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Cody is a folk-singer's folk-singer and a poet's poet. He
was born and bred in Delavan IL, population 25, surrounded by the endless
skies of the American Midwest. Before moving to Chicago in 2003,
Cody tried his hand at sessions in Nashville and carefully hewed and
tested his art in college town bars and honky-tonks around the Midwest. He
now plays regularly in the city and it's not uncommon to see whole rooms
full of strangers erupt and sing along to the choruses of his songs on
their first listen (I've seen it happen). Cody's voice is powerful and
gritty, emotionally piercing while subtly imbuing additional layers of
meaning and poignancy in his lyrical delivery. His song-writing is
deeply rooted in the American Folk tradition and all of its grit but with
a post Dylan sense of wit, perspicacity and that certain savior-faire. He
didn't go to college but he drank all of their beer.
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Every folk-singer has to migrate to the city, in a way it
seems to be hidden in definition of a folk singer anymore. Cody has
come to remind Chicago that it is in Illinois. And to remind the
rest of the world that when Louis Armstrong redefined, some say invented
the art of Jazz in the 1920's he brought his Hot Fives to Chicago to do
it. When Robert Johnson wanted to put his Mississippi Mud on wax,
his hellhound chased him to Chicago to do it. And same like, Cody
has come to Chicago to deliver what it needs, when it isn't even sure
itself. He is currently recording a collection of songs from his
vast back-catalog and performing across the heartland. |
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