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Born Matt the Electrician
on a frosty San Francisco morn, Matt and his family soon moved
to Oregon in search of culture, nice weather and vineyards. Once
there, Matt spent much of his youth obsessed with Woody Guthrie,
The Hollies and the soundtrack to Godspell. The Electrician's
were a musical, yet thrifty family, so they found a swell garage-sale
trumpet to encourage this musical interest. Unfortunately, because of the elder Electrician's spiraling origami habit, money was not only extremely tight but intricately folded and beautifully hung all around the Electrician household, so Matt was limited to the only three chords his parents could afford. His dad assured him this was plenty, that kids in China only get one or two. And strangely it all
worked out, Matt headed to Austin, a serious music town, with
aspirations to become a serious musician. Matt's first record, Baseball Song, was an impressive first showing by a young talent, capturing youthful emotions yet showing the direction of new found maturity. Landing him firmly on the map, No Depression called it "an impressive debut that makes Matt The Electrician a songwriter to watch." Sever's second record Home. continued to radiate with the heat and grapple of youth: the unbridled eruptive green energy, the wry optimism, the epiphanies of burgeoning love and the booze-soaked nights and vinyl booth mornings of life on the road; a record The Austin Chronicle calls "an acoustically amusing postcard of life in Slacker Central." Set for an early 2003 release, Sever's new record promises a slight departure from the real or imagined boundaries of home to a place where love evolves and grows comfortable, where new families and priorities are built, and where life reduces to a concentrated clarity. Where people grow up. Sever lives and works
with his family in Austin, Texas. Discography: new
album 2003 on
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