Dubbed "the poet laureate of the lovelorn", Ad Frank follows a long tradition of brooding, hyper-literate curmudgeons that includes Leonard Cohen, Lloyd Cole and Roddy Frame. His wry, self-deprecating lyrics tell familiar tales of a life and loves that did not go as planned. Stopping just short of morose, Ad offsets his darker side with wry musings like, "Is it too late to be good, or is the answer obvious? The best of what was left went to a stripper in Providence."
Together with his band, 70s-influenced powerhouse The Fast Easy Women, Ad and company deliver a sound that evokes late glam and early new wave. Now in his third decade as a songwriter and performer, Ad has shared bills with his idol, John Cale, jazz legend Mose Allison, Vic Chestnutt, American Music Club, and The Bravery. His music has been featured on "One Life to Live" and NPR’s Marketplace. Ad has performed live and on record with the Dresden Dolls, the Willard Grant Conspiracy, and Martin Carr of the Boo Radleys.
A critic’s favorite, his 2005 album, The World’s Best Ex-Boyfriend, "bursts with love-lorn desperation" according to the Boston Globe. The Weekly Dig declared its flagship anthem, "Lucky," to be "an introspective crooner, a ballad just this side of stadium-sized, just dripping with heart and brimming with clever, poignant turns of phrase."
Ad’s fifth and latest album, "Your Secrets Are Mine Now," was completed in late 2008 and is due out on Archenemy Records (Freezepop, The Elevator Drops) on November 3. This album examines the lifecycle of longing, love, betrayal and loss, from the hopeful leading rally "Open up the Patio (Pretty Girls Are Back in Style)" to the mournful closer, "Timing Is Everything." Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
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