Phosphorescent
As Phosphorescent, singer/songwriter Mathew Houck embarked on a slow-burning journey that saw his music rise from dusty homespun albums to critically lauded and internationally recognized songs as he pushed on through the years. Houck wrote songs and toured solo while in his early twenties, taking on the Phosphorescent moniker in 2001 and releasing several albums before signing to heavyweight indie label Dead Oceans with the release of 2007's Pride. Relocating from Athens, Georgia to Brooklyn, Houck assembled a cast of various bandmates, touring relentlessly through the 2000's and finding more success with each new album. 2013's career highlight Muchacho would be Phosphorescent's best-received work to date. The album sold better than anything that came before it in Houck's catalog and included standout cut "Song for Zula," which was used in multiple films and television shows across the globe. After starting a family and moving back to Nashville, Houck took several years off before re-emerging with 2018's C'est La Vie. Singer/songwriter/multi-instrumentalist Mathew Houck was born in 1980 and grew up in Huntsville, Alabama. He moved to Athens, Georgia around the turn of the century and began making music solo under the name Fillup Shack. 2000's self-released Hipolit and a tour of Spain and England would be the only activity as Fillup Shack before Houck took on the Phosphorescent moniker. Early output from the project was at times more drifting and experimental, filtering Houck's plaintive folk and country songwriting through layers of fuzzy production. This style informed 2003 debut album A Hundred Times or More and its 2005 follow-up Aw Come Aw Wry. By this time Houck had left Georgia for Brooklyn, New York. The project reached the next level when Houck signed to Secretly Canadian subsidiary label Dead Oceans. The label started Phosphorescent's run with the release of third album Pride in the fall of 2007. While still touched by the woozy, ungrounded approach of the earlier albums, the songwriting was hookier and more focused, beginning a move away from experimental urges and into more polished material that would continue with subsequent albums. More straightforward indeed, the next offering from Phosphorescent was 2009's To Willie, a collection of sincerely delivered Willie Nelson covers with Houck's wavering voice high and clear in the mix. Fourth album Here's to Taking It Easy arrived the next year and was followed by extensive international touring. In 2013, fifth album Muchacho was released, a hybrid of traditional country influences and a more electronic-leaning take on the experimental textures that defined earlier albums. The album was Phosphorescent's best-received work to date, gaining critical praise across the board, as well as enthusiastic responses from growing numbers of fans. More touring ensued and enough new interest in the group resulted in 2015's expansive live album Live at the Music Hall. Over a decade of touring and nonstop music making saw Houck slowing down significantly as major life events unfolded over the next few years. He began a relationship with bandmate Jo Schornikow, who had worked with him during the making of Muchacho, and the two moved to Nashville and started a family, having two children in quick succession. During this downtime, Houck wired up his new Nashville dwelling with a recording studio and began a drawn-out writing process for what would become Phosphorescent's sixth album, 2018's C'est La Vie.© Fred Thomas /TiVo Read more
As Phosphorescent, singer/songwriter Mathew Houck embarked on a slow-burning journey that saw his music rise from dusty homespun albums to critically lauded and internationally recognized songs as he pushed on through the years. Houck wrote songs and toured solo while in his early twenties, taking on the Phosphorescent moniker in 2001 and releasing several albums before signing to heavyweight indie label Dead Oceans with the release of 2007's Pride. Relocating from Athens, Georgia to Brooklyn, Houck assembled a cast of various bandmates, touring relentlessly through the 2000's and finding more success with each new album. 2013's career highlight Muchacho would be Phosphorescent's best-received work to date. The album sold better than anything that came before it in Houck's catalog and included standout cut "Song for Zula," which was used in multiple films and television shows across the globe. After starting a family and moving back to Nashville, Houck took several years off before re-emerging with 2018's C'est La Vie.
