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Marc Delgado

In The Darkness: Woodstock folk artist Marc Delgado thought she might get away on ‘The Queens of Coming and Going’

Taken off his well-received twelve-track album called ‘Wildwood Road‘, Marc Delgado sings with such tranquility and ever-lasting calmness on wishing that she got out of all the darkly-lit times with ‘The Queens of Coming and Going‘.

Marc Delgado is a Woodstock, New York-based indie Americana-folk singer-songwriter. He is a skilled craftsman who has seen many things, good and bad, that have made him into a self-aware artist, who performs with an old school edge and truly effortless charm.

Originally from California, Delgado, after working a succession of dead-end jobs, Marc quit everything, got married & moved to the woods.” ~ Marc Delgado

You feel like you have drifted away into a state of mind from many years before, his voice takes you to places you haven’t felt for many years, or at all. This is a singer who clearly loves telling stories, as he is a true singer-songwriter who is all about the journey, to seeking that much-needed self-enlightenment.

He began writing songs chronicling his life & his odyssey as an addict in the motels & low-income neigbourhoods of The Central Valley & Southern California to redemption & recovery.” ~ Marc Delgado

The Queens of Coming and Going‘ from the well-respected Woodstock, New York indie Americana-folk artist Marc Delgado, is a nostalgic song which feels so wonderfully timeless, as he sings with a classic style which is so rare these days. His gritty vocals and compelling storytelling, is a real marvel to behold during these strange times we currently live in.

Hear this new track on his Spotify page and see more on his FB music page.

Reviewed by Llewelyn Screen

Marc Delgado tells The Cautionary Tale of Richard Manuel

The Cautionary Tale of Richard Manuel is the indie psych-folk debut single from Woodstock-based, California-born singer-songwriter Marc Delgado. If the styles of Paul Simon, the National and Dinosaur Jr coalesced, the sonic result wouldn’t be all too far from Delgado’s debut that pulls the storytelling roots of folk up through a sleek and modern production.

The kicking beat, lofty colourful guitars and spacy synths converge to create a psychedelic platform for Delgado’s instantly magnetic vocals that draw you in by the unapologetically unadulterated passion to provide 3:28 minutes of total aural escapism.

The Cautionary Tale of Richard Manuel is now available to stream via Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast