Reviews
“Olsen, an itinerant troubadour who regularly graces Australian folk festivals, was at her most engaging. Such was the candour of her songs and chatty tales that it would impossible for anyone with blood in their veins not to empathise with her. Her full-throated voice and crisp guitar served up such diverse subject matter as crop-dusting and prostitution, while a revealing yarn about life-drawing classes introduced The Truth of a Woman. From her new CD came In Your Darkened Room, the title track to an album containing some of her finest work, a black frost edging her usual warmth and humour.”
– John Shand, Sydney Morning Herald
“It is indeed a rare occurrence to be so completely captivated for an entire concert by one person and a guitar, but American singer/songwriter Kristina Olsen certainly managed this and more, delivering a highly entertaining show to a capacity audience for over two hours. From her opening songs I felt that this was a person I had known for much longer, the supreme accolade any storyteller can wish for. The audience of predominantly fortysongethings loved it, demanding that Olsen return to the stage for three encores. Olsen’s singing is as powerful as it is delicate, forceful as it is tender, and she asks a lot of herself, instrumentally, voically and emotionally.”
– Patrick Shepherd. Christchurch Press, NZ
“To begin with the songs, they are those wonderful gems of song writing which don’t rely on any particular genre for their beginnings. Olsen builds melodies, not styles. She can wind them into unpredictable combinations which then become lovely melodies or she can deliver them in straight lines which become jazz- or blues-oriented pieces. Her guitar stylings are wide, ranging from delicate, complicated runs to aggressive direct blues runs. She’s a sharp guitarist, able to provide herself with both the rhythm and lead pieces she needs to give her songs solid solo support. As a storyteller, Olsen is similarly wonderful, mixing earthy observations about herself and those around with the occasional comment about society’s various shortcomings. Most of all, though, Olsen is funny, noting those things which innocently point out where she and all of us provide material for comic relief. She’s talented, funny, and observant, and consequently she becomes the witty friend who shares her life with you, not preaching to you or insisting on our praise to maintain the friendship.”
– Roots & Reel
“Olsen is an eclectic artist worthy of much more acclaim.”
– Los Angeles Times
“Strong songs and guitar playing, great singing and intimate stories…after hearing it I’m in love with the lady.”
– Acoustic Musician
“This is Olsen playing solo to the world, and the results are stunning…playing slide guitar with a fury, finely crafted songs, personal and delivered with fire…”
– Folk Almanac
“…wicked blues slide guitar…soon her storytelling becomes so wonderful, and her music so expressive, one realized that the untamed Olsen is more valuable than any slicker version could be.”
– Boston Herald
“A joy to watch and hear”
– Maddy Prior
“Kristina once seen and heard is not easily forgotten. Her skills in writing and performance along with the charm of her musical personality have always ensured this – miss them and miss out”
– Simon Nicol, Fairport Convention
“A magnificent singer who talks about rude things!!”
– Les Barker
“Kristina changed my life”
– Jackie Hanham, workshop participant
“Kristina Olsen not only reduces grown men to quivering wrecks with her songs, she also knits socks between sets… That’s talent for you”
– Caz Graham
“Kristina Olsen – The Creme de la creme. Kristina is the business, if you don’t know her work or haven’t seen her shows, we strongly suggest you make it your mission this year to seek her out. Say hello, you won’t regret it.”
– Chris While and Julie Matthews’ Recommendations and don’t miss ’em list
“…and then there was the life force that is Olsen. The American opened the show with a solo set of wit, wisdom and stinging slide guitar. A raconteur who could still any bar or charm crowned heads, she set the tone for sad or saucy songs about love from a woman’s perspective. Accompanying Coughlan she added deft flecks of guitar, growling alto saxophone, accordion, voice or just sat out as the song required. Again, no pretence.”
