Kalweit and the Spokes is a project that came about through a side collaboration between Minneapolis born vocalist Georgeanne Kalweit, Leziero Rescigno and Giovanni Calella. Even though all three come from different music scenes, together they have found a road back to the heart of a more core sound. The result is a surprising melding of “old school blues”, folk and post-punk, worked out in its most essential form in which the song remains the focal point. The songs form intricate pathways, both real and imagined, and are inspired by mysterious characters like silent film diva Clara Bow, or by a painting, as in New York Movie by Edward Hopper, and describe the poetic landscape of the Kalweit and the Spokes. The lyrics come from poems and micro stories written by Georgeanne which are set to music by Leziero and Giovanni, and are up close reflections of the social-political unrest of our times (Guns are Back and Split us in Two). In the debut album Around the Edges, the guitar, drums and voice are all clearly crucial elements, though they are not the only ones. Organs, various noises and sounds, a harmonica and percussion complete the cornucopia. The songs come to life spontaneously and, at times, out of the blue, like in Ice Man, dedicated to Otzi, the man found in the ice after 5.000 years in the Italian Alps.
The painting on the album cover is in fact by Georgeanne, who is also a painter.
Around the Edges is inspired by the colors and scents of the Salento area, in South Eastern Italy, and the deserts of the American South West.
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