Press, Reviews & Rumours

featured rumour



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Tippy Canoe
Photo by Barbara Haddock Taylor

Atomic Books' Uke-Pop Party starring Victoria Vox, Uni and her Ukelele, Tippy Canoe and Skizz and The Go-Pills was featured in the Baltimore Sun Newspaper

Read it here: http://tinyurl.com/tipunibaltosun6-08
by Jennifer McMenamin June 30, 2008


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The latest post on Rock and Rock and Meandering Nonsense contains some fabulous insights about the new recording Parasols & Pekingnese.


Big thanks to Bob Lange for the review!



Wednesday, July 09, 2008



Review: Tippy Canoe and the Paddlemen - Parasols and Pekingese





Label: Late Bloomers Works

Released: May 31, 2008

One look at the cover of Parasols and Pekingese leaves little doubt where the album is going. It mixes art deco style with the painted effects of a pre-linen postcard. As the cover suggests, Tippy Canoe and the Paddlemen look back to simpler, more honest times. There's nothing new in that. Americana bands and folk-punk bands among others have been at it for quite awhile. The better artists are steeped in these days gone by while others just have a kitschy veneer. It doesn't take long (probably a matter of seconds, not minutes) to recognize that Tippy and her band are the former.

From the rollicking rootsy country of "Mass Transmissions" to the dark sensuality of "Sleep, Sleep My Dear" and everything in between, Tippy Canoe and the Paddlemen prove that theirs is more than a passing interest in the treasure trove of the past. Tippy's voice can tap both Patsy Cline and Billie Holiday and the Paddlemen themselves are so good they're easy to miss in a sense. There isn't a self-serving note played with all focus on the songs and not the players.

While "Neighbor of the Tell-Tale Heart" is the album's most memorable track with it's rich, old time country sound and undeniable hook, it is perhaps "Champs-Élysées" that gives greatest testament to the band's strength. Anytime, a band can fit the Pretenders into an old-time album this seemlessly, they have to be good, pure and simple.

While looking to the past for inspiration is fairly common these days, Tippy Canoe and the Paddlemen easily stand out. Not only is their music completely immersed in the past, but it also exists very much in the present.

Ratings
Satriani: 8/10
Zappa: 8/10
Dylan: 8/10
Aretha: 8/10
Overall: 8/10

by Bob Lange




LINK to original review: http://rnrnonsense.toomanyvoices.com/2008/01/review-tippy-canoe-and-paddlemen.html





Parasols & Pekingnese is available at:


CD Baby: http://www.cdbaby.com/tippycanoepaddlemen


Late Bloomers Works (through PayPal): http://www.latebloomersworks.com


iTunes and various other digital music sources such as Rhapsody.



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"The Return of the Jumping Fleas! Or how we learned to stop worrying and love the ukulele" by Ian Lendler with photos by Chris Stewart.
San Francisco Chronicle Magazine expose of the modern Bay Area uke scene
November 25, 2007

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Nifty segment originally aired June 20th, 2007 on KQED Public Television's art showcase SPARK:
Watch it here:

http://www.kqed.org/arts/places/spark/profile.jsp?id=17140

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Photo: Kristopher Parra aka Little E. Background: Sunset by Megan Wilson

as read in

Spin Magazine



Rapid Ear Movement


At the 12th annual Noise Pop festival, one brave writer attempts to see 120 bands in one long weekend. It was nice knowing you, dude

By Rob Harvilla

WEDNESDAY
6:41 p.m., Thee Parkside

A jovial lass sings and strums a ukulele. Her stage name is Tippy Canoe. My journey has not yet begun, and already we�re trapped in a deleted scene from Mulholland Dr.


UKULELE FETES - Rachel Swan, EAST BAY EXPRESS With the warbling, twangy voice and sweet-Clementine looks of a miner's daughter (save for her tattoos and slinky evening gowns), Tippy Canoe is more than a little kitschy, and intentionally so. Check her out at the Ivy Room in this Sunday's Uke-Centric Showcase, (5 p.m., $5) a special rural boogie and bluegrass show that also features Tiki King & the Idol Pleasures, the Paper Dolls, Cracker Jack Salteen, and Uni & Her Ukulele --- though, as the event's name implies, the ukulele is the main star.

Tippy's Tops -Up with ukuleles by Hiya Swanhuyser, SF Weekly
There can be little doubt that the ukulele revolution is on. And we know that anyone capable of smiling can be made to do so via the little guitar, in the right hands.
One of the torchbearers for this movement is Tippy Canoe, the alter ego of Michele Kappel, a lady whose good-humored ditties and earnest prettiness are right in line with the charm of her instrument. But she's hardly a simple revivalist: She describes her music as "ukulele-driven du-wop country '20s jazz pop." Tonight she performs alongside Songs From a Random House and Ralph Carney's Hulagins, starting at 8:30 at the Make-Out Room.

Links to Fascinating and Informative Online Reading...

7X& Magazine, October 2006 issue
West Coast Performer Magazine, March 2004
Zero Magazine, April 2004
Spin Magazine, May 2004
SF Chronicle, December 19, 2004