"... haunting Midwestern songstress delivers mellow lyrical tunes!" - Indie-music.com
Indie-music.com (Apr 20, 2008)
I first met Megan King in the fall of 2002, when she signed up for my Intro to World Folk Music class at Indiana-Purdue Fort Wayne. Now, as someone who teaches college courses on folk and popular music, I’m accustomed to drawing the musically gifted and musically inclined. I’m constantly amazed at how much my students already know, how eager they are to learn more, how engaged and enthusiastic they are. But Megan was one of those who stands out from the beginning. It wasn’t just that she stayed awake (most manage) and seemed attentive (until the first exam, how can you really tell?). It wasn’t just that she nodded at appropriate times (you can fake that) and laughed at my jokes (I’m sure a lot of times, they’re just sparing my feelings). True, she was often carrying a guitar (many are). And she was "working on a CD" (who isn’t these days?). But Megan asked questions—really relevant questions. She offered informed observations. She knew what ASCAP was and understood the difference between intellectual property and the public domain. She immediately grasped the difference between folk music and the folksong revival. She’d heard of Sligo-style fiddling. She could follow the plot of a Child ballad and hear Cuban rhumba’s influence in Congolese soukous. In short, Megan seemed to get it. I didn’t—not quite. Then one night Megan came down to open stage at Fort Wayne’s Toast & Jam Coffeehouse. And I got it. Megan King sings like a wild bird. She picks a mean guitar. And she writes songs—not just doodles but songs: musical pieces with a beginning, a middle, and an end, actual songs with a structure and a point. So I finally got it. Megan King feels music. She knows music. Megan King gets music. Now that her CD is out, you can get it too. So get it. If you don’t, maybe think about taking a class.
JOHN MINTON
Professor of Folklore
Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne
Liner Notes - Confidential Reality (Dec 23, 2004)