moment." On the irresistibly toe-tapping "Just Love," Frankenreiter turns his focus to his two sons, Ozzy and Hendrix. "Sometimes my kids'll get scared of things in the dark-you know, the monster under the bed," he says. "So that song's me telling them, 'Instead of thinking there's something bad there, think of it as just love creeping in. Embrace it. Talk to it.'"
Elsewhere on Start Livin', Frankenreiter hones in on more heavy-handed matters. Undoubtedly the album's most somber moment, "A.I." pays tearful tribute to Frankenreiter's friend Andy Irons (a professional surfer who passed away in November 2010). "I'd never been that close to someone who passed away before. The song's about me telling Andy that I just wish I could see him one more time," says Frankenreiter of "A.I.," which pairs pained lyrics ("Help me get through another day away from you") with gentle guitar melodies and shushing percussion. Frankenreiter also says goodbye to a friend on "West Coast Fool," but this time it's a wistful takedown of "a Southern man with big ol' Southern plans." A high-minded twist on the typical kiss-off track, "West Coast Fool" pulls off the unlikely feat of seamlessly blending banjo twang with the soothing hum of a Tibetan singing bowl.
For Frankenreiter, the essence of Start Livin' is most fully captured in its album-opening title track. Accented by handclaps and a stick-in-your-head harmonies, "Start Livin'" is a feel-good, uptempo call to "celebrate tonight." "To me the most beautiful thing about this record is it really reflects who I am today," says Frankenreiter. "Start Livin' means stop worrying about where you've been, where you're going-just start embracing what you have around you. Start loving what you have right now."
Shawn Johnson, raised in Boston, Massachusetts, and is a soulful singer/songwriter whose life experiences provide him the opportunity to create music with a passion that is heard in his lyrics and felt in his stage presence. His music is best described as a lyric-oriented blend of alternative rock and folk, designed for live performances. Influenced by artists such as Counting Crows, Ani DiFranco, Dave Matthews, Public Enemy and Riche Havens; Shawn's musical style is an eclectic mix of enthusiasm, creativity, and energy. "Shawn Johnson's brilliantly catchy acoustic and electric guitar lines combined with his powerfully poetic lyrics are enough to stand alone," said Justin Knight, Knot Known Records, Inc.
Shawn Johnson moved to the Phoenix area in 1995, along with headlining hundreds of shows in the valley, he has opened for bands such as Phish, Dave Matthews Band, Fiona Apple, Reel Big Fish, Medeski, Martin and Wood, Sneaker Pimps, Rusted Root, Incubus, Linkin Park and Charlie Hunter. He has been nominated and received a number of awards including, "New Times Best of Phoenix" (1998), "The Edge Locals Only Competition" (2000), and "Arizona Infusion of Music Award" (2002). In the summer of 2001, Shawn Johnson & The Foundation toured in Denver and Boulder Colorado. Upon returning to the valley, they recorded their latest album 'Strength'. Following a successful release, the band hit the road touring Boston and Cape Cod, where they played at the House of Blues and the Pride Festival in Cambridge for a crowd of 40,000. Shawn's career plans include a solo acoustic tour, a full band tour, a major label release, and continuing collaborations with other artists.
In the meantime, Shawn will continue to play with the raw passion that shoots straight to his fans' souls. "Music is so personal; Everything has a purpose in life, and as long as my songs are affecting somebody, even one person, then the time I took to write that song, and the effort it took to play it… was all worth it" -- Shawn Johnson
$21.00 - $23.00
Off Sale
Each ticket buyer will receive a free copy of Donavon’s new CD Start Livin’ at the show!
Who’s Going
Upcoming Events
Crescent Ballroom
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Tue, May 21
SUNDRESSED CD RELEASE SHOW
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Wed, May 22
KATCHAFIRE
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Thu, May 23
THE TECHNICOLORS
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Thu, May 23
THE TECHNICOLORS
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Fri, May 24
Old School - R&B and Hip Hop Dance Party
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Fri, May 24
FUNK & SOUL AT MIDNIGHT
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Sat, May 25
FLAMENCO POR LA VIDA
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Sat, May 25
DECKER, CAPTAIN SQUEEGEE
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Sat, May 25
KISMET. WITH SEAN WATSON
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Sun, May 26
TRIVIA NIGHT / DRINK & FOOD SPECIALS