NATALIE FLANAGAN
One Way
Productions is proud to announce the November 2002 release of
Natalie Flanagan's CD Album, "LET", produced by
Boston Music Award
winner David Minehan at Woolly Mammoth Recording
Studios.


SONGS: GRACE UNDER PRESSURE, THAT'S THE WAY*, PATIENCE, COME IN TOKYO,
ARTISTS: Natalie Flanagan: voice, acoustic guitar; Dennis Roach: voice, guitars; Ritch Cortese: "Natalie Flanagan writes the kind of songs you just can't find in your day to day
coffeehouse Singer/Songwriter scene. Her Power Pop is embellished with
vintage guitar tones that evoke the comfort of sitting next to a roaring
fireplace and listening to a heavy thunderstorm. Her singing sounds like she
could very well be the bastard daughter of Chrissie Hynde. Good songwriting
aside, Flanagan should be commended on finding a way to fuse Power Pop with
Country Rock in a manner that strays from all the tired and predictable
formulas often found in the charming but predictable No Depression
scene".
LONG LIVE THE KING, MARGOT'S ARMS, COUSIN TONY, IN THIS WAY,
WATER UNDER THE BRIDGE
 words & music by N. FLANAGAN except * words & music by D. ROACH
bass; Tony Kazzynski: piano, organ; John Lynch: drums; Nigel Grover: drums, percussion;
David Minehan: guitars, percussion,bass, liederhosen
The Rolling Stones
ALBUM LINER NOTES
Feeling a warm glow of sweet sadness.
I've just stepped out of Natalie's world.
It isn't a place that you can necessarily get to quickly; the simple act of placing the disk in your CD player does not guarantee entrance.
You see Natalie does not make it easy for you.
You have to go with respect and understanding. Its a place where aching
melencholy is tempered with courage and tenderness. Call it grace under
pressure. Natalie doesn't give you the words- she grapples with them as if
knowing that in balance they could never really be precise enough. But
somehow it is all there in her voice.
If you decide to enter Natalie's world, you will only be given shadows of meaning.
These are the ground rules. In "Come In Tokyo" she may or may not
be describing the strange bittersweet rush of hearing her music played on
the radio with the words: When my lucky light lit up the sky/I got all
choked up inside". She dedicates it with love and brotherhood to all
her fellow artists in the USA. Perhaps that's a hint. Perhaps it isn't. In
"Patience" she talks about the power that is out there and beyond
words when she advises the subject of the song: "You'll see what to do
once the silence pierces you through".
Each word is a commitment, and as is the case with all the true and best
artists, exacts its toll on both singer and listener; nothing is wasted.
her delivery embodies the supremely casual cool of Chrissie Hynde and Bob
Dylan, but unlike these singers her words are always just under the radar.
Its up to you to do the listening. Maybe the key moment on the CD is when she says: "Some folks just can't tell
what is or isn't real". If you are someone that can tell, then you
will be welcome in Natalie's world.
- David Wildman
onewayrc@aol.com