Thomas Anderson Brosseau is an American singer-songwriter and guitarist from Grand Forks, North Dakota, United States. Robin Hilton of NPR said Brosseau "possesses one of the most arresting voices in folk music today."[1]

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Tom Brosseau
Brosseau at a house concert in Salt Lake City, Utah (2024)
Brosseau at a house concert in Salt Lake City, Utah (2024)
Background information
Birth nameThomas Anderson Brosseau
OriginGrand Forks, North Dakota, United States
GenresFolk
Occupation(s)Writer, performer, radio Great American Folk Show podcast host and creator
Instrument(s)Guitar, vocals, harmonica
Years active2001-present
LabelsTom Brosseau
Websitewww.tombrosseau.com
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Early life

Brosseau was born in Marshfield, Wisconsin on November 3, 1976. His family moved back to their native North Dakota in 1978, where his father, James, was a doctor at United in Grand Forks until he retired after 40 years, in 2018. His mother, Jolene Rae, graduated from art school in St. Paul and was an interior designer. He has two siblings, Benjamin and Caroline.

Brosseau learned to play acoustic guitar from his grandmother. He said:

I grew up with music in the church, in the school, music at home. I learned a lot of hymnal and folk songs, both traditional and contemporary, and since I was influenced by what my grandparents listened to, in a sense I studied the singers and songwriters of the Great American Songbook".[2]

He graduated from the University of North Dakota in 1999 with a BA in Communications, and a MFA in Non Fiction Writing in 2011 from Otis College of Art and Design.[citation needed]

Career

Brosseau moved to Los Angeles in 2003, and began performing at the renowned club Largo, where he met siblings Sara and Sean Watkins of the band Nickel Creek. Sean Watkins recorded both Brosseau's albums North Dakota Impressions (2016) and Grass Punks (2014), which included the song "We Were Meant To Be Together" and was later featured in the original Netflix series Love.[citation needed] John Parish produced Perfect Abandon (2015) with Brosseau and a 3-piece band at The Cube theater in Bristol UK, using only a single mic.[citation needed]

Brosseau has toured in Japan, Canada, Portugal, Iceland, and Australia. He also sings and plays guitar with Becky Stark, Sebastian Steinberg, and John C. Reilly in John Reilly & Friends. In 2011, they released the Jack White-produced Blue Series 7" singles John & Tom (TMR-112) and Becky & John (TMR-113) on Third Man Records.[3]

Brosseau's song "How to Grow a Woman from the Ground" was covered by Chris Thile, who released a 2006 album of the same name.[citation needed] Experimental folk pop duo Christy & Emily covered "Here Comes The Water Now" in 2010, a song originally featured on Grand Forks, and also in 2010 the band Mice Parade covered his song "Mary Anne" on their album What It Means To Be Left Handed. Sara and Sean Watkins covered Brosseau’s composition, “We Were Meant to Be Together” on their Watkins Family Hour album, Vol. II., in 2022.[citation needed]

Collaborations

Brosseau's musical collaborations include a folk duo with singer-songwriter Gregory Page called The American Folksingers, which began in San Diego, California in 2002.[4] The American Folksingers released two volumes of American folk music on Page's Bed Pan Records for which Lou Curtiss was musical advisor.[5]

Les Shelleys, Brosseau's folk duo with California singer-songwriter Angela Correa, also began in San Diego, California in the early 2000s. They released one album on FatCat Records in 2010, Les Shelleys, and toured extensively in the U.S., U.K., and Europe.[6]

Brosseau has appeared on the Watkins Family Hour, headed by Sean and Sara Watkins, in Los Angeles, California,[7] and John Reilly & Friends, headed by actor John C. Reilly, featuring Becky Stark and Sebastian Steinberg.[8]

In 2023, filmmaker Chel White scored the music to Brosseau’s A Bird Is Following Me, an 8-minute narrative about an incident that happened to him while living in Los Angeles.[citation needed] It was released as a single in April, 2023 with The Prairie outtake “I Know How Much I Love You Now” as the B-side.[citation needed]

The North Dakota Trilogy

Brosseau's three Crossbill Records releases North Dakota Impressions (2016), Perfect Abandon (2015), and Grass Punks (2014) are a trilogy, informally known as the North Dakota Trilogy. Brosseau said:

The trilogy visits life from a local perspective, taking the listener on a journey that doesn't clip along uniformly on some common interstate, but treads at its own pace on a rural route. More glances, more investigations and introspections, more light, more dark. Memories, imaginings, longings for a place, a home. My sense of home is probably the dearest thing I hold. I work to preserve it. I go back into my memories and dreams of where I grew up and I explore, not as a detective but a cartographer. Noting each item and each room I am able to keep everything alive, and when everything is alive it is glorious. So daily I roam through any place or structure I've ever been. I visit with people that have long since been dead. I sit in a park with my favorite weather.[9]

The Great American Folk Show

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, Brosseau had been developing a weekly radio program with Prairie Public in Fargo, North Dakota as both lead writer and host that focused on the arts, called The Great American Folk Show. The pilot was pitched in December 2019, and the show premiered on-air on May 3, 2020 with actor John C. Reilly, North Dakota food columnist Marilyn Hagerty, artist Penni Emrich Burkum, and musicians Tom Lennon and Heidi Gluck.[10] Since then, The Great American Folk Show has featured over 600 artists, storytellers, musicians, authors, chefs, diner owners, curlers, painters, opera house caretakers and poets.

A Lifetime Ago, Vol. 1, 2, 3 & 4

In 2020, Brosseau began an album series focused on unreleased material spanning 22 years of recording. A Lifetime Ago features radio, live, outtakes, B-sides, as well as new recordings, a total of 44 tracks. Musical guests include Sean Watkins, Gianna Ferilli, Cindy Wasserman, Andru Bemis, Shelley Short, Ethan Rose, Doug Schulkind of WFMU’s Give The Drummer Some, Dominque Arciero, Jermey Backofen, Adam Pierce, Gregory Page, and Chel White.[citation needed] Album artwork consists of a photograph by Carey Braswell and design and layout by DLT, Tom Brosseau’s longtime friend and collaborator.[citation needed]

Discography

  • Tom Brosseau (2001)
  • North Dakota (2002)
  • Late Night at Largo (2004)
  • What I Mean To Say Is Goodbye (2005)
  • Empty Houses Are Lonely (2006)
  • Grand Forks (2007)
  • Cavalier (2007)
  • Posthumous Success] (2009)
  • Les Shelleys (2010)[11]
  • John & Tom (2011)
  • Grass Punks (2014)
  • Perfect Abandon (2015)[12]
  • North Dakota Impressions (2016)
  • Treasures Untold (2017)
  • In The Shadow Of The Hill: Songs from the Carter Family catalogue, Vol. 1 (2019)
  • A Lifetime Ago, Vol. One (2020)
  • Live in York (2020)
  • The Prairie (2020)
  • A Lifetime Ago, Vol. Two (2021)
  • A Lifetime Ago, Vol. Three (2022)
  • From Blue & White Notebooks (2022)
  • A Lifetime Ago, Vol. Three (2023)
  • Songs from The Great American Folk Show, Vol. I (2023)
  • Alluvium and other North Dakota folk songs (2024)

Singles and EPs

  • Hurt to Try EP (2004)
  • Amory EP (2006)
  • Been True EP (2009)
  • “Sunflower” with Heidi Gluck (2022)
  • “Under African Skies” with Heidi Gluck (2022)
  • A Bird Is Following Me with Chel White (2023)

References

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