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Quinn Marston | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Quinn C. Marston |
Born | Westchester County, New York, U.S. | May 31, 1988
Origin | New York City, U.S. [1] |
Genres | Indie folk, [2] indie punk, [3] indie rock, [4] alt soul, [2] rootsy pop [2] |
Years active | 2009–present |
Labels |
Ernest Jenning
[5] Producer: Tom Beaujour [6] |
Website | qmarston.com |
Quinn C. Marston (born May 31, 1988) [7] is an American musician and artist. His music has been featured on TV shows such as One Tree Hill, [8] [9] Ghost Whisperer, [10] and The Gates. [10] [11] He has performed regularly at various New York City clubs, including the Knitting Factory in Brooklyn [12] [13] and The National Underground in Manhattan. [14] His music has been compared to bands and artists such as The Breeders, [15] Belly, [15] The Cure, [3] Liz Phair, [16] Karen O., [16] Kimya Dawson, [3] and Connie Converse. [16]
Marston is the son of public service advertising director Ginna Marston and the grandson of advertising copywriter Frederick D. Sulcer.
Music reviewers[ who?] have described Marston's music as "instantly catchy, energetic pop rock tunes," [15] "upbeat," [17] and "crunchy." [18] Guitar World editor Brad Tolinski described Marston's lyrics as "unique" and that he has "something to say," which is "worth listening to." [19] My Old Kentucky Blog wrote that his music has "ragged urgency." [19] [20]
His vocals have been described as "over-enunciated," [21] "understated," [22] and having a "shy slur to sexy shout" [16] with an "endearing loneliness" [3] and a "quirky confidence." [23]
His lyrics have been described by critic Addy Danti of Buzz Danti as "witty and wise beyond their years, set to grungy melodies that encapsulate a youthful angst. [16] Another reviewer wrote that the "title track spins and jams with ferocity that doesn't take away from Marston's melodic quality." [3] Another described his lyrics as "sleepily whimsical poems," [24] while another described them as "quirky and charming." [25]
Before 2013, Marston identified as a female, and since 2013, he has identified as a male. In 2019, he identified as trans man.[ citation needed]
Quinn Marston is a singer/songwriter ... In 2009, Marston collaborated with producer Tom Beaujour, ...
alt folk + alt soul + rootsy pop (note: Wikipedia disambiguation alt folk => indie folk)
Quinn Marston ... from Can You Hear Me, See Me Now? -- released 10/26 ... indie rock
NY-based 20-year-old singer/songwriter Quinn Marston kicks some serious booty. ...
11138. Electrical One by Quinn Marston Songs from One Tree Hill Season 7- Episode 10
Quinn Marston - "Electrical One"
Cause for Alarm (Season 5, Episode 5) -- So High by Quinn Marston -- One Tree Hill -- The Gates -- Ghost Whisperer
"Electric One" by Quinn Marston (Andi researches succubus) ... Air Date -- Sunday July 25, 2010
from 02:00 pm ...
Quinn Marston Band - (Set time: 5:00 PM)
7:30p at The National Underground, New York, NY
Quinn Marston ... writes instantly catchy, energetic pop rock tunes. "Can You Hear Me See Me Now" ... reminds me of early 90s alternative girl rock like Belly or the Breeders....
This article has multiple issues. Please help
improve it or discuss these issues on the
talk page. (
Learn how and when to remove these template messages)
|
Quinn Marston | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Quinn C. Marston |
Born | Westchester County, New York, U.S. | May 31, 1988
Origin | New York City, U.S. [1] |
Genres | Indie folk, [2] indie punk, [3] indie rock, [4] alt soul, [2] rootsy pop [2] |
Years active | 2009–present |
Labels |
Ernest Jenning
[5] Producer: Tom Beaujour [6] |
Website | qmarston.com |
Quinn C. Marston (born May 31, 1988) [7] is an American musician and artist. His music has been featured on TV shows such as One Tree Hill, [8] [9] Ghost Whisperer, [10] and The Gates. [10] [11] He has performed regularly at various New York City clubs, including the Knitting Factory in Brooklyn [12] [13] and The National Underground in Manhattan. [14] His music has been compared to bands and artists such as The Breeders, [15] Belly, [15] The Cure, [3] Liz Phair, [16] Karen O., [16] Kimya Dawson, [3] and Connie Converse. [16]
Marston is the son of public service advertising director Ginna Marston and the grandson of advertising copywriter Frederick D. Sulcer.
Music reviewers[ who?] have described Marston's music as "instantly catchy, energetic pop rock tunes," [15] "upbeat," [17] and "crunchy." [18] Guitar World editor Brad Tolinski described Marston's lyrics as "unique" and that he has "something to say," which is "worth listening to." [19] My Old Kentucky Blog wrote that his music has "ragged urgency." [19] [20]
His vocals have been described as "over-enunciated," [21] "understated," [22] and having a "shy slur to sexy shout" [16] with an "endearing loneliness" [3] and a "quirky confidence." [23]
His lyrics have been described by critic Addy Danti of Buzz Danti as "witty and wise beyond their years, set to grungy melodies that encapsulate a youthful angst. [16] Another reviewer wrote that the "title track spins and jams with ferocity that doesn't take away from Marston's melodic quality." [3] Another described his lyrics as "sleepily whimsical poems," [24] while another described them as "quirky and charming." [25]
Before 2013, Marston identified as a female, and since 2013, he has identified as a male. In 2019, he identified as trans man.[ citation needed]
Quinn Marston is a singer/songwriter ... In 2009, Marston collaborated with producer Tom Beaujour, ...
alt folk + alt soul + rootsy pop (note: Wikipedia disambiguation alt folk => indie folk)
Quinn Marston ... from Can You Hear Me, See Me Now? -- released 10/26 ... indie rock
NY-based 20-year-old singer/songwriter Quinn Marston kicks some serious booty. ...
11138. Electrical One by Quinn Marston Songs from One Tree Hill Season 7- Episode 10
Quinn Marston - "Electrical One"
Cause for Alarm (Season 5, Episode 5) -- So High by Quinn Marston -- One Tree Hill -- The Gates -- Ghost Whisperer
"Electric One" by Quinn Marston (Andi researches succubus) ... Air Date -- Sunday July 25, 2010
from 02:00 pm ...
Quinn Marston Band - (Set time: 5:00 PM)
7:30p at The National Underground, New York, NY
Quinn Marston ... writes instantly catchy, energetic pop rock tunes. "Can You Hear Me See Me Now" ... reminds me of early 90s alternative girl rock like Belly or the Breeders....