Toby Burke

Toby Francis X. Burke[1] (born Melbourne, Victoria) is an Australian musician who also performs as Horse Stories.[2]

Biography

Toby Burke was born in Melbourne. His music career began when he started performing under the band name, Horse Stories, as a guitarist, singer-songwriter in the US in 2000. The name is said to have been taken from an album by fellow Melbourne band Dirty Three.

Horse Stories' first record, Travelling Mercies (for Troubled Paths), was recorded with Texas-born drummer Clinton Stapleton in a friend's converted garage and released on UK label Loose Music in 2001. Burke and Stapleton went on to make two more Horse Stories records (with other musicians): One Hundred Waves and Everyone's A Photographer.

A prolific and productive writer, in 2004 Toby Burke released a 'solo' record under his own name and in 2005 began recording experimental instrumental music as Perfect Black Swan, with the aim of collaborating with artists in other media.

Toby Burke currently lives in Los Angeles and works as a writer and musician.

From NME magazine:[3]

Although he had to up sticks from Australia to Los Angeles in order to get properly noticed, things are beginning to happen at last for Horse Stories mainman Toby Burke. Three albums in, the unfettered melancholy bliss of the man from Melbourne’s electronica-tinged, dust-clouded tales are surely going to find themselves a wider audience. Well if there’s any justice they will, anyway. The woozy psychedelia of ‘Firewall’ and the tortured beauty of ‘The Wheels’ recall Wilco’s recent awesome studio-bound experimentation and REM at their most coun-trified respectively. Really, there’s no higher praise than that.

Discography

Albums

Horse Stories

Toby Burke

Perfect Black Swan

Singles

'Horse Stories

References

  1. ""Amber Lights" at APRA search engine". Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA). Retrieved 18 February 2010.
  2. Spencer, Chris; Zbig Nowara; Paul McHenry (2002) [1987]. "HORSE STORIES". The Who's Who of Australian Rock. Noble Park, Vic.: Five Mile Press. ISBN 1-86503-891-1. Retrieved 18 February 2010. Note: [on-line] version established at White Room Electronic Publishing Pty Ltd in 2007 and was expanded from the 2002 edition.
  3. http://www.horse-stories.com/EAP_NME.gif
  4. http://www.abc.net.au/local/reviews/2005/03/29/1334308.htm
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