BARTON CARROLL
"The Lost One Release Date: 1/22/08”
“The Lost One” is a collection of twelve songs by Barton Carroll.
Since 2002, Barton Carroll has toured and recorded extensively with Crooked Fingers and Eric Bachmann, playing guitar, steel guitar, and upright bass. Carroll has also toured, playing various instruments with Azure Ray, Dolorean, and Micah P. Hinson.
In 2006 Carroll released his second solo effort, “Love and War,” on Skybucket Records. “Love and War” received much critical acclaim in music journals such as Harp, No Depression, The Big Takeover, and many others.
Paste Magazine also included a track from “Love and War” on their November, 2006 CD sampler.
The album title, “The Lost One,” was stolen from one of the classic films of the Noir canon, a genre that Carroll is hooked on. Like the film, the songs tell stories of souls who, burdened by their past, fear they will not be redeemed. Carroll’s sardonic and self effacing wit is evident.
Musically, the record is a mixture of the mountain music that Carroll grew up hearing in Western North Carolina, and the sweet, sad, melodic sensibility of Alex Chilton. Carroll has a sincere, durable voice well suited for storytelling and folk songs.
“The Lost One” was produced by Martin Feveyear, who engineered and produced the 2005 Crooked Fingers release, “Dignity and Shame.” Feveyear is a veteran producer and engineer, having worked with such artists as Mark Lanegan, Damien Jurado, and John Wesley Harding.
Press
Press Darling PR
Angie Carlson (919) 370-3045
angie@pressdarlingpr.com
Label
Travis Morgan (205) 223-3842
travis@skybucket.com
www.skybucket.com

Press for “Love and War”
"There's a timelessness to the ten performances on Barton Carroll's second album. They exude depth of character, passion and commitment. His songs have a literary bearing that puts him in the ranks of Paul Kelly, Nick Cave and Greg Brown.....'Small Thing' is the sort of song a career can be built upon."
~Harp Magazine
"....a dramatic statement of purpose; a thoughtful and inventive work that should appeal to those who often find themselves at the crossroads of the personal and the political."
~ No Depression
"(Carroll)...croons his melancholic, hymn-like words in a voice that recalls John Doe and Bad Religion's Greg Graffin..."
~The Big Takeover