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Frank Palmer

Vancouver, BC
writer profile >
LEVEL
aspiring
GENRES
Singer/Songwriter, Rock , Easy Listening
INSTRUMENTS
bass / acoustic guitar / electric guitar / keyboard / mandolin / piano / synthesizers / vocals
INFLUENCES
The Beatles, AC/DC, The Band, Frank Zappa, Neil Diamond, Neil Young, Warren Zevon, Stravinsky, Metallica, Johnny Cash, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Quentin Tarantino, April Wine, QOTSA, Deep Purple, Willie Nelson, Megadeth, Queen, Kiss, Pantera, The Doors, Frank Sinatra, Don Williams, The Cars, Ernest Hemingway, Guns n Roses, Stone Temple Pilots, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Mozart, Megadeth, Nickelback, Corb Lund Band, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, The Eagles, Kurt Vonnegut, Slayer, David Allan Coe, Gwar, the smalls, Public Enemy, Anthrax, Pink Floyd, Eminem, Bartok, JImi Hendrix, Black Sabbath, Debussy, Janis Joplin, The Blues Brothers, Don Ho, Elliot Smith, CCR, Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band, The Kinks, Nietzche, Cartoons, Friends-Family-Life
DAY JOB
Mental Health Worker
I AM INTERESTED IN
in co writing online
in co writing in person
in networking with songwriters
in pitching songs to artist
in pitching songs to tv
in getting a record deal
in getting a publishing deal
I WRITE:
When I have time

I Also Write:
by myself
with others

I Prefer To Write:
lyrics
melody
music
my network >
     
   

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Home Videos: Gin House

Gin House performs their song "Roots" for a home town crowd.

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Q&A: Bright Eyes

After a brief stint as a solo artist, Conor Oberst has revived Bright Eyes to release The People’s Key, an album that deals with the nature of time, spirituality, and human existence. Also, it’s Rastafarian friendly.

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Robbie Robertson

As a member of The Band, Robbie Robertson changed the course or rock music history, hipping the genre to a more old-timey sound with songs like “The Weight,” “Up On Cripple Creek,” and “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down.” His latest solo album, How To Become Clairvoyant, reflects on his rock and roll past.

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Jessica Lea Mayfield: Look At Miss Ohio

“Things are starting to get weird.”

Jessica Lea Mayfield, whose Nonesuch Records debut Tell Me is in stores now, is on the phone from her home in Ohio and we’re having a good laugh over her recent success. It’s beer o’clock on both ends of the phone, the last interview in a long week of talking to complete strangers for the two of us.

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