– Mary Coughlan/Kristina Olsen Concert Review Sydney Morning Herald, Arts & Entertainment, Feb 2009
“This is no kind of formula entertainment. After hearing it I’m in love with the lady”
– Acoustic Musician Magazine
“She always signs her letters, “Love, Kristina” Maybe because she can’t spell “Sincerely Yours” She likes four letter words. They get the point across. They hardly ever have double letters. Kristina Olsen’s record “Love, Kristina” is one of my favorites. She has the above-referenced acapella half-apology for her spelling, as well as a song for battered women called “Keeping This Life Of Mine” and a lighthearted ditty called “Little Brother Sure Can Dance”. And many more delightful songs, all wrapped up in her strong, slightly jazzy voice. Moreover, when I emailed her a couple of years ago, she actually emailed me back! So she’s nice, to boot!”
– Andrea Crain
“Kristina Olsen is the very picture of the modern folksinger: She’s a hard-touring, nonstop songwriter who doesn’t seem to care about – or even think of – mainstream success. She’s also full of thoughtful, thought-provoking songs, which she skillfully plays on guitar, saxophone, concertina and piano. Olsen’s latest album is ‘All Over Down Under’.”
– The Onion April 10-16, 2003
“Australian Cello Meets American Slide”
US audiences get a chance to experience an unusual musical pairing when American singer-songwriter-multi-instrumentalist Kristina Olsen will tour with Australian cellist Peter Grayling.
They are stopping over in the states in Sept/Oct 1998 as part of their round the world tour to celebrate the release of their CD ‘Duet’.
Kristina Olsen is a powerfully engaging performer with a blues raw velvet voice, brilliant guitar skills (on acoustic and steel-body slide guitar) and a fine way of crafting a song, from hilarious tales of love-gone-wrong to seriously compelling songs of rare insight and compassion.
She is well know for her songwriting and her songs have been recorded by Fairport Convention among others.
Cellist Peter Grayling takes an instrument rarely seen off the classical stage and weaves it through Olsen’s songs, enriching the ballads with a gorgeous, mellow sound and driving along the bluesy numbers with punchy playing and recklessly passionate solos.
Dr. Grayling was formerly the principal cellist with the Tasmania Symphony Orchestra and now currently does contract work for the Western Australian Symphony when he isn’t on tour with Olsen.
The depth, diversity and excitement of Kristina and Peter’s live performances are captured in fifteen studio tracks on their new CD ‘Duet’, which also offers two bonus live tracks recorded on their last Australian tour.
These two multi-instrumentalists create inspired musical settings, recorded live in the studio with the emphasis on the real interplay of a musical partnership honed on stage.
All the songs/pieces are in duet form.
On ‘Heart Hill’, a song Olsen wrote about the actual heart-shaped English wood which a grieving fiancee planted on the hill where her lover’s plane had crashed, Kristina plays concertina and sings while Peter plays mandocello and sings harmony.
On the blues classic ‘Brownsville’ Kristina moans out the melody on slide guitar and voice, while Peter adds a third harmony part on the cello.
All the tracks are in song form except ‘Pillow Talk’, an instrumental waltz with Kristina on saxophone and Peter on cello.
Their work together has left a trail of excitement in Australia, and now the US will get its first chance to catch them as a duo, live in concert.
Kristina has toured the UK as a solo artist since the early ’90s and established a large following of devoted fans in the folk music world.
She won great acclaim with appearances at Cropredy and Sidmouth in 1997 where her skills as a singer/songwriter and multi-instrumentalist were shown off to their full potential.
During one of her many tours of Australia and New Zealand, Kristina met Peter Grayling a cellist and botanist.
They have formed what has been described as “a musical marriage made in Heaven”.
The bluesy raw velvet voice of Kristina; her great guitar work on acoustic and steel body slide guitar set alongside the beautiful tones of the cello played by the classically trained Peter took audiences by storm on their short UK tour in 1998.
They have recorded two albums together.
The first, the aptly named “Duet” was a best seller at festivals in 1998.
Last year they appeared at Towersey and Bridgenorth festivals and again outsold most other artists with their new album “Truth of a Woman”.
