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Update #3: CD's have been pressed!

Backer_white For backers only, Posted on August 9, 2010
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Update #2: 4 days left!

Posted on July 30, 2010

what an amazing week. it began with opening for elvis costello and ended with a gig at lincoln center with ETHEL, the string quartet that plays all over 'postcards from downtown' and 'beautiful yesterday' and now, this successful kickstart run is ending and i will be sending "american standard' out to my home country, with such love and support from you all that i can hardly believe it. i'm thrilled, and thankful to you all beyond measure.

4 days left!!

we're even getting close to what we need to get this sucker out on vinyl which i didn't really think possible. please spread the word any way you can these last few days, i think we may do it!

there's a really good chance that this record will not be out 'officially' till january. those who contributed at 25+ level are going to get it in a matter of weeks. i'll be sending everyone the link to download the bonus tracks sooner than that.

i believe first there will first be a 'soft release' - i will be selling 'american standard" before official release through my website, at shows, and through itunes come mid september. if you play it for friends and someone just has to have it, it will be available.

this has been just an extraordinary experience, and it's renewed my faith in my ability to make this dream of a life i've had keep going. i am so grateful, and so happy to know i've got such kindhearted people in my life. i feel truly blessed. and again - thank you thank you thank you.

xxx

Update #1: got a piece of hatemail about this i'd like to share (with response)

Posted on May 7, 2010

but first - we broke a thousand in the first 48 hours. thank you so much!

but i wanted to share this: this is my first bit of fan hatemail received via this site after launching this campaign (well, actually i think it's my first bit of fan hatemail ever. which is kind of an achievement of sorts)

my response below. this fan is from spain - hence his grammatical/spelling errors. you can view this post and share it at: http://www.facebook.com/#!/note.php...

Dayna,

I really couldn't find this more ridiculous!
I wish you never had enough money to reach your target.
You Mrs. are the only responsable of this situation.
You've lost all your dignity. Maybe if one day you realised about this and stop demanding charity, things will begin to go better for you (again). That's the first step to obtain anything real in this life!
Have you stopped to think before ask for this help?
Have you ever heard about AFRICA, HAITI, NEPAL??????
Dayna, I'm a friend who bought your first two records even if I was young and with no money in my pockets. Now I regret it, honestly. Never again.
PLEASE STOP THIS GAME.
IT SUCKS!

dear david,

i'm so sorry to disappoint you.

those 2 records you bought? lots of people bought those. more than 30,000. not rock star numbers. but i was, for the first time in my life, scraping the bottom of the middle class. i paid off my debts. i looked forward to being an equal breadwinner with my husband. we bought a modest house and i paid my half of the monthly bills. my third record, put out 4 years ago, sold maybe half as much. not great, but i could make it work. but 'american standard'? in 6 months, i've sold 900 copies in europe. 900. now if i were losing my audience because my music was getting shitty or boring, i'm not stupid - i'd figure it out: say, if i'd gotten more bad or indifferent reviews than good, and if my crowds were getting smaller with every tour - i'd suck it up and look elsewhere to make a living. but reviews have been mostly great. people are still coming to shows. and then there's this: a short scan today of 4 random bit torrent pirate music sites showed that over 50,000 copies of this record have been downloaded. for free. on just 4 pirate sites. out of hundreds.

what most people don't realize is that touring does not pay for itself. touring with a band usually loses quite a bit of money. the point of touring (besides the sheer joy of it, for us road dogs) is to sell records. i get next to no commercial radio airplay at all. sales of CD's and legal downloads was the only source of real, consistent profit i ever saw in 20 years of making music professionally.

i am demanding nothing from my fans. but if there's enough of them that want me to make records, that tell me, with some degree of passion, that my music means something to them and they are hungry for more - i see nothing wrong with asking those fans, that are able, to help. the only thing that causes me some degree of regret about this venture is that i'd bet my bottom dollar that the the vast majority of people that donate are the sort of fans who already buy my music, legally and conscientiously. and i am humbled and grateful beyond words to win that kind of regard and support.

so, this is not a game, david. don't be disrespectful. it's not easy to ask for help. it's hard to admit that the profession and craft to which i've dedicated my life is no longer the same and i can no longer take for granted that it will pay my bills. i'd wrongly thought that having enough fans meant that i could put out a record in europe, where my audience is biggest, and after a few months of touring and selling cd's, have earned enough to release it and tour in america (where it's much more expensive to promote). and when it was all said and done, after paying bills - i'd break even, or in a good year, have a little money to sock away to make the next record.

that's the way it was for me for the last decade, until this release. until a growing number of people decided it was ok to just steal something that cost me tens of thousands of dollars and hundreds of hours both creative and technical to make. perhaps people thought that because there's a couple of countries in the world (spain, and the netherlands) where my name's in magazines and people pay money to see me play live in big clubs and theaters - that such a little theft wouldn't hurt me. they're wrong.