Singer/songwriter/multi-instrumentalist Mathew Houck was born in 1980 and grew up in Huntsville, Alabama. He moved to Athens, Georgia around the turn of the century and began making music solo under the name Fillup Shack. 2000's self-released Hipolit and a tour of Spain and England would be the only activity as Fillup Shack before Houck took on the Phosphorescent moniker. Early output from the project was at times more drifting and experimental, filtering Houck's plaintive folk and country songwriting through layers of fuzzy production. This style informed 2003 debut album A Hundred Times or More and its 2005 follow-up Aw Come Aw Wry. By this time Houck had left Georgia for Brooklyn, New York. The project reached the next level when Houck signed to Secretly Canadian subsidiary label Dead Oceans. The label started Phosphorescent's run with the release of third album Pride in the fall of 2007. While still touched by the woozy, ungrounded approach of the earlier albums, the songwriting was hookier and more focused, beginning a move away from experimental urges and into more polished material that would continue with subsequent albums. More straightforward indeed, the next offering from Phosphorescent was 2009's To Willie, a collection of sincerely delivered Willie Nelson covers with Houck's wavering voice high and clear in the mix. Fourth album Here's to Taking It Easy arrived the next year and was followed by extensive international touring. In 2013, fifth album Muchacho was released, a hybrid of traditional country influences and a more electronic-leaning take on the experimental textures that defined earlier albums. The album was Phosphorescent's best-received work to date, gaining critical praise across the board, as well as enthusiastic responses from growing numbers of fans. More touring ensued and enough new interest in the group resulted in 2015's expansive live album Live at the Music Hall. Over a decade of touring and nonstop music making saw Houck slowing down significantly as major life events unfolded over the next few years. He began a relationship with bandmate Jo Schornikow, who had worked with him during the making of Muchacho, and the two moved to Nashville and started a family, having two children in quick succession. During this downtime, Houck wired up his new Nashville dwelling with a recording studio and began a drawn-out writing process for what would become Phosphorescent's sixth album, 2018's C'est La Vie.
© Fred Thomas /TiVo
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The BBC Sessions
Phosphorescent
Alternative & Indie - Released by Dead Oceans on Jun 11, 2021
24-Bit 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Muchacho
Phosphorescent
Alternative & Indie - Released by Dead Oceans on Mar 18, 2013
3F de TéléramaPitchfork: Best New MusicUnder the name Phosphorescent, indie country songwriter Matthew Houck has walked a drunken path, wobbling closer to the indie side on some records and ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Muchacho De Lujo (Deluxe Edition)
Phosphorescent
Alternative & Indie - Released by Dead Oceans on Mar 25, 2013
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Like a Rolling Stone
Phosphorescent
Folk - Released by Calldown Music on Mar 18, 2022
24-Bit 48.0 kHz - Stereo -
Homecoming
Phosphorescent
Folk - Released by Calldown Music on Apr 16, 2022
24-Bit 48.0 kHz - Stereo -
C’est La Vie
Phosphorescent
Alternative & Indie - Released by Dead Oceans on Oct 5, 2018
In 2013 Matthew Houck relied on the earthly charm of country folk to show us his vision of the great feeling of love on his album Muchacho. Since then ...
24-Bit 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Pride
Phosphorescent
Alternative & Indie - Released by Dead Oceans on Oct 22, 2007
On his latest album under the Phosphorescent guise, Mathew Houck continues his work with reflective folk music given a somewhat ethereal bent. If not ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Song For Zula (BBC Radio Performance 2013)
Phosphorescent
Alternative & Indie - Released by Dead Oceans on May 19, 2021
24-Bit 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Song for Zula
Phosphorescent
Alternative & Indie - Released by Dead Oceans on Jan 15, 2013
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Bad News from Home
Phosphorescent
Rock - Released by Calldown Music on Jan 17, 2022
24-Bit 48.0 kHz - Stereo -
I'm a Mess
Phosphorescent
Rock - Released by Calldown Music on Feb 16, 2022
24-Bit 48.0 kHz - Stereo -
C'est La Vie No.2
Phosphorescent
Alternative & Indie - Released by Dead Oceans on Oct 1, 2018
24-Bit 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
To Willie
Phosphorescent
Alternative & Indie - Released by Dead Oceans on Feb 3, 2009
Saying Phosphorescent's tribute album to Willie Nelson is redolent of history is an understatement -- besides the subject of the album itself, the tit ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Here's To Taking It Easy
Phosphorescent
Alternative & Indie - Released by Dead Oceans on May 10, 2010
4 étoiles Rock and FolkMatthew Houck may operate out of the too-cool-for-school, New York City indie rock community, but the Alabama-born mastermind behind Phosphorescent ha ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Live at the Music Hall
Phosphorescent
Alternative & Indie - Released by Dead Oceans on Feb 17, 2015
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Live / Ghost Lights
Phosphorescent
Alternative & Indie - Released by Dead Oceans on Nov 29, 2010
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
The Weight of Flight
Phosphorescent
Folk - Released by Calldown Music on Jan 28, 2019
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Christmas Down Under
Phosphorescent
Alternative & Indie - Released by Dead Oceans on Sep 7, 2018
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
New Birth in New England
Phosphorescent
Alternative & Indie - Released by Dead Oceans on Jul 31, 2018
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
To Love Somebody
Phosphorescent
Pop - Released by Calldown Music on May 16, 2022
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
You Can Make Me Feel Bad
Phosphorescent
Alternative & Indie - Released by Yep Roc Records on Nov 25, 2014
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo