Disappear Fear

disappear fear
Also known as SONiA & disappear fear,
disappear fear orchestra,
SONiA
Origin Baltimore, MD, USA
Genres Indie Folk, Indie Pop, Americana, Latin American, Blues, World
Years active 1987–present
Labels disappear records, Rounder/Philo Records
Associated acts Indigo Girls, The Czars, The E Street Band, Black Light Burns, Charlie Surf Academy, Susan Souza, Commonbond, Chris Chandler, Mama's Black Sheep, Sam Weiser
Members
Sonia Rutstein (SONiA)
Cindy Frank (CiNDY)
Past members
Michael Bowie
Laura Cerulli
Angela Edge
John Grant
Helen Hausman
Seth Kibel
Marc Lawrence
Howard Markman
Christopher Sellman
Dylan Visvikis
Glenn Workman

Disappear Fear (stylized as disappear fear) is an American indie pop/indie folk band formed in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1987. Even though the band has gone through different incarnations, they still make music for audiences around the world.[1]

Contents

Biography

The original band consisted of sisters Sonia Rutstein and Cindy Frank and expanded the following year to include guitarist Howard Markman. Their lyrics often addressed love, life, Baltimore, LGBT rights, and progressive political issues. The pair released four albums as a duo. (According to the band's official website bio, more than a half million copies of disappear fear records have been sold through 2009.) In 1994, after self-releasing their music via their own disappear records label, the band was signed to Rounder/Philo Records. Two years later, Cindy stopped performing regularly with the band in order to focus on her growing family. Occasionally she still provides harmony vocals for the group, and of late, Cindy's teen son Dylan Visvikis has shared his talents on vocals and piano. From about 1996 through 2004, Sonia Rutstein started a solo career (as "SONiA") that took her across the nation and around the globe. She released four well-received LPs under her own name and established herself as a compelling, captivating and popular attraction in the world of LGBT, Lilith Fair, and alt-folk artists, thanks to her passion for her subjects, the honesty of her lyrics, and her warm, positive, and eclectic blend of folk, pop, rock, blues, global sounds, and Americana. In 2005, Sonia re-formed disappear fear with Laura Cerulli on percussion and vocals, Angela Edge on bass guitar and trumpet. Rutstein provided lead vocals, guitar, harmonica and piano. The band released its first album (DF 05 LiVE) in its new incarnation in October 2005 on disappear records, and took SONiA's songs to diverse audiences at home and abroad. Among the major events Rutstein has graced either alone or with band are the March on Washington for Woman and the Concert for Peace at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, DC with Peter, Paul and Mary (March 2003). Her performing destinations have taken her as far away as Jerusalem (where she toured bomb shelters), Fiji, and Australia's Sydney Opera House. The newest disappear fear disc is 2011's Get Your Phil, an album steeped in folk and Americana sounds. Playing on the album are SONiA (songwriter, lead vocals, acoustic guitar, harmonica, piano), CiNDY (vocals) and Tony Correlli (piano). It is a cover album of the late folk singer/songwriter Phil Ochs's music.

Rutstein's 2006 Middle East tour led to the founding of Guitars for Peace, a non-profit foundation that delivers instruments to children in impoverished or war-torn nations.

Discography

disappear fear

SONiA

SONiA & disappear fear

Bandmembers

Current Members

disappear fear
Additional musicians

Past Members

The disappear fear orchestra

Awards and Nominations

SONiA is an award-winning artist: She was presented with the award [2][3] for Best Female Artist of the Year in 1999 for Almost Chocolate and her Me, Too won for Best Acoustic Album in 2001.[4] The band's disappear fear won the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation Media Award for Best Album in 1994.[5] Both No Bomb Is Smart and Tango garnered multiple Grammy Award nominations for Rutstein in the pop and folk categories.[6] Sonia's songs are featured in the teen movie Frog and Wombat and in the independent film Wave Babes. SONiA also scored the entire soundtrack for Dave Marshall's documentary film Autumn's Harvest. In 2002, the Santa Cruz Guitar Company created its SONiA model guitar in Rutstein's honor.

References

  1. ^ Brennan, Sandra. "disappear fear". Allmusic.com. http://www.allmusic.com/artist/disappear-fear-p38416/. Retrieved May 21, 2011. 
  2. ^ Queer Music Heritage [1])
  3. ^ Gay & Lesbian American Music Award
  4. ^ [2]
  5. ^ [3]
  6. ^ "AUDIX - Microphones, Wireless Systems, Monitors and Pro Audio Equipment". Audixusa.com. http://www.audixusa.com/cgi-bin/audix_coranto/viewnews.cgi?id=EkVuAuEZApsUZbzIqR. Retrieved 2010-05-14. 

External links