STREAM: Darlingside Performing “Fish Pond Fish” In Full
Start Time: 8:00 pm
‘Live Stream Live’ is back for a second round—this time we’re playing our new album, Fish Pond Fish, in its entirety and in sequence (we've never tried this before), plus a bunch of ye olden favorites. Deni Hlavinka (keys) and Ben Burns (drums) will be joining us for the first time to bring out the flavors of the new album and help us reimagine some of the "classics". We’ll do an afternoon show here on the east coast so that our UK/EU friends can join us live, then we’ll hit an evening show, followed by a group meet & greet after all the music’s wrapped. All the events will be viewable for 72 hours following the live broadcast.
ARTIST PROFILE | Darlingside
If Darlingside’s first album, Birds Say (2015), focused on the past through nostalgia, and their second, Extralife (2018), contemplated uncertain futures, Fish Pond Fish stands firmly in the present, looking at what’s here, now. Dave Senft, Don Mitchell, Auyon Mukharji, and Harris Paseltiner have created a natural history in song—taking us into gardens, almond groves, orchard rows, down to the ocean floor and under stars.
The band has long been praised for their harmonies and intelligent songwriting, described by NPR as “exquisitely-arranged, literary-minded, baroque folk-pop,” and their dynamic presence (crowded tightly together onstage) have made them a live-performance favorite. But this album showcases their broader storytelling abilities: nature is a looking glass, the songs suggest, with tracks like Ocean Bed, Green + Evergreen, Mountain + Sea, and Crystal Caving making metaphors of their titles. An experience of nature is an experience of self; an experience of self is one of natural change cut and complemented by stasis.
The band started studio recording Fish Pond Fish in late 2019, at the studio of producer Peter Katis (Interpol, The National). At Katis’s suggestion, many components of the initial demos were preserved as layers in the produced tracks to retain the spirit of the initial recordings, resulting in a collection of songs that is simultaneously the most bedroom-tracked and production-heavy full-length album that the band has yet released.