Vancouver-raised singer-songwriter Taylor Ashton got his start in 2006 as frontman and songwriter for the band Fish & Bird. When that project dissolved, he traveled to New York City with the rough plan to spend a few weeks checking out the city and figuring out his next move. About a decade later, he still hasn’t left – and he’s established himself as a staple of a certain weird corner of the city’s rich music community, and has been tapped to write & perform original songs for the likes of the New York Times and the Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon.
His second solo album, Stranger To The Feeling, is a sonic odyssey through the heart of America, one that works its way chronologically and geographically from coast to coast as it meditates on the meaning of closeness and connection. The performances are warm and inviting, anchored by Ashton’s deft guitar and banjo work and rich, easygoing melodicism, and the recordings—helmed by producer Jacob Blumberg and captured with a broad range of collaborators including Courtney Hartman, Big Thief’s Buck Meek, Lake Street Dive’s Rachael Price, Vulfpeck’s Theo Katzman, Late Show bandleader Louis Cato, and Mipso’s Jacob Sharp — are alternately sparse and lush, with arrangements often serving as aural reflections of their physical environments. From a blanket in Brooklyn’s Prospect Park to an energy vortex in Sedona, AZ, the settings are inextricable from the songs, and the result is a moving collection that manages to evoke both the gentle virtuosity of Nick Drake and the buoyant wit of Paul Simon.