INVOCATION: an incantation, prayer or summons of the spirit.
The title of Kate Schrock's most recent album, the musical and lyrical themes that simmer within the soul of
Invocation were borne out of several inspiring journeys made to Jamaica for the purpose of recording between 2004 and
2006 while being accompanied by good friend Glen DaCosta, long-time horn player for Bob Marley and The Wailers. Her vision
for the album was further influenced and transformed by the eye-opening experiences Kate encountered several months later during
her travels to the upper Amazon River basin in Ecuador on a study tour with Heifer International, a development organization
founded by her grandfather, Dan West.
Representing Ms. Schrock's sixth independent release on her own Kakelane Music label, Invocation fully embodies
her trademark blend of jazz and rock gospel, while also stirring hearty portions of reggae and dancehall elements into the mix.
Lyrically, Kate takes a direct approach when tackling such provocative topics as war, injustice, poverty and the ills of commercial
over-development. But a huge part of her talent and dexterity as a songwriter is her seemingly effortless ability to inject a
subtext of calmness into her songs. This in turn allows her listeners to tap into the special kind of energy one discovers when
teetering between the zones of outrage and forgiveness, and she accomplishes all of this without having to redirect any of the
less-than-flattering light she likes to cast upon the burdens and challenges of love and spiritual health that exist in what most
would agree are especially perplexing times these days. With her unique knack for pulling off this emotional kind of balancing
act, Invocation once again demonstrates why Billboard Talent Net has proclaimed Kate Schrock to be "one of the
best unsigned artists in the U.S." Invocation is co-produced by Grammy-nominated engineer/producer Steve Drown, and features
brother Nate Schrock, frontman for the alt-country band The Coming Grass, and his guitarist, Steve Jones. DaCosta's recognizable
melodic horn stylings give the record a definitive feel. The album also features bassist Anne Deck and drummer Ginger Cote, both
long-time members of the band, as well as introduces Jeff Rojo, Marc Chillemi, and Dominica-born Rastafarian musician Nyah Henderson
Raised on the coast of Maine (father a fisherman-playwright, mother a grade-school teacher), Kate Schrock left
home at 16, finished high school at the Putney School in Vermont, and then headed to New York City and Paris where she spent nearly 2
years working as a fashion model. Uncompelled, Kate began reading Dostoevsky and Nietzsche on park benches between go-sees in le
Jardin Du Luxemburg, and sneaking into the back rooms of piano stores on Av du Maine to work on her secret life as a bad poet and
budding songwriter. Inspired by the evocative work of independent filmmaker Wim Wenders, and a synchronistic day spent alone with
Bill Murray walking the perimeter of Paris and swapping wild stories, Kate took a leap of fate and quit the 'biz', opting instead
to immerse herself in the heady waters of philosophy and art back in the U.S. Activating this new direction in her life at the
University of Chicago, she fronted Sin Embargo, a Velvet Underground-like band in Hyde Park, and worked on and off quite happily
for an unglamorous $6 an hour as maintenance person at the national headquarters for the Church of the Brethren. Kate's next journey
took her to Bennington College where she studied performance and jammed with the jazz students who attended there. After completing
college, Kate moved into a burned-out apartment building in Times Square and began performing in small clubs in the East Village and
Bleeker Street to audiences oftentimes consisting solely of her friend Bob. When the riots in Los Angeles caused her concern about
safety in the NY urban jungle, Kate ventured back to Maine where she discovered a thriving music scene in Portland and began work on
her first album, Refuge, which she released in 1994.
Systemically restless, Kate returned to Chicago in 1997 where she released her second album Shunyata, a dynamic
recording effort that caught the attention and ears of the audiophile community and was voted a "record to die for" by
Stereophile Magazine. It was on the strength of these two albums and Kate's inspired live performances that
Famous Music Publishing signed her in 1998. It was shortly thereafter that Zero Hour Records positioned themselves to release
Kate's first national album, "Shooting Up On Faith," but declared bankruptcy just weeks before the record was scheduled to hit the racks.
With the wind temporarily out of her sails, Kate came off the road and landed in a 200-year-old farmhouse barely 3 miles from where
she grew up as a child in Maine.
Uninspired and tired, Kate received a much-welcomed visit from long-time friend Dave Rave, former lead singer for the
Canadian punk band Teenage Head. His presence at the farm helped to remove the jinx of a writing block with which she'd been wrestling.
This unleashed the material that would eventually appear on her third album Dames Rocket, which she once again released
independently on her own label. In support of this new album, Kate began to make her way again around the U.S. tour circuit until
the aftershock of 9-11dampened the live performance landscape. This sparked Rave to revisit Schrock at her farm in Maine, and with
the able assistance and talents of Glen Marshall, a studio engineer and protégé of Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois, they put together
the blueprint for her fourth album Indiana.
Indiana was recorded in 4 days in a church-turned-studio in Hamilton, Ontario. It features Juno award winner
Tom Wilson (Blackie and the Rodeo Kings) on "If Loving You", a hauntingly heart-wrenching duet penned by Schrock, Rave and Marshall.
Rave also contributed his unique vocals to "Need", and to the title track, "Indiana." The rest of the band playing on the album
is a veritable "who's who" of the Hamilton music scene, and features Ray Farrugia on drums (Junkhouse), Keith Lindsey on keyboard
and accordion (Daniel Lanois), Bill Becker on guitar (Ponderoo), and Peter Rhibany on bass (Motown).
In 2003, Schrock and Rave hit the road in support of Indiana and Rave's own Everyday Magic album. It was at the
last show of their tour that Kate met Glen DaCosta and began the work on Invocation.
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