Boiled in Lead | |
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Origin | Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States |
Genres | folk punk, worldbeat, folk rock, alternative rock, Celtic rock, Celtic punk, Gypsy punk |
Years active | 1983–present |
Labels | The Crack, Atomic Theory, Omnium |
Members | Mo Engel: percussion Todd Menton: vocals, guitar, mandolin, bodhrán, whistle Drew Miller: bass guitar, dulcimer Haley Olson: Violin |
Past members | Robin Adnan Anders Marc Anderson Michael Bissonnette Jane Dauphin Brian Fox Mitch Griffin Josef Kessler Laura MacKenzie Dean Magraw Michael Ravaz Adam Stemple David Stenshoel[1][2][3][4] |
Website | www.boiledinlead.com |
Boiled in Lead is a folk-punk/worldbeat band based in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and founded in 1983. Tim Walters of MusicHound Folk called the group "the most important folk-rock band to appear since the 1970s."[10] Influential record producer and musician Steve Albini called the band's self-titled first album "the most impressive debut record from a rock band I've heard all year."[11] Their style, sometimes called "rock 'n' reel,"[1] is heavily influenced by both traditional folk music and punk rock, and has drawn them praise as one of the few American bands of the 1980s and 1990s to expand on Fairport Convention's rocked-up take on traditional folk.[12][13] Folk Roots magazine noted that Boiled in Lead's "folk-punk" approach synthesized the idealistic and archival approach of 1960s folk music with the burgeoning American alternative-rock scene of the early 1980s typified by Hüsker Dü and R.E.M.[4] The band also incorporates a plethora of international musical traditions, including Russian, Turkish, Bulgarian, Scottish, Vietnamese, Hungarian, African, klezmer, and Romani music.[1][2][3][14] Boiled in Lead has been hailed as a pioneering bridge between American rock and international music,[1] and a precursor to Gogol Bordello and other gypsy-punk bands.[15] While most heavily active in the 1980s and 1990s, the group is still performing today, including annual St. Patrick's Day concerts in Minneapolis.[1][16] Over the course of its career, Boiled in Lead has released nearly a dozen albums and EPs, most recently 2012's The Well Below.
Although the band recorded Scottish writer John Leyden's ballad "Lord Soulis" under the title "The Man Who Was Boiled in Lead" on their first album,[2] the band's name is actually taken from the murder ballad "The Two Sisters" as performed by folk group Clannad on their album Dúlamán, as well as the New Year's tradition in Nordic countries of molybdomancy, or casting molten lead into snow to foretell the future.[17]