Fairport Convention are big fans and have recorded Kristina’s song “Dangerous”.
What the Press Say
“It would be impossible for anyone with blood in their veins not to empathise with her… full-throated voice and crisp guitar.”
– John Shand, Sydney Morning Herald, Australia
“Olsen rocked the audience with her traditional blues style laced with modern lyrics. “She’s original and she’s modern. She was the best performer here,” said one of the vendors who had been listening to the blues for two days.”
– Kendra Milligan, Sun News, New Mexico, USA
“Olsen’s singing is as powerful as it is delicate, forceful as it is tender, and she asks a lot of herself, instrumentally, vocally, and emotionally. The audience loved it, demanding that Olsen return to the stage for three encores.”
– Patrick Shepherd, The Press, Christchurch, NZ
“Olsen’s singing is as powerful as it is delicate, forceful as it is tender, and she asks a lot of herself, instrumentally, vocally, and emotionally. The audience loved it, demanding that Olsen return to the stage for three encores.”
– Patrick Shepherd, The Press, Christchurch, NZ
“Grayling is that rare beast among cellists – the really exciting soloist who can improvise and really seize the moment. Most importantly the performances are really alive, and many of the songs are really moving. They move in varied ways, too: from full-on blues-mama lustiness to thought provoking and poignant.”
– Doug Spencer, ABC Radio 24 Hours
– Ray Purvis for the CD review column in The West Australian. ★★★★
– David Sanderson, The Hastings News & Observer
‘Live From Around the World’
– Stephen Ide, Dirty Linen, Oct/Nov ’97
‘All Over Down Under’
“After cutting a couple of early career, self-released tapes with her Loose String Band, Kristina Olsen recorded a quartet of albums for Rounder/Philo from the early through the late nineties. Her most recent pair of studio releases, on her Take A Break label, featured Australian cellist Peter Grayling. Grayling also appears on this disc along with, fellow countryman and skilled piano accordionist, George Butrumlis. The album title hints at the contents, and was recorded in concert during March 2001 when Olsen undertook an Australian tour. The twist with the material of this particular collection is that Olsen has included ten new compositions. She’s also been magnanimous to her sidemen, in that the album includes one composition by each of them. Both instrumentals, ‘Raphael & Hillary’ by Grayling was written for an ABC Radio book reading programme, while Butrumlis airs the traditional sounding ‘Portsoaken’. It seems that they learned the latter tune in the car park,immediately prior to performing it in the show. Three of Olsen’s older songs ‘Truth Of A Woman’, ‘The Man With The Bright Red Car’ and ‘Better Than TV’ are reprised at the end of this disc, aka ‘the Second Set’ – During the interval the audience had been invited to write song requests on pieces of paper, and for the second set Kristina drew titles from a hat. The three players create a wonderfully rich sound and between them contribute the sounds of acoustic guitar, steel body slide guitar, sax, concertina, cello [at turns sonorously moody, then rhythmically upbeat], mandolin and accordion [Butrumlis playing adds tremendous colour to the melodies].
Kristina has had the good sense to incorporate nine segments of stage patter, and while her songs introductions come across as factually enlightening, the remainder are spontaneously humorous [and even bear repeated listening] – The liner includes an instruction on which tracks to programme, if you want to hear a music-only CD. Apart from being a soulfully articulate musician, Olsen is a compulsive dancer – I’ve seen her enthusiastically join the sidestage throng at the Kerrville Folk Festival – and her love of tango dancing is given full and enthusiastic expression in ‘How I Love This Tango’. Elsewhere, the opening ‘Fallen Bicycle’ recalls an old love affair, while ‘Tony’s Sax’ is Olsen’s instrumental contribution. ‘The Weekend is Here’ gives the female viewpoint relative to the escape from the drudgery of a 9 to 5 day job, and is a darned fine toe tapping and fun song to boot where the latter cut explores the total fulfilment of boy/girl passion, ‘The One That Didn’t Get Away’ and ‘Sweet William’ hail from the same source. This disc is available from www.amazon.com and the entry on their site states, ‘Explicit Lyrics’ Now if Kristina were some spandex clad heavy metal goddess or a pin impregnated punk princess, I could accept the possibility of aural offence. As it stands Olsen & Co. merely mention prostitutes, brothels, lesbians, turbo-charged vibrators, pubic hair, useful things to do with panty liners and such. Counter to the language that is uttered on many stages, world-wide, these days, there’s genuine humour here and no four letter words were employed during the recording. OK, the closing cut ‘Better Than TV’ is a tale of sexual congress – a natural human expression of love they say. As for – ‘Explicit’ – I don’t think so !!!”
