Sitting in San Francisco, mid-spring and mid-drought and hoping for rain, I suddenly realised I had a sizeable pile of music that I’d either been sent in the hope of a review, or else had grabbed because I’d just seen […]
Deborah Grabien can claim a long personal acquaintance with the fleshpots — and quiet little towns — of Europe. She has lived and worked and hung out, from London to Geneva to Paris to Florence, and a few stops in between.
But home is where the heart is. Since her first look at the Bay Area, she’s always come home to San Francisco. In 1981, after spending some years in Europe, she came back to Northern California to stay.
After seeing the publication of four novels between 1989 and 1993, she took a decade away from writing, to really learn how to cook. That done, she picked up where she’d left off, with the five novels of her Haunted Ballads series being brought out by St. Martins Minotaur between 2003 and 2007. Still Life With Devils, a standalone thriller about a serial killer who may not be human, was released by Drollerie Press in December 2007; Drollerie also released And Then Put Out The Light, the story of a sculptress who deals with the breakup of her marriage in an unusual way. Dark’s Tale, her first YA title, draws on her and her husband’s experiences working with the San Francisco SPCA’s feral cat program in Golden Gate Park. Deborah’s non-fiction essays and reviews have appeared in multiple publications and anthologies. She’s a music editor for Green Man Review specialising in all things Bay Area, Rolling Stones or Richard Thompson, and a regular reviewer for No Depression. She revels in her songwriting partnership with Bay Area guitarist and former RatDog guitarist Mark Karan, and with Lauren Murphy.
Deborah was deeply involved in the Bay Area music scene, from the end of the Haight-Ashbury heyday until the mid-1970s. The eight novels of her current series, the Kinkaid Chronicles, are the books of her heart. Narrated by ageing rock superstar guitarist John “JP†Kinkaid, this character-driven mystery series not only takes the reader into the way rock and roll really works at the highest end, but illuminates what living with a chronic progressive illness is like. Like JP, Deborah herself has lived with multiple sclerosis for well over a decade.
Deborah’s been happily married to Nicholas Grabien since 1983. A San Francisco native and another member of the local music scene in its heyday, Nic is a bassist, while Deborah plays guitar. Together with drummer Larry Luthi, their band, The Sound Field, performs originals around the Bay Area. The Sound Field's first CD, The Bucket List, features guest players that include David Lindley, Pete Sears and Jason Crosby, and is due out in early August 2017..
These days, in between cat rescues and cookery, Deborah can generally be found listening to music, playing music on one of many guitars, hanging out with her musician friends, or writing about music, insofar as her multiple sclerosis will allow.
Sitting in San Francisco, mid-spring and mid-drought and hoping for rain, I suddenly realised I had a sizeable pile of music that I’d either been sent in the hope of a review, or else had grabbed because I’d just seen […]
I should probably lead into what’s likely to be a deep look into this extraordinary 10-song CD with something snappy, or possibly something erudite and intellectual. I can’t. Not going to happen. Every song on Lauren Murphy’s “El Dorado” hits in […]
Here’s a scenario for you. Picture this: One of the premier keyboard players of the past 40 years sits down with one of the greatest producers in the history of modern music. The keyboard player’s got a raft of original songs he wants to […]
For Deadheads, popular culture historians, kids who yearn to have been part of the scene around the Grateful Dead but were born too late, or people who appreciate great photography, this book is the gold standard. It’s absolutely gorgeous. Not […]
Recently, a friend casually asked what I was listening to. When I said I was putting together a review for Achilles Wheel’s new album, Stones to Sand, his response was an immediate “Awesome! Those guys can play!” Since the friend in […]
A few days ago, I got an email from publicist and old friend Dennis McNally, letting me know that a small package of interest would be arriving shortly. Really? Cool. What is it? Bob Bralove and Tom Constanten, on a […]
Day One Once upon a time, when multi-tracking and isolation meant something very different in Recording Studio Land than they do today, I spent some time in that particular environment. I’ve been in some world-class studios: Wally Heider Studio C, […]
Living in the Bay Area since 1971, I sometimes get the blank stare from other locals. I don’t want to listen to Grateful Dead wannabes or guitarists who sound as if they’re on a liquid IV drip with Garcia riffs […]
Let me say something upfront: Matter of Time, from Santa Cruz songwriter and guitarist Steven Graves (http://www.stevengravesmusic.com), is not what I expected. It’s something much better: a very pleasant shock. The truth is, every time I hear about a new […]
My appreciation piece/eulogy for Bert Jansch On the morning of 8 December 1980, my alarm went off in my London flat. It was a clock radio, set to BBC, and coming out of the mists of sleep was the news […]
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