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"'Really good, really unexpected, and really different'--Village Voice"
The Brooklyn-to-Atlanta transplants of Girlyman call their music leading-edge three-part-harmony folk-pop. Founded on September 11, 2001 ("We realized that we wanted to have fun, to do what felt right to us, and to not take ourselves too seriously. We started out by calling ourselves Girlyman," says vocalist-songwriter Nate Borofsky), Girlyman executes amazing harmonies that hint at the members' classical training. Their shows are miracles of mutually attuned nonconformist magic. Girlyman has just released a new album, "Everything's Easy," that's their most intimate and sophisticated effort yet. They've also been collaborating with comedian Margaret Cho, who sums up this remarkable trio pretty well: "They seamlessly blend folk, country, pop, and rock, and they genre-bend as fearlessly and flawlessly as they gender-bend. It's the music of my heart and soul. Girlyman is the future and the past and the present."
Visit Girlyman on the Web
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