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It’s Tuesday, one of the biggest days in Cary Brothers’ life, the day his album “Who You
Are” is released, and the singer-songwriter is talking about good fortune. “I hope my
karma is saving itself for the record,” he jokes from his home in L.A., where he is laid
up. “I cracked my ankle doing the video shoot, then I lost the hard drive on the laptop
that does everything for me.”
By the time he hobbles into the Hotel Cafe tonight for his record-release show,
Brothers figures to have some stories to tell, beyond those on his lushly orchestrated
debut. There, amid ringing guitars, crashing cymbals and tinkling pianos, the Nashville
native with the Britpop sensibilities tells his L.A. tales, touching on “a lot of things
that have happened to me since I moved here, all the disastrous relationships,
everything I’ve learned … like not to date actresses,” he says.
In
Brothers’ case, it’s been as much “where you are” as “Who You Are.”
He was playing open mike nights when he discovered the burgeoning singer-songwriter
scene at the Hotel Cafe, and with a boost from one of its pillars, Gary Jules, earned some gigs there. “The
Hotel’s where I got my legs,” Brothers says. “Everybody has gravitated to that place;
it’s a magnet. It taught me how to write a good song and be totally fearless.”
His big break came when a college buddy from Northwestern, writer-producer Zach Braff, used the twangy “Blue Eyes” in the “Garden State” soundtrack — a song
that Brothers, not a fan of country music despite his home turf, calls “kind of
short-form Gram Parsons.”
It’s the hidden track on the album, but newer fans
might be drawn to “Ride” (in the movie “The Last
Kiss”) and the title track, if for nothing else, the video. Brothers dismissed
proposals for Hallmark-commercial video treatment. Instead he concocted his own, and
even landed Phil Harder
to direct it: His band plays a high school dance and intervenes when a jealous boyfriend
threatens a nerd. Brothers injured his ankle diving off the stage but gamely finished
the shoot. “I hurt my ankle,” he says, “and then we have to shoot the fight
scene.”
The tenor of the video (not yet finished) was important to the
singer. “People tend to confuse serious singer-songwriters with people who take
themselves too seriously,” Brothers says. “This is one way of showing that ain’t me.”
||| See Cary Brothers perform tonight at the Hotel Cafe. [He’ll be back in town at the Troubadour on Aug. 22.]
|||
Download the title track from “Who You
I’ll post the video for “Who You Are” when it
becomes available; meanwhile, here’s the video for “Ride”:

