Glorytellers
Biography

The name Glorytellers can have positive or negative denotations. A gloryteller can be one who recounts resplendence or grandeur, such as someone who sings about the possibility of a more egalitarian society, or it can be someone who proclaims veneration for expired majesty, such as those who stir up nationalism by trumpeting a vague and narrow set of values. "Glory" is also a verb meaning "to take great pride or pleasure in," so a gloryteller can designate someone who takes pride in narrating.
The creative force behind Glorytellers is guitarist/singer/songwriter Geoff Farina, who spent the better part of 14 years fronting Boston's genre-bending Karate, and as one-half of the formative lo-fi duo Secret Stars. Farina's latest effort reveals a set of delicate ballads that draw from the quirky psych of the Raincoats and Spacemen 3, the rustic narratives of The Band and Mose Allison, and even the dense harmonies of pianists like Jelly Roll Morton, Herbie Nichols and Andrew Hill.
Glorytellers also manifest Farina's love for earlier American music, including the dense ragtime guitar of Blind Blake and Rev. Gary Davis, the earnest blues of Robert Pete Williams, Geeshie Wiley, Willie Johnson, the cathartic acoustic music of Roscoe Holcom, Robbie Basho, Skip James, Sonny Terry and Brownie McGee, the narrative songwriting of The Band, Leonard Cohen, Mose Allison, Merle Haggard, Gram Parsons, and Bob Dylan, the impressionistic harmonies of pianists Herbie Nichols, Andrew Hill, Jelly Roll Morton, Bill Evans, and Abdullah Ibrahim, and the electric guitar styles of Jim Hall, Lonnie Johnson, Johnny Smith, Otis Rush, Grant Green, Link Wray, and Jimmy Bryant.