Production Credits
Produced by Erik Friedlander & Scott Solter
Executive Producers: Dick Connette & Erik Friedlander
Recorded at Pueblo Street August 22-23, 2005, San Francisco
Erik Friedlander: cello, tuning forks
Scott Solter: engineer, live processing
Mixed at The Tiny Telephone, September 7, 2005
Mastered by Steve Berson at Total Sonic Media
Design+Illustration by Kio Griffith
Family photo by Oscar Bailey
Erik Friedlander photo by Emiliano Neri
All other photos by Lee Friedlander
Notes by Erik Friedlander
The titles "Rusting in Honeysuckle" and "A Thousand Unpieced Suns" are taken from Cormac MacCarthy's books Child of God and Blood Meridian.
Many thanks to Scott Solter for his savvy and empathetic ear.
Thanks also to John Darnielle, Kio Griffith, Dick Connette, Michael Greenberg, The Fraenkel Gallery, Bryce Dessner and Alec Bemis.
All compositions by Erik Friedlander (ASCAP)
www.erikfriedlander.com
P & C Skipstone Records
Block Ice & Propane Liner Notes
Every summer my parents would pack us up for months of camping. My father is a
photographer, and he’d plan these trips around his work, various teaching jobs
and photo shoots, all across the U.S. Our camper was a thin shelled box sitting
on top of a 1966 Chevrolet pickup truck. An economy model with a propane gas
stove, a sink and a table-- no shower, no fridge. 15 lb. blocks of ice kept the
food from rotting. Lukewarm sponge baths from the sink or campground showers
did the same for us.
One summer newer RV's appeared on the road-- sleek, silver Airstreams throwing
our reflection back at us as they roared past like first class trains. Showers.
Refrigerators. Incomprehensible luxury. The era of block ice was drawing to an
end, but not for us. Melting cubes swiped from motel ice machines tided us over
when we were low.
The stale smell of drowning food. The propane stove my mother was always afraid
would leak catastrophically. The hours my sister and I spent reading or
counting Mack trucks from the top window. The tongue my father prepared that
seemed to gape at us from the roadside picnic table. Cities, campgrounds,
parades, outhouses, wild animals, and strange characters suffused in the haze
of thousands of hours of highway travel. Writing these pieces put me back in
that camper, where time seemed to slow, while outside tiny white signs
furiously ticked off the next tenth of a mile.
Many thanks to Scott Solter for his savvy and empathetic ear. Thanks also to
John Darnielle, Kio Griffith, Dick Connette, Michael Greenberg, Bryce Dessner and Alec Bemis.
PHOTO BY OSCAR BAILEY