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Album
Guitarist Chris Welch and mandolin player Patrick Newkirk started Pinebox Serenade as an acoustic three-piece group with bluegrass leanings, playing their first shows in early 2004. Since then, the group has become one of Denton's larger groups, weighing in with seven members who each add a layer to the band's brand of dark acoustic folk. The 11 songs on the disc reveal a band that plays rock clubs but is distinguished by elements of country - Newkirk's mandolin plucking, Holly Manning's lively fiddling, even Welch's gravelly voice, which is a Johnny Cash kind of low. Welch handles vocal duties on most of the songs, like the mournful "Lost Pines"; Newkirk handles a few numbers, including "Gravedigger's Blues," with its dark lyrics but sprightly music. In fact, that kind of contrast runs throughout the album, as in "Streets of Righteousness," in which Welch sings about being shunned from the streets mentioned in the title - the lyrics are dark, but the music rollicks in a minor key, buoyed by fiddle, cello and snappy snare drumming. Even the album cover, by Art Prostitute's Brian Gibb, is a lesson in contrasts: The cartoon-like art features a boy dragging a toy duck behind him, eyebrows cocked anxiously. When you flip the CD over, that's when you see that the boy's walking behind a turtle, a bear, an elephant, a giraffe and other animal playthings carrying a coffin. Pinebox Serenade includes a few players better known for their turns in the Denton, TX rock scene, not countr
Lost Pines
Pinebox Serenade
Streets of Righteousness
Pinebox Serenade
Snow, OK
Pinebox Serenade
Emptiness
Pinebox Serenade
Gravediggers Blues
Pinebox Serenade
Town Drunk
Pinebox Serenade
Last Breath
Pinebox Serenade
Diamond Bessie
Pinebox Serenade
Black Dress
Pinebox Serenade
Your Turn
Pinebox Serenade
Carried Away
Pinebox Serenade