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Liz Ryder



Last Updated: 11/23/2009

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Status: Single
City: Berkeley
State: California
Country: US
Signup Date: 6/11/2005

Blog Archive
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Monday, March 31, 2008 
If anybody knows of any folk songs they think i might like to sing then please let me know about them...i’m tired of sifting through songbooks and it feels a bit unnatural learning something from a book that has been passed down by ear for years and years.  Missing the British folk clubs and the quirky songs you hear...
Monday, March 31, 2008 

Current mood:  curious

Lyrics to my newest song...

Willow Tree

 

Forgive me if I tremble like a leaf

I’m rooted so deeply I live from beneath

And I can’t breathe, let alone speak

But I can just whisper to the breeze

As is passes between the eaves

So carry me to where I want to be

If that’s all that I can be

 

I don’t mean to stand like clay

If there’s a crack in the surface then I let things slip away

The sky is open now, come rain or shine

Come blizzards of time

Come plagues and come flies from heaven

Come you and I if that’s all that we can be

If there’s nothing left to believe

 

And when night comes, still it will be

Blue shadows and street lights for company

Bats and foxes hunt above the ground

No warmth in your bed, no so song and no sound

No song and no sound from me

Oh willow tree won’t you set me free

If that’s all you offer me

If that’s all that I can be

 

Oh don’t take me from where I want to be

’Cause I know how I should feel

It seems nothing here is real…

Friday, March 28, 2008 

Current mood:  restless
Category: Music

So...staying in CA for a while! Have loads of new stuff and a good handful of gigs lined up for ther next few weeks so if you’re in the area please come along and heckle some...looking forward to new beginnings and different places. Will come back and visit the UK soon I promise!!!

Putting together tours for the UK and California soon so will post a new blog when I have more news on that...the plan is CA this summer and and UK venue tour Feb-March 09 or thereabouts so keep checking back.

You can also join the mailing list by sending an e mail to admin@lizryder.com (please put ’ liz ryder mailing list’ as the subject as alot of junk gets sent to me and it might get filtered out of there’s no recognisable content), and if you wish to receive the odd post card or promo material through the post you can send me your address. It won’t get passed on to anyone and I won’t bombard you with junk!

Take care and hope to see you soon! xox

Thursday, October 18, 2007 

Category: Music

Biography

Liz Ryder was born in Los Angeles in 1981 to Greek/American, English/Welsh parents. She grew up in the Midlands and has been writing and playing music for as long as she can remember. She now amply divides her time between the UK and Northern California, playing her music on both sides of the ocean.

Liz was born into a family of actors and was exposed to theatre from an early age but this was not the route she decided to follow. With a shy demeanor as a child she turned to music for an artistic outlet, learning various musical instruments, first the piano, then flute, harp and recorder until she finally settled with the guitar and began to sing solo, write her own songs and use a wide range of open tunings which she is unafraid to exploit to the full. Highly influenced by Folk and Americana, Liz directs her music with a spirit rooted in tradition as well as the contemporary. With a soulful voice, she renders folk songs with a modern twist and approaches song writing with a sense of progression.

Unwilling to wait around for a record deal, Liz cut her first independent album 'Sacramento Orange' in 2001 on her own label (featuring herself on guitar, vocals, harp, whistles, flute, recorder, bodhran and piano) after which followed festivals, such as Warwick and Towersey, venues like Acoustic Routes in Cambridge and support for artists such as Oh Susanna and Kreg Viesselman, as well as some radio play, live slots and interviews on local Midlands BBC Radio. In 2001 she was the winner of a young musicians competition at Alcester and Arden Festival and in 2002 was a semi finalist at the BBC Radio 2 Young Folk Awards. Since then she has continued to manage herself successfully, shining and progressing on the UK folk and acoustic scenes. In 2005 she graduated with an MA in creative music technology and composition defining her skills as an artist, engineer and writer.

In 2003 Liz recorded and produced her second album 'On the Neon Highway', a more contemporary singer/songwriter- based collection. Then in 2007 she independently released the four track 'Skyline EP'. Look out for her new album in 2008 as well as more live recordings!

With influences ranging from Hank Williams to Cat Stevens, from Johnny Cash to Tori Amos, and from Annie Difranco to Joan Baez, Liz Ryder is a songwriter with a heart in many places.

Sunday, October 14, 2007 

Category: Music
LIZ RYDER – SKYLINE EP (2007) & ON THE NEON HIGHWAY (2003)

www.lizryder.com & www.myspace.com/lizryder


4/5 SNOGS

One of the highlights for me of this summer's snogfest extravaganza was the gorgeous, understated performance from former Bangor resident Liz Ryder on the acoustic stage. A perfect setting for her wonderful songs and voice. She now divides her time when not gigging between Sheffield and California, which also sounds pretty cool to me. So here we have this years 'Skyline' EP and what is I think, her debut album, 'On The Neon Highway' from 2003. They both provide a very balanced and coherent style and body of work. 'OTNH' is very reminiscent of 'Blue' and 'For The Roses' era Joni Mitchell, without being in any way derivative. Acoustic guitar is to the fore and the ten songs on offer here are touching and accomplished. This year's 'Skyline' EP adds some fantastic piano playing, and a certain Kate Bush influence to the aforementioned Joni influence. You can hear the intervening four years of gigging and living in the slightly world weary nature of the songs, and the Kate Bush and Joni comparisons are not lazy journalistic shorthand, Ms Ryder really has that range and clarity to her voice and songs. Both of these releases are available through her website, and you can also hear tracks on her myspace page. I urge you to check them out, and strongly advise that if you get the chance, to go and see her live, when these special songs really shine.