– Arthur Wood (contributing editor), FolkWax
And About Live Concerts
“Olsen, an itinerant troubadour who regularly graces Australian folk festivals, was at her most engaging. Such was the candour of her songs and chatty tales that it would impossible for anyone with blood in their veins not to empathise with her. Her full-throated voice and crisp guitar served up such diverse subject matter as crop-dusting and prostitution, while a revealing yarn about life-drawing classes introduced ‘The Truth of a Woman’. From her new CD came ‘In Your Darkened Room’, the title track to an album containing some of her finest work, a black frost edging her usual warmth and humour.”
“A great night was had by all at the Winery, West End, Brisbane last night (26/3/2002). An enthusiastic monday night audience loved the show and brought Kristina back for three encores. George Butrumlis was in particularly fine form, playing a Piassola piece as part of the requests set. Peter Grayling was requested to play a cello piece naked, but declined due to ‘technical difficulties’.”
– The Sydney Morning Herald
– Ken Ferguson for The West Australian
“It’s a perfect coupling – one no publicity hound could ever think up. A sassy sex obsessed San Franciscan born singer songwriter and a silent cellist from Fremantle. Olsen’s songs evoke all sorts of feelings – Thursday night’s audience laughed out loud, choked back the tears and cheered the honest sentiment of songs such as “Wish You’d Stop Doing So Well” …meanwhile Grayling’s cello and mandocello made inroads into bodies and hearts while his shy demeanour emitted a different kind of star appeal.”
– Les Everett for The Fremantle Review
Kristina Olsen, Harbour Light, Lyttelton
“It is indeed a rare occurrence to be so completely captivated for an entire concert by one person and a guitar, but American singer/songwriter Kristina Olsen certainly managed this and more, delivering a highly entertaining show to a capacity audience for over two hours. Her secret is a simple one. She tells it like it is with a humour and directness that draw laughs of recognition in hilarious songs such as ‘The Man I Love,’ ‘The Weekend is Here’, ‘The Big O’, and the gloriously raunchy ‘Better Than TV.’ Then the tables are turned and the emotional roller-coaster tackles abusive marriages (I’m Keeping this Life of Mine), lost love (Heart Hill), and the drudge of life (State of Grace). ‘The Man with the Bright Red Car’ swapped emotional extremes very neatly, Olsen holding the audience in the palm of her hand, and the achingly beautiful ballad ‘The One That Didn’t Get Away’ made for the deep thought all round. ‘The Tango’ was a neat piece of historical comment, while her spot-on anthem to the green-eyed monster, ‘Stop Doing So Well,’ proved bitingly close to the mark for many! The instrumental changes (to concertina and steel guitar) worked well, the concertina particularly evocative in ‘Heart Hill’ and ‘Yellow Piper.’ Olsen’s singing is as powerful as it is delicate, forceful as it is tender, and she asks a lot of herself on stage, instrumentally, vocally, and emotionally. From her opening songs I felt that this was a person I had known for much longer, the supreme accolade any storyteller can wish for. The audience of predominantly fortysongethings loved it, demanding that Olsen return to the stage for three encores.”
