Upcoming Shows

Monday, Feb 22, 2010
Dallas, TX

Wed., Mar 24, 2010
New York City

Friday, April 30, 2010
Baltimore

More dates to be added

Review of Close Companions:

"Close Companions" is highly recommended and a great companion for those long drives through winding country roads on a golden autumn day.

Read the rest of the review here.

One of those best-kept secrets has long been
the talents of D.C. Anderson.
-- John Hoglund

Welcome!
Here you'll find D.C. Anderson's music, concert videos, information about current concerts and recordings, stories from the road, photos from a life in the theater and on concert stages, a press kit, a blog and much, much more (If your last name is Moore, don't you think you owe it to the world to name one of your kids Muchmuch?). You'll also find lame attempts at humor.

Enjoy the music. Tell a hundred of your friends. Write or say 'Hello' at a concert or performance of PHANTOM!

Thanks for stopping by! -- D.C.


NEW CD released October 13, 2009, available at iTunes and Amazon and LMLMusic.com!

Oh Lord. Please excuse me while I gush.

It is all so personal-how we relate and react to things around us. Thoughts. Sounds. Stimuli unending. Inside and out. So many distractions. Stop! This is about D.C. Anderson. But no. It is always the tree falling in the forest. And what then if the tree falls on you? How to find objectivity in that tangle of branches. Feeling for broken bones. Sure of a broken heart. Again. Thank you, again. Finally, again.

'Close Companions', in good part owing to the near perfect piano, bass, guitar and violin (plus additional vocals from some musicians), has the feeling of a song cycle thanks to the minor figures upon which the music and more so the lyrics, sometimes skate, with not so much figure-eights as much as gentle spirals. And ah, those lyrics--poetry, as they in the best of all possible worlds should be, and a light in the murk as in the worst world they must.

Whether his repeated wail at the end of 'Long Past Blue' written with Geoff Packard, or the entirety of 'What's Happened Since' written with Bryce Kulak, and on and on through this paean to human foibles set to truth, his flexible tremulous voice never betrays a meaning; rather like a sudden illustration next to a definition in a dictionary--his interpretation a picture of a word worth a thousand words.

Noah Tree, CABARET SCENES - your nightclub guide.


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