NEW ALBUM ‘DEAD BIRD ON THE HIGHWAY’ EARNING ACCLAIM
Today, a new mini-documentary was released about Petunia, bandleader of
Petunia & The Vipers, which touches on his yodeling, hearing early
western music as a young punk music fan, performing on street corners
and in subways to get his start, Jean Cocteau and the mystique of
traveling, the effects of being adopted, the sacrifices touring
musicians make, and his real name:
Here’s what we’re reading about new album ‘Dead Bird on the Highway’:
"Different than anything you've ever heard... not exactly something you come across every day."
– Christina Vinson, The Boot, May 10, 2016
"Strikingly original... timeless… avant-country.”
- Sarah Murphy, Exclaim, May 13, 2016
“Infectious and invigorating… some of the best goddamn yodeling you're ever going to hear.”
- Ryan J. Prado, Portland Mercury, May 19, 2016
"While listening to Petunia and the Vipers, it's easy to pick out a
variety of influences- country, some twang, western swing, and the
likes. But there's also more with a hint of rock and a dash of jazz. Is
this starting to sound like a recipe of sorts? Sure... if David Lynch
was the guy serving it all up." – Elmore, May 12, 2016
“Wonderfully weird.”
- Rob Cullivan, Portland Tribune, May 18, 2016
“Enigmatic… a star-studded who's who of the West Coast's roots scene…
Petunia — a natty-suited gentleman with floppy hair — croons, yelps and
yodels as the room starts spinning around, and things take a strange
turn. His words start to burble into each other in a polyrhythmic,
polysyllabic flood that upsets the straight-up flaming roots boogie of
the backing band. The lyrics take off down some dark and twisted lane
where no love song should ever go. Suddenly you've got a wilting begonia
in your hair, and you're enmeshed in a song that sounds like Marty
Robbins lost a fight with a Bossa Nova. And now what the — is that a
kazoo stealing the solo spot from the pedal steel?”
- Orange County Weekly, May 25, 2016
“A dynamic whoop and holler that can drop from a boisterous crescendo to
mousy whisper at a moment’s notice…. Fusing early country stylings with
gypsy jazz, rockabilly, and surf. At the helm of this movement are
Canadian firebrands Petunia and the Vipers… strange charisma.” Feature
- Tyrell Trimble, Daily Messenger (OR), May 25, 2016
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