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If musicians make a cd and nobody hears it, does it still make a sound? The Fugitive Poets have moved out of the country and into the heart of the city-and it looks like, from the initial listening of their sophomore release, they don''t like it one bit. On their incredibly moving second cd, The Day the Radio Died, the Poets have elevated both their sound and content- and are are no longer using mysterious aliases.
"We felt so strongly about the songs and the message..." quipped Marc Vecchiolla, the founder of the project, "that we knew it was the right time to uncover our identities. Not that anyone even noticed. But we did."
It takes a lot of effort to pull off a concept cd and not have the message ruin the actual enjoyment and quality of the music. The Day the Radio Died is about isolation, anxiety, anger and hope. It''s about the voice of the individual standing up to the injustices of corporate America and a cry for simpler times. It''s about the short attention span of today''s society and the growing loss of spirituality in modern life. "It''s about life as we know it. Living in a city and a little bit cranky about everything...." confirms Poet John Crawford.
There is hope in the message, but it comes after they get just about everything off their chest.
EMAIL ADDRESS FOR FUGITIVE POETS: mjvecc@https://www.tradebit.com
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