– Reviewed by Patrick Shepherd
Spiegeltent – 12-3-02
“If her lyrics are a true reflection of her life, Kristina Olsen has had one hell of an interesting journey. From a dream in which she was a lesbian to dancing the tango and what really happens at “life drawing classes”, all got a humourous workover in the Californian Singer/Songwriters one-off Show. Add to that unusual mix a sprinkling of spine-tingling instrumentals with Australian Cellist Peter Grayling, and a show-stopper encore of ‘The Big O’ – a ditty about orgasms not Roy Orbison – and her appreciative audience were left singing along for, ahem, more.”
– Jo Schulz, The Advertiser
“The final day of the Mimbres Region Arts Council’s Blues Festival on Sunday brought home the roots of blues as artists unplugged from their amps and went totally acoustic. Kristina Olsen was the largest draw for listeners. The park’s crowd swelled before she opened her set. “In the past they (the Mimbres Region Arts Council) usually book a few women artists to play the blues festival. This year they only had Kristina Olsen, so we came to hear her,” said one female listener and her friend. Olsen rocked the audience with her traditional blues style laced with modern lyrics which played off society’s fascination with consumerism. Based out of Los Angeles, Olsen is all too familiar with the “Californication” presented in television and radio today. “She’s original and she’s modern. She was the best performer here,” said one of the vendors who had been listening to the blues for two days”
– Kendra Milligan, Sun News
7 April 2002 Devonport Folk Music Club, Auckland, NZ
“While still flying high from the Keb Mo concert the night before we felt like seeing Kristina tonight would be like a bonus.
I had forgotten how her performances can be so powerfully moving. By the end of the first set my face hurt from smiling
and my eyes were red from crying. Next time I will remember to being the Kleenex. Her clever and hard driving guitar arrangements reinforce the emotional punch of her lyrics. Mr. MO didn’t make me cry.”
– www.michealyoung.com/musicLately.htm
“Kristina Olsen is one of the most entertaining and compelling performers on the international acoustic music circuit.” Kristina delivered on the promise of her promotional material in her concert at Burns Hall on April 15. An appreciative audience of about 50 heard her performance, disappointingly few for a performer of her calibre. Her songs are sometimes moving, sometimes earthy (at any rate, I have been told that ‘The Big O’ had nothing to do with Otago!). What the blurb doesn’t prepare you for is the intricacy of her guitar playing. Her style moves from gutsy blues through jazz to something almost classical, and back again, as the mood of her songs takes her. Kristina has touch; her rich blend of voice and instrument is always just right for the lyric.”
– Neil
Tilley’s, 9 November.
“Kristina Olsen tells stories. The singer/songwriter from the United States spends ten months of the year touring the world and telling stories of love and loss, as all good singer/songwriters do. What sets her apart from a number of other artists of the troubadour persuasion is her ability to make her audience laugh. An excellent guitarist, and no slouch on the sax or concertina, which also made guest appearances in her sets, Olsen and her co-conspirator, cellist Peter Grayling, did much to undermine the idea that a singer/songwriter must be earnest and intense. Not that there was a lack of intensity in songs such as Dangerous or Heart on the Hill, where raw emotion was matched by articulate, poetic lyrics and a musically satisfying backing. But these songs, and others like them, were interspersed with Olsen’s self-deprecating humour, allowing the audience respite. And then there were songs such as Better than TV and The Big O, which had the audience howling with laughter. It is obvious that Olsen has visited Canberra many times before, with the audience at Tilley’s seemingly made up of aficionados who knew the material well. The affection was mutual, with Olsen making it clear that despite the bushfires that turned a simple trip from Katoomba to Canberra into a seven-hour epic, there was no chance that she would cancel a gig at Tilley’s. While I had heard of Olsen, I had never attended one of her gigs before. I was impressed with both her musicality, both in writing and performing, and her skill as a raconteur. But the cello playing of Australian Peter Grayling, with whom Olsen has recorded two CD’s, was a revelation. Not only does he have the chops – as evidenced in an impromptu recital of the Prelude from Bach’s Cello Suite in C – but his dry sense of humour was a perfect foil for the more exuberant Olsen. And who knew the cello could sound as low-down dirty as it did on I Don’t Want to be Your Friend? All in all, it was a rewarding evening for the contemporary-folk minded. Entertaining, intelligent, varied, and above all funny, Olsen’s show was a fine indicator of what is required for a performer to succeed in living the musical life.
