PATRIK TANNER &
THE FARAWAY MEN
Patrik Tanner's CDs
'Done Broke Down', 'Sparks Would Fly', 'Allsorts' and 'Soft'
can be purchased by sending $10 (any form) to:
3335 Virginia Avenue South, Minneapolis, MN 55426
“I always liked the image in my mind of the
Irish ending up in East Texas and being so damned lonely that country
music came out of them,” says Tanner.
Perhaps that sentiment was sown when Tanner was a
Swedish transplant in Southern California. In any event …
and lest he remain in a continued fit of isolation … shortly
after his return to the Twin Cities in 1994, Patrik formed The Faraway
Men. With outlaws Mark Juenemann on bass and Brandon Fjetland on
drums & hambone, they released 1997’s Done
Broke Down and 1998’s Sparks Would
Fly. The band was a perfect vehicle for Tanner to
express his fondness for great songsmith-storytellers like Gram
Parsons, George Jones and Elvis Costello while spinning his own
unique tales of love-gone-bad with both swagger and soul.
While hailed by some critics as torchbearers of the
“alt-country” genre, the band actually sought to take
a more reverential approach to classic C&W roots – one
that defied expectations of either alt-country’s urban hipster
twang or the Nashvillian bubblegum that continues to dominate today’s
country scene. As PULSE of the Twin Cities exclaimed, “if
this is country, then country just got unbelievably cool.”
On 2001’s Allsorts,
The Faraway Men took a sharp stylistic turn, offering up a guitar
rock concept album rich with 1970s-style international pop ballad
overtones. With the recent addition of fellow wunderkind guitarist
Jon James, Patrik and company continue down a similarly twisted
interstate, daring to cross that line separating radio nirvana from
fiery auto wreck. Whichever way the wheel may turn, within the glorious
confines of their basement rehearsal space, Minnesota’s best-kept
rock-n-roll secret remain patiently waiting to spontaneously combust.
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