Mr. Smolin

Location:
LOS ANGELES, California, US
Type:
Artist / Band / Musician
Genre:
Lyrical / Melodramatic Popular Song / Showtunes
Site(s):
Label:
Nomenclature Records
Type:
Indie
Mr. Smolin is featured in the L.A. Weekly



Bring Back The Real Don Steele is a digital-only release available via download at CDBaby.com, the iTunes Music Store, and Amazon.com



Mr. Smolin is mentioned in this article on musicians who are UCLA alumni



"The Earth Keeps Turning On" appears on the Weeds Season 3 Soundtrack Album



Mr. Smolin pays tribute to an old teacher in an L.A. Times article entitled Mr. Schoenman's Flying Lessons



Mr. Smolin on Facebook



Mr. Smolin on Twitter



Listen to Mr. Smolin on Last.fm



DanRae Wilson's video of Mr. Smolin's classic song "Casper":



Mr. Smolin is the performance moniker of Los Angeles songwriter Barry Smolin, aka Shmo. Best known as the host of the psychedelic radio show The Music Never Stops on KPFK 90.7 FM in Southern California, Smolin has been writing songs for 30 years in a variety of genres, finally settling on a piano-based offbeat pop sound that reflects influences ranging from Stephen Foster and Hoagy Carmichael to poet-artists like Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen to singer-songwriters like Cat Stevens and Harry Nilsson and Elton John and David Bowie and Randy Newman and Tom Waits to pop eccentrics like Gilbert O'Sullivan and Tim Buckley as well as theatre composers like Jerome Kern and Stephen Sondheim, among many others.
Smolin's first band, The Wake, formed post-high school in 1978, was also his first musical interaction with the artist now known as Stew, who played guitar in that late-adolescent outfit. Other members of the group included drummer Eldad Tarmu (now well-known as a jazz vibraphonist), bassist Viken Garabedian, and pianist/singer Ron Dumas (later of Dumas & Attack Group), who also wrote some of the songs. The Wake played its first professional show together in April of 1979 at The Troubadour in West Hollywood, CA. The group disbanded in 1980 after a year of gigs in the Los Angeles club scene.
The next 21 years Smolin spent variously playing solo (including appearances at Gerde's Folk City while residing in New York in the mid-'80s), as a duo with college-chum Harvey Canter, and as the keyboard player in Canter's bands Sea of Green and Ruby Flux. Having set aside his own music for most of the '90s, concentrating instead on writing poetry and playing other people's music, both live and on the radio, Smolin regained his muse and started writing songs again in 2001, the batch of tunes that would become his 2004 album At Apogee, a lush, non-linear song-cycle produced by Stew. Performers on the album included horn virtuoso Probyn Gregory, the psychedelic surf-noir band Double Naught Spy Car, and other hit-men from the L.A. indie-pop mafia. Village Voice music critic Richard Gehr dubbed Smolin's style on At Apogee psychedelic cabaret music."
Mr. Smolin's 2nd album is another collaboration with Stew entitled The Crumbling Empire Of White People. Released in June of 2007, The Crumbling Empire Of White People is the artist's take on love and loss, politics, religion, and other burdens of our age.
Renowned "Pervasive" artist and longtime Smolin enthusiast Gary Baseman provides 4 original paintings for the album art on The Crumbling Empire Of White People.
Mr. Smolin's song "The Earth Keeps Turning On" is featured on Episode 7 (Season 3) of the Showtime television series Weeds. In addition, the song is also featured on the Weeds Season 3 Soundtrack Album released in June of 2008.
Mr. Smolin's 3rd album, a Los Angeles song-cycle entitled Bring Back The Real Don Steele, recorded live (and unrehearsed) at Echo Curio, was released in November of 2009.
When he isn't making radio and music, Smolin wears a variety of other hats as well. His primary fulltime gig is as a high school English teacher in the Los Angeles Unified School District. He is also a dedicated writer of fiction and poetry, seeking out methods of forging language that communicates the deepest layers of consciousness. As a journalist, Smolin has written articles on a variety of subjects for such publications as the L.A. Times, NY Arts, Relix, Dupree's Diamond News, The Sondheim Review, Rhino.com, and Jambands.com. He has also provided liner notes for numerous recordings over the past 10 years. In 2004, Smolin wrote the Foreword to the book Dumb Luck, a retrospective of the work of Gary Baseman.
In the words of Billie Jean King, "Pressure is a privilege."
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