| If you find yourself in a room
where outbursts of laughter alternate with sudden
mournful silence, you might well be at a Sam Shaber
show. WXPN-fm in Philadelphia says Shaber is "Stark,
raving, great!" Folkweb.com calls her "a
riveting performer,” and Femmusic.com voted
her Top Female Performer.
Touring from her native New York City to Seattle
and back again and again, Shaber has also won awards
in the John Lennon, Billboard, and USA Songwriting
Competitions for her driving melodies, smart lyrics,
and soaring voice. Recently, she also won the ear
of Columbia recording artist/producer Shawn Mullins
("Lullabye"), and the two set about making
her latest album, eighty numbered streets, released
in 2003. The first single, "All of This,"
about the simplicity and complexity of life in New
York City, reached #1 on the Quiznos Subs National
In-Store Playlist, ("Well, you never know what
you're gonna get," quips Shaber,) and both singles
have placed on FMQB and the Hot AC charts.
Daughter of late-screenwriter David Shaber (Warriors,
Nighthawks) and artist Alice Shaber, Sam uses her
observer's eye in songs like "Bare," about
the crowded nature of being on the road, "Simon
Says," about the importance of personal responsibility
in the wake of September 11, and "Rain and Sunshine,"
about the loss of a close friend in a car accident
on her first tour. Her sharp wit also resonates in
songs such as "When the Roses Run Dry" ("A
cynic's love song," Shaber explains on stage),
"Tempting," about an apparently fabulous
one-night stand, and the album's leading track, "Eldorado,"
a song about family and appreciating what you have:
It's kinda silly/How something as big as New York
City/Can be invisible when you're staring at your
feet, Shaber sings in "a voice that can snap
easily from a hoarse wail to a skyscraping falsetto"
(Acoustic Guitar). And Shaber is never afraid of taking
risks on stage, from an intimate song about the loss
of her father called "Solitaire": Now I
have your shoes/And every half-written page/And songs
from fiddlers' rooves/For daughters who have come
of age; to a hilarious anthem in the voice of a lovesick
Scottish boy - complete with accent! - called "It's
a Crying Shame": And it's a crying shame/That
you don't even know my name...But Ah dunny ken how
to begin when you're so far/From reality and me...
From dancing to Sgt.Pepper in her parent's living
room when she was three to lip-synching to Hungry
Like the Wolf in front of the mirror at age 12, Shaber
has come a long way. And in her live show, she brings
her audience right along with her!
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