by WIL WILLIAMS
Saturday, September 29, 2007 
Well it's been a long a fruitful summer filled with festivals, gigs and travelling round the UK and bits of California to play in some new and some not so new places!

This summer started with a string of shows at home (or as i describe it, home number 1) in northern California, 3 weekly spots at the Folsom street market in June and a Coffee house gig in Walnut creek near San Francisco. Folsom Thursday night market is always a bustling and busy event filled with families with dogs, teenagers hanging out in gangs and vendors selling everything from cookies and jewelry to massage oils and insurance. I was hopefully a welcome addition to the atmosphere as I took the stage for 3 hours nearly every week into June ( in the hot hot heat) trying to make new fans and friends alike! The Pacific Bay Coffee Co. in Walnut Creek also didn't disappoint. This is a small, intimate venue where they hold live music every sunday for two hours during a busy lunch time rush. The crowds are always great and come to listen to the music and to appreciate the atmosphere. Be sure to watch out for more dates this Christmas and coming new year as I will be organizing more shows in California!

Then it was back to the UK and shortly after, South Wales where I appeared for the first time at the relitively new Chepstow Folk Festival. Chepstow is a typical castle based market town with gorgeous surroundings and seems the perfect place for a folk festival. I played two shows over the weekend and here's a little quote from one of the organizers!

"When
Liz Ryder plays her songs she sings as if her voice is coming from another place, and it's a beautiful place. On the surface quiet and unassuming but the sound has a depth, it's smouldering and full of passion It's a place everyone should visit more often".
(John McConnachie, Two Rivers Festival 2007).

The following weeks took me back up to Sheffield (home no. 2), Bradford, North Wales, London, York and notably Sidmouth in Devon and Broadstairs, Kent. Sidmouth is a festival I have always wanted to play so it was excited to be going. It was held at the beginning of August, overlapping with Broadstairs which made for a really fun but really tiring week! My first couple of shows at Sidmouth were the Bedford Hotel and the Rugby club, both popular and quite intimate venues. Highlight of the festival though, had to be my hour long support performance for 'Lau' in the Ham Marquee, Hobgoblin Stage. This venue is the largest of them all at Sidmouth and seats around 500 people i think! Other notable highlights were chatting with Lester Simpson of 'Coope Boys and Simpson' in the theatre bar as part of the songwriters masterclass series and then rounding off with a short support set for 'Monobloco',
a large samba/rap/dance/world group from Brazil. I think i was chielfy there to give people a rest before they danced the night away! I, being less than a good dancer - stayed for a while to meet the band, listen to some of their very funky music, buy their CD (they made a new fan in me!) - and then crashed in my room and packed up to leave for the next morning.

After a short London visit with an old school friend, Broadstairs didn't disappoint either. This festival, at another coastal town (across the other side of the country I might add) is equally vibrant during the Folk Week. It was my first time there too although I lived in north Kent for a couple of years in the early 2000's and used to visit Faversham folk club quite regularly, so it was nice to catch up with some old aquaintances as well as make some new ones. I was set to play a few good venues around town, unamplified (in true folk style). It was a change of pace to Sidmouth...just as friendly but somehow a little more laid back. I played one set in the main marquee as part of a concert billed 'New to You' where i met and saw some old aquaintances from the folk circuit, mostly young musicians i had met a few years ago at a competition in St. Albans, North London.

And so, after a hectic week I returned to Sheffield to play a few shows in the area and also to do a return spot at the Black Swan folk club in York where I had played in 2001! Seems so long ago as we are moving into 2008, where there will hopefully be new festivals, new friends, new music and new places to explore and get to know...there is much, much more to come!
Liz Ryder, 2007 x
Saturday, September 29, 2007 

Category: Music
Liz Ryder - Skyline EP

Liz Ryder is like concrete. Consisting of one part Greek, one part American, one part English and one part Welsh, Sheffielders can now be thankful that she is now half Yorkshireman and also lives in Folsom, California - not a bad mix for a young musician. And musician she is as this EP displays her equal talent at the piano, behind the guitar and stretching her excellent, traditional folk style vocal. Her voice certainly has a haunting quality tipified by the likes of Joni Mitchell and, latterly, Rachel Dadd - elongating the notes until they disappear into the ether. She does this perfectly on the title track, her tones lifting over a meandering backing. 'View from Pier 39' is perhaps the stand-out, closing the EP with six minutes of crescendoing piano and enchanting warbles. Definitely worth investigation at some of her gigs in Sheffield over the next few months.


Alex Lawson