Mama Dish on the Stoop,Blues Mon Epouse,
G. Washington’s Portrait at the Frick,
Rediscovered,
Banjo Breakout ,
Cap Chat/Sainte-Anne-des-Monts
Lazy Summer Stoop,
Rainy Day ,
Rocher-Percé/St. Laurent
Berthier-sur-Mer 2002/The Summer After
12-String Breakout,
A Brooklyn Life ,
Tappan Zee/The Hudson ,
Opus Mon Epouse
The Ballad of the Brothers Krongard
This            album represents recordings which were done between 2002 and  2010. Some            elements of the music were conceived as early as 1968. One was  actually            written in 1978, while traveling over the Tappan Zee Bridge in  the back            of a van. I was on the way to open a show for my friends Sonny  Terry            and Brownie McGhee at a club in Woodstock, New York.
Most of this music,            though, was written in Brooklyn and Québec, my geographical  muses,            close to the time they were recorded.
I am not sure what inspires me so much almost exclusively in  those            two locations, but it must be the proximity to the sea. Having  grown            up in the mountains, I have always been drawn to the sea. If  the Midwest            is America's Heartland, New York harbor is its greatest valve,  and still            carries all the inspiring power and energy that Walt Whitman  wrote about            so eloquently. And the Saint-Laurent, the great estuary that  drains            the Great Lakes and opens up to its majestic gulf, holds a  power over            me that can best be described by the music I have written in  its valley.
The synchronicity            of my son Pete Tridish giving me one of a new generation of  recording            devices in 2000, and the "Stolen Election" followed by the            tragedy of September 11th, opened up the most productive time  of my            life as an artist. It was political protest that was always my  greatest            motivator. As a political songwriter, no period called for  action as            much as the last decade. With the constant collaboration and  support            of my beloved Mama Dish, the musical drive was so strong, the  issues            so imperative, that music spilled out of me and into recording  devices,            even beyond the political songs. This collection is from that  musical            overflow.
There is a certain            unevenness about this album. Since it was recorded in two  different            countries, at different locations, with different recording  devices            and different instruments it is unlike the studio recordings  of today.            Even with my modern digital recorders, it is more like the  field recordings            of early folk music collections. I am perfectly happy about  that because            my identity as an artist has always been as a folk musician
Papa Dish
Papa            Dish:            composing and performing progressive folk and blues. Papa Dish  Music            produces and distributes limited edition home-made CD's and  graphics.            (Revolution Through Office Supplies.) Click on the links below  to hear            the newest royalty-free downloads from Papa Dish and to read  the lyrics.
All songs copyright Papa Dish 2010.
Click on the images to see them full size.
From me : Candra & The Sheriff 
