Welcome...
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This page is for our friends in the press and those of you on the ground setting up shows.
Included here is a sample press release, some pull quotes, and links to a print ready photo. The photo is 300dpi and is copywrite free. We'll have more pictures soon.
Enjoy! We hope you will find this useful.
And....Thank You for everything!
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Click on the photo for the larger version:

TIMOTHY HULL - CONCERT PRESS RELEASE
Raggle Taggle Street Songs, Exiled Busker Ballads and Global Soul.
For the past nine years, Timothy Hull has brought his mix of rocking acoustic songwriting and tradition-inflected singing to colleges, clubs, coffeehouses and conferences coast to coast. His style fits comfortably into formats ranging from rowdy bars to formal halls. He is appreciated by a wide array of folks from traditional music fans to political activists, lovers of well-crafted songwriting, punks and quiet people, acoustic guitar enthusiasts, and funky people everywhere.
Born of an Irish mother and American father, Timothy grew up with time split between the old country and the new. "My parents’ work would take them to Scotland most summers, and they’d cart me along," he explains. "By the time I was 14 or 15, I was staying on overseas to work and ramble around. The world there just sort of seeped under my skin."
It’s appropriate that Timothy should use that phrase, as that is exactly what his songs do: seep in under the skin, and reside there, almost physically. They are dreamy and vivid, glorious and sad. "The sky is wild and open/Open like an orchestra," he sings in "Following Sky," then softly intones, "Huddled in an underpass/the remnants of the working class," in the striking "The Boys from Downtrodden Down." The songs might insinuate like soft spring rain, or blow in like a February gale. On the anthemic "Rag-Tag," Timothy belts out the credo, "Dream the way you want to be/Live the way you dreamed you’d be/And sing the songs that set you free/In a new direction," only to return to whispering secrets like, "I met a girl with antique eyes/At dawn she wasn’t there/I think of her in springtime/With her honeysuckle hair," in "Up In Meath."
Such an intimate moment might not suggest it, but the latter song was inspired by a posting about a local anti-corporate conflict which Timothy found on the Irish Indymedia website an example of his effortless blend of concerns personal and political, local and global, the ancient and the up-to-the-minute. As Seattle’s Victory Review remarked, his "songs explore familiar ‘folk’ themes such as economic and social injustice, and ecological conservation, yet it would be inaccurate to say that they are really ‘about’ them. Instead, Hull's songs are about life lived on a human scale, as captured in his vivid snapshots of playing and living on the streets or in a makeshift camp by a river, of wandering and rambling the roads and the rails, of making do in difficult circumstances. And in the immediacy and simple ‘dailiness’ of these images, we feel the resonance of those larger themes more keenly."
Timothy began playing guitar at the impressionable age of 13, and writing songs not too long after. Asked for influences he’ll go on and on: "Joe Strummer, The Bothy Band, Django Reinhardt, The Grateful Dead, Dick Gaughan, New Model Army, loads of my friends who are songwriters, activists, and gardeners, Gram Parsons, Marc Chagall?." Asked to describe his songs, though: "Um?well?." That’s best left to others. Fortunately, music critics and DJs have stepped in with such praise as: "neo-Celtic guitar wizardry and rocker heart," "many moments of transcendence," "the ability to tell a story that touches the heart just as powerfully as rouse you to action to save a forest," and "thought-provoking lyrics about injustice, the environment, spirituality, and the mad aching beauty of life."
Timothy has released four full-length albums and a handful of EPs and singles. His pair of 2004 releases are Songs for Miriam and Other People and the eight-song benefit CD Live in Yachats. Of the studio album, he says, "We reached for the moon with that one. I wanted to make an album where the songs sound like they do inside my head, even if I couldn’t reproduce the arrangements live." As the in-concert disc reveals, though, that’s not a problem, as his instrumental dexterity, pure voice, and intimate performance style more than effectively bring the material across to an audience.
What’s next? An album of traditional songs from Ireland and Scotland, followed by another collection of new compositions. "We’ll go reaching for the moon again," he predicts, "and hope we don’t lose our bearings somewhere up in the stratosphere." And what’s this timeless troubador’s timeline? "Hopefully we can get it all done by breakfast, or at least by tea."
-To schedule interviews contact Timothy Hull at 503.752.5078 or send email.
Quotes:
"Timothy is a tremendous songwriter and guitar player with roots in Celtic folk and thought-provoking lyrics about injustice, the environment, spirituality, and the mad aching beauty of life. Fans of the Waterboys, Richard Thompson, Jim Page, and Casey Neill, to name but a few, will love him."
- Jeff Rosenberg , KBOO Community Radio , Portland Oregon
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"Many of Whidbey Island singer-songwriter Timothy Hull's songs explore familiar "folk" themes such as economic and social injustice, and ecological conservation, yet it would be inaccurate to say that they are really "about" them. Instead, Hull's songs are about life lived on a human scale, as captured in his vivid snapshots of playing and living on the streets or in a makeshift camp by a river, of wandering and rambling the roads and the rails, of making do in difficult circumstances. And in the immediacy and simple "dailiness" of these images, we feel the resonance of those larger themes more keenly. A good example is the opener, "Rag-Tag," a kind of rousing campfire anthem for a band of itinerant musicians, yet beneath the devil-may-care surface we feel their cold, hunger, and isolation."
-Richard Middleton - Victory Music Review - Seattle
"Timothy Hull is a rare talent among singer/songwriters. He has the ability to tell a story that touches the heart just as powerfully as he can rouse you to action to save a forest. He is a gifted guitarist reminiscent of Richard Thompson yet he brings a unique flair rooted in the Gaelic/Celtic traditions as well as the contemporary sound of his generation. To experience Timothy Hull live in concert is to witness music in its highest form: to walk away transformed by the experience and still wanting more."
- Robyn Shanti, KBOO FM