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Darlingside

Darlingside
Origin Boston, MA
Genres Indie Folk, Americana
Years active 2009–present
Associated acts Tall Heights, Caitlin Canty, David Wax Museum, Heather Maloney, The Ballroom Thieves
Website www.darlingside.com
Members Don Mitchell (guitar, banjo, vocals)
Auyon Mukharji (mandolin, violin, vocals)
Harris Paseltiner (guitar, cello, vocals)
David Senft (bass, kick drum, vocals)
Past members Sam Kapala

Darlingside is a four-person indie folk band from Boston, MA. The band consists of Don Mitchell, Auyon Mukharji, Harris Paseltiner, and David Senft. Their style has been described as “exquisitely-arranged, literary-minded, baroque folk-pop” by NPR. Their latest full-length album, Birds Say, was released in September 2015 by Thirty Tigers.

Darlingside began as a five-piece touring Indie rock band in the fall of 2009. Members (Sam, Don, Auyon, Harris, and David) met as undergraduates while attending Williams College in Williamstown, MA. A previous iteration of the band existed while they were students and included as many as seven members (other members were Eli Walker, Dan Wollin, and Shea Chen).

In 2010, the band went on their first national tour and released a self-produced six-track studio EP, EP 1. They released their debut full-length album, Pilot Machines, in 2012, which was recorded and co-produced by Nathaniel Kunkel (who has worked with Sting, Lyle Lovett, Graham Nash). Writing about Pilot Machines, David Fricke of Rolling Stone praises the band as having “a rich line in acoustic textures and chamber-rock dynamics.”

After Kapala’s departure from the band in 2013, Darlingside moved toward a traditional bluegrass set-up (notable because they do not play bluegrass) with all four remaining musicians clustered around a single condenser microphone. Following additional national tours translating their indie-rock songs into quartet arrangements, Darlingside released their second full-length album, Birds Say in September 2015. After headlining across New England on a regional release tour, they further promoted the album on a national tour supporting Grammy Award-winner Patty Griffin at sold-out venues such as the Ryman and Fillmore theaters.Birds Say received critical acclaim from NPR (“exquisitely-arranged, literary-minded, baroque folk-pop”),Rolling Stone (“A ‘must-see’ act…locomotive folk-pop confections so richly executed it’s hard to tell if it’s one voice or 12”), and The New Yorker (“Sometimes the sunshine breaks out in their harmonies and it feels like 1965 with David Crosby and the Byrds”).


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