Helen Saunders is a graduate in musicology from the Canberra School of Music and a freelance writer.”
– Helen Saunders
“Oh, there was some good stuff at Towersey, with loads of Anglo-Australian connections. Kristina Olsen from the USA was playing with the Aussie cello player Peter Grayling – who is one of the very few artists I have seen get a spontaneous burst of applause for a solo at a folk event, and that happened three times in one concert. Kristina said she played together with Peter whenever she could. Let’s hope this happens a lot more in the future.”
“No one in the huddle knew quite what to do. Stay under a tarp on a ridge of high ground? Or run for more substantial shelter, exposing oneself en route to the full force of the elements. Every ten seconds or so, someone would make the decision to cut and run. “They went slipping and sliding down the hill, because it was so wet,” said Brian. “Then someone said, ‘If this is to be your last night on Earth, is there anywhere you’d rather be?” Songwriter Kristina Olsen started singing “Rock Island Line.” Everyone joined in, singing faster and faster as the wind howled and rain pounded on the plastic canopy. When the storm passed, they were still there. “Nobody got hurt,” says Brian, “except for those that slid down the hill.”
Kristina Olsen & Peter Grayling are Dangerous at the King’s Head
“It’s never a good idea to break up with a singer-songwriter – you just might recognise yourself dangerously immortalised in a song! The California blues singer Kristina Olsen’s third appearance with Peter Grayling, cellist from Australia, last friday at the King’s Head in Allendale brought out an enthusiastic, standing-room only crowd who were enthralled with the hauntingly realised humanity encapsulated in her songs. It was an emotional roller-coaster of an evening, as Kristina skates on a fine line between bawdy commentary on life and revealingly emotive interludes that twist the listener’s soul into knots. But with the counterpoint of Peter’s cello playing a Greek chorus as the intimate revealer of innermost feelings, the combined effect was like being buffeted by a soft, tender, all-embracing storm. ‘Draw a line’ might have been the song the audience came to hear, and Kristina poised it three numbers into the first set, to capture her audience totally. Come the musicians, come the evocation, and ‘Phoebe’s Iceberg’ was such an echo of softly keening reminiscence and loss of a tiny girl. Or how about the firm and stout-hearted welly behind the ‘Flying’ song (Yellow Piper) where the long-suffering wife saves to gain her pilot’s license? Or the multi-keyed ‘Sweet William’, as intriguing a piece of traditionally informed contemporary music as was ever written. You’re up, you’re down, maybe ‘It’s the kind of mood I’m in’ that draws the next piece into touch and brings the audience together with the performers. The cello sings, listen to the feeling, and sigh in recognition. David Dodson may have written ‘The Big O’, but only one performer could do it justice, and Kristina’s perfectly raw blues voice came on strong to close the set, while what Peter did on the cello can’t really be described in a family newspaper. Ten songs into the second set, and it was rapture, with snappy transitions from clever asides into exquisite lyrics and impressionistic instrumentals, even before the final number, a paean to a real world without television. Anyone for tango? I’m certain Kristina made several converts to this expressive dance form, just by delivering a instrumental with Peter that brought the dance to disembodied life. Then the encores started to pour out, in a heartfelt tribute of appreciation from the entertainers to the promoters, agents and audience for having launched the duo on their increasingly successful UK career. ‘If I left you’ moved on to the bitter humour of ‘Don’t do so well’, and then ‘Heart on the Hill’, before the Tom Waits number, ‘Broken bicycle’ wrapped up the evening and left the audience finally satiated, carrying the music home with them by the CD boxload. It seems entirely likely, on this form, that a larger venue will be needed for this duo’s next appearance in Tynedale.”
– Larry Winger