re: africa, haiti, nepal - are YOU not going to the cinema or out to see a concert because haiti needs that money more? i am not equating myself with a tragic cause. i am trying to raise money from fans who feel a connection with my music, people who feel they have a personal interest in seeing me NOT quit, because at this point, that is what's at stake.
and i'd MUCH rather feel humbly indebted to a bunch of nice people who are appreciative and respectful of what i do than to a multinational corporation who'd just as soon be selling dishwashers as music.

musicians relying on the largesse of patrons has a history going way back. i'm in the company of those famously degraded sellouts mozart and bach, sir. there's nothing new to complain about here. for centuries, artists have been scrambling, hustling and, yes - grovelling - to keep food on their tables in a fashion that still leaves them enough time and energy to create something that makes their life feel worth living, that makes them feel connected to something universal, something that moves people.

i'm sorry you regret buying those 2 records when you were so terribly poor. that's about 8 beers you could have drunk or 2 paellas you could have eaten or two films you could have seen (with popcorn!) and it's all gone to waste! i hope at least you enjoyed listening to them many, many times before i disappointed you by not passing your test for artistic purity and therefore making you feel like your money was badly spent.

i'd like you to name one musician you think passes your purity test - i guarantee you, they were either born wealthy or got very successful, very young. or, more likely, they've sold out, or as you put it - lost their "dignity" - in ways you just haven't heard about . they wrote and sang an advertising jingle in japan. they asked their publishers to pitch their most commercially viable songs to a big country or pop star. they played a wedding or private corporate affair for a fan who happens to be a billionaire and who paid them very very well. and they smiled at the man with the money. they did what they were paid to do, then they took that big ole check and paid off their bills with it and kissed their spouse and kids when they got home and with a clear conscience and a huge weight off their shoulders started working on something that made their heart beat faster with excitement and fear and great great joy.

me, and every artist i know - do whatever we can to get to that place. i've sung a couple of tv commercials (and that work is drying up too, since the recession), i've done some paid studio session work as a singer and guitar player, i've produced records for other musicians, and i've prayed to whatever god that will listen that some big stupid pop star would cover 'love gets in the way' and make it a huge hit and make me enough money so i can just fucking write, record, and perform the music in my head for the rest of my life.

i know that no one owes me this life i love, that i feel positively blessed to have had even if it's coming to a close- that of being a full time recording and touring artist. but it's the only life i just KNEW, from the day i wrote my first song, that i'd be willing to fight for. every single day.

i wish that kind of life for everyone. you too.

sincerely,

dayna kurtz

ps: it's clear you don't love my music anymore, tainted as it is. but if there's any other music you love - please buy it, or you will kill it.

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      John West on July 24, 2010

      As one the nine hundred europeans who have bought your 'American Standard' CD I'd like to comment. 1) Even your own website didn't publicise it's release so it was very difficult to find out about it. 2) Having found out about it's existence I could find no way of sampling it's contents - times are hard and it's hard to justify spending out on a full price CD without having any clue to its contents. If I hadn't got most of your other CDs I probably wouldn't have bothered. I was tempted to join the illegal downloaders just to get to hear what you were doing. 3) Calling a european only release 'American Standard' maybe wasn't a great decision. 4) Releasing stuff on vinyl is no good for me, I haven't had a record player for many years, so I'm sorry but I downloaded 'It's not love ...' (which I thought was excellent). I hope you can forgive me.
      All the best

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      dayna kurtz on August 2, 2010

      thanks for your comments - will do my best to get to the west coast to promote this, i just went to SF for a wedding, and i've fallen in love with your city, corey. i'd only been there a couple of times and never had any exploring time. hey john - thanks for buying a/c - to respond: 1. i relied on european sources to promote it there - i'd planned on releasing it in the states only a couple of months after - but then, clearly, money wasn't coming in and i found myself deeply in studio debt. i need to pay someone to change the art on my website - i was that broke, couldn't do it. and i didn't want to advertise too heavily that the record was out and thus have AMERICAN fans illegally downloading the thing too. 2. there's no guarantee that a live show won't be a dud, and people fork out 10 or 20 euros for that. i have no problem with people downloading/streaming a few songs off a record to get an idea whether or not it's up your alley - i do it myself, records are expensive. but i just want people to be aware enough that what they're listening to required great expense and sacrifice - and if they really like those songs - they should make it a point to buy it. 3. i agree, the name itself was awful, it made me have to overexplain myself in interviews. won't happen again. it is however, my most truly american record, wherever it's released, and i wanted the name to reflect it. 4. all vinyl releases will have a cd inside (with bonus tracks, most likely) - the 'hazel' EP has one as well. all those songs are available for legal download on itunes too!

      5. i forgive you!

      dk

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      dayna kurtz on August 2, 2010

      and thank you too, rosemary and marianne!

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Funding Successful

This project successfully raised its funding goal on August 3, 2010.

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a link to 3 downloads of currently unavailable (anywhere) studio tracks! PLUS a thank you on my website 'thank you fans!' board!

