| | Biography
The Boston Globe calls singer-violinist Jake Armerding "the most gifted and promising songwriter to emerge from the Boston folk scene in years."
At 13, Armerding joined his father's bluegrass band, Northern Lights, on fiddle. He soon turned his attention to songwriting, and recorded his first CD, Caged Bird, while earning a degree in English Literature at Wheaton College (IL). The record was an immediate hit on Boston's folk radio station, WUMB, which honored Armerding with its 2001 Best New Artist award. Touring regionally and with support from radio, the record eventually sold more than 2500 copies and got Armerding noticed by the hip Nashville independent label Compass Records.
In 2003, Compass released Jake Armerding, a collection of folk-pop songs written over a year living in Music City. It was the #6 most-added new record among Americana radio stations in April 2003, and critical praise soon followed. "A master at bending boundaries," marveled the Globe, while the Washington Post called Armerding's instrumental skills "remarkable." Touring non-stop, he made debut appearances at the Newport Folk Festival (RI), Kerrville Folk Festival (TX) and Falcon Ridge Folk Festival (NY) that year, along with some of the country's best-known acoustic venues, the Ark (MI), Bluebird Cafe (TN), Tin Angel (PA) and the Freight & Salvage (CA).
After more than 500 performances, from Anchorage to London and Miami to Bangor, Armerding returned to Nashville to record "Walking on the World." With the help of Nashville legends (Dan Dugmore on pedal steel) and his own friends in the scene (Crooked Still's Aoife O'Donovan on harmony vocals), he crafted an album that is "sharp, original, quietly intense, and rewarding for any who'll listen with both ears" (Lansing State Journal). Walking is as difficult to categorize as much of today's best music; equal parts New England singer-songwriter, acoustic pop/rock and newgrass, no genre is exactly safe. But the effect is natural. "His real achievement has been to bend the boundaries of the genre -- to break the conventions that define country music," writes the Boston Globe (March 2007). Armerding stands out from a crowd of new singer-songwriters for what has always been a hallmark of great songwriting: an ability to create something new out of something old.
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