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the downloads and thank you's listed above PLUS **a personally autographed copy of "American Standard" delivered BEFORE the official release!

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the prizes listed above PLUS: ***an autographed copy of my live DVD "Postcards from Amsterdam" PLUS ***an autographed copy of my EP "Beautiful Yesterday Sessions" with 3 tracks unavailable on "Beautiful Yesterday"

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ALL GIFTS mentioned above (not including house concert unless in US) PLUS: ***the sister painting to the portrait created for the album cover (it's very similar) - an original Leslie Staub - you can view this almost finished portrait at www.daynakurtz.com/kickstarter. Check out her other portraits at: http://www.lemieuxgalleries.com/artist_staub_ChurchSoul.html

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All the other rewards (including painting if no one has snatched it by the time the fundraiser is over! first come, first served there) PLUS: **an original song, written and recorded by me about any person or situation you'd want (or I can turn your lyrics or poetry or short story into a song if you'd like!)

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Would you even know me since I’ve been away? Dayna Kurtz begins, in the plaintive tune “Invocation” that opens her new record, American Standard. The tune’s refrain is a plea – Mama, let me come home. Dayna explains: “I was asking for help from the gods at the start of a marathon writing session that birthed half this record, and most of the next record’s worth of originals. I may be an atheist, but I’m a writer first, and we’re a superstitious lot. I think the writing gods and goddesses are a lot sexier than your run-of-the-mill deities, though. And a lot more frightening.”

American Standard may open with a nervous prayer, but then it comes out swinging hard with a rockabilly homage to an unnamed aging legend of the genre, “Good in ’62.” followed by a deep Mississippi grind called “Billboards for Jesus.” Co-produced with longtime drummer Randy Crafton, he and Kurtz recorded half the disc in his award winning analog studio “Kaleidoscope Sound” in New Jersey, then hit the road to lay down the rest: first to Ardent Studios in Memphis to record with Sun Records legend Sonny Burgess and his band, the Legendary Pacers. Dayna laughs out loud at the memory: “That was a hoot! The last time that band had a personnel change was in 1961 – all 5 of them, in their late 70’s and 80’s, playing together and just kicking ass for that long. It was a gas!” And from there to New Orleans to record “Election Day” with the brass band the Nightcrawlers. (with help from pianist John Gros and guitarist Paul Cebar) “I really wanted to capture the relief and joy we all were feeling on the streets on election day. And a brass band is an instant street party. It’s hard NOT to dance when a great brass band is playing.”

It has been more than 3 years since her last full length recording, (Another Black Feather) was released, and she’d taken more than a year off heavy touring. Why so much time? Dayna explains: “I don’t think I’d ever had more than a month off without having to pack up or lock myself in a studio in more than a decade. I applied and was accepted into some Masters level classes in poetry writing at the New School in New York, something I’d always wanted to do. I also took a few guitar lessons – my first ever - because I’d fallen in love with early rock and roll and rockabilly and wanted to learn to play like my new heroes. I got to know the great guy I married a little better. I cooked, I gardened. It was pretty dreamy.”

It wasn’t all play, though – Ms. Kurtz kept busy producing records for other artists as well. She and long time collaborator Randy Crafton produced a top 5 record for dutch Universal Recording artists Room Eleven called “Mmm…Gumbo,” named for the traditional Louisiana stew Dayna makes to kick off all her recording sessions. (She says: “I’m a big believer that excellent food helps make excellent records. Especially first day in.”) She recorded (and produced) a 10 inch vinyl tribute to Hazel Dickens with fellow Brooklynite, Mamie Minch, as well as a couple of upcoming 7 inch vinyl singles with other pals Keren Ann and My Brightest Diamond. Dayna is excited about all of it: “It was a pretty brilliant time. I feel rather lucky I have that kind of freedom, that I could drop out of old patterns, learn how to do some new things, have some fun and recharge.”

Recharge, indeed. American Standard showcases Dayna’s most direct, most muscular writing to date. And, oddly, the word that best describes her often startling covers is original. She turns an obscure later Elliot Smith song, “Don’t Go Down,” into the howling desperate blues song it seems suddenly meant to be. On the Replacements’ ode to the drunk and lonely, “Here Comes a Regular,” the industrial clank of Crafton’s drums in the background underscores the drowsy warmth of Dayna’s vocals and lap steel (and some particularly spooky ‘human hammond’ backing vocals by Dayna and the French/Israeli chanteuse, Keren Ann). And Dayna breaths some fresh cigarette smoke into a dusty old rockabilly nugget, “Lou Lou Knows, ” turning a little tune written for a man to sing about a girl into a woman’s playfully snarled and cocky boast Lou Lou won’t be second choice/Lou Lou’s this town’s biggest noise/Lou Lou’s takin’ this town!” - You can practically see her strut across the stage with a switchblade tucked in her boot. Dayna will be taking your town shortly. Best not to miss her, lest she decide to take some more time off to learn a few more tricks.