Biography

Originally hailing from Boston, MA, Corner House takes their name from the place where the four young band members found musical family in one another - their shared home in Brighton, as students at Berklee College of Music. Emerging from varied genre backgrounds, the quartet’s unique strength is their desire to learn from one another, not only in musical skill and style, but in life experience; such that every challenge overcome by one band member becomes part of the group’s shared musical and personal DNA. Mutually inspired, learning from one another, and open to any and all ideas, the group is a beautiful representation of their generation; not only tolerating, but embracing diversity in every aspect of their music making.

Press release

Boston’s Corner House grows together on new album How Beautiful It’s Been

Originally hailing from Boston, MA, Corner House takes their name from the place where the four young band members found musical family in one another - their shared home in Brighton, as students at Berklee College of Music. Emerging from varied genre backgrounds, the quartet’s unique strength is their desire to learn from one another, not only in musical skill and style, but in life experience; such that every challenge overcome by one band member becomes part of the group’s shared musical and personal DNA. On their debut full length album How Beautiful It’s Been the band reveals the sublime result of that growth mindset, with a singular sound that incorporates old time, Scottish, progressive bluegrass and folk.

Originally made up of songwriter and guitarist Ethan Hawkins, Scottish fiddle player Louise Bichan, and bluegrass mandolinist Ethan Setiawan, Corner House are students of a wide variety of musical traditions. In the autumn of 2017, the group debuted at FreshGrass Festival in North Adams, MA, before recording a self-titled EP and touring Scotland the following year. Returning from overseas, the three found the illustrious cellist, Casey Murray, living just down the street and invited her to join the fold, unveiling the new line-up on a second EP, Smart Folks, released in 2019.  For their debut full length record, which focuses more on lyric based arrangements, they enlisted harp virtuoso Maeve Gilchrist, a past mentor to all four band members, to produce. “We all really admired her musicality, arranging and writing, and Ethan and Maeve bonded over poetry, and songwriting”, explains Bichan. 

How Beautiful It’s Been features five songs and four instrumentals, which serve as soundscape meditations between each lyrical offering.  Several of the instrumentals, such as “2 Rights Make A Chicken”, showcase the Celtic influence in the band, with gorgeous cello and fiddle melodies calling Alisdair Fraser and Natalie Haas recordings to mind. In this context, however, they are also accompanied by rhythmic and arpeggiated mandolin and guitar, emerging into improvised solos before returning to the melodic backbone of the tune. 

Although Hawkins is the sole lyric writer, the subject matter of the group’s songs is a reflection of their collective experience. “What this band really does well is challenge me to be a mirror rather than write songs based on my own life” he explains. “A lot of the lyrics that I wrote were drawn from conversations that I’ve had with the rest of the band, which I think parallels our experiences with each other musically”.  One such song is “Angel Falls”, which Hawkins wrote after a long discussion with Murray about her experiences with religion as a queer person. “I am human / I have choices  / To love who I want to love / I have a right” he sings on “Angel Falls”, one of the album’s standout tracks. 

On “Young Brother”, Hawkins writes about the birth of the band and the unbreakable bond of coming of age together. “I wanna sing with that little Louisa / Talk all that shit with that Tom / When the chorus connects with the morning / They can keep me from singing it wrong” he sings. The mutual inspiration and joy that the quartet finds in one another seems to radiate from the music with contagion. The song is nostalgic and full of warmth, drawing the listener into magical nights of music made into the wee hours.

In many ways, Corner House is the band we all wish we could be a part of. Mutually inspired, learning from one another, and open to any and all ideas, the group is a beautiful representation of their generation; not only tolerating, but embracing diversity in every aspect of their music making. If we listen closely enough, we may be able to learn just as much from them as they have from one another. 

Connect

Booking

Press inquiries

Louise Bichan
pr@cornerhouseband.com

Press

Corner House is a rare collective of musicians whose strength lies in their lyrics and the emotions evoked by their music—they have the power to effect change. Their brilliant use of instruments and lyrics beg the listener to dig deeper to search for answers. They paint across a wide palette while honoring music from the past.
— M Music & Musicians magazine
It’s warm, beautiful, and earthly and feels like it comes straight from the soul.
— Divide and Conquer
Fun-filled and vibrant. There’s also a beautiful groove going on throughout this piece that makes it highly addictive and danceable. The album will involve a unique blend of indie rock and pop with bluegrass, Celtic, old time sounds…we can’t wait to hear it.
— Folk Radio UK
Expertly played instruments and beautifully arranged vocal harmonies. Lilting, high flying and leaving a flutter in your chest.
— Red Line Roots
Corner House has a sweetness running in all their music, with shiny bright lyrical brilliance as well.
— Americana Highways
A joyful, textured mixture of traditional genres 8/10
— Americana UK
  • “Corner House’s music is thoughtful and inspired...points straight in the direction of where roots music is headed, and it’s a great and bright destination. Ferocious fiddle, with a couple of the most talented and exciting young string players in the US right now. Any corners you get to turn with them are going to be unexpected fun.”

    Darol Anger

  • “Corner House’s music is thoughtful and inspired...points straight in the direction of where roots music is headed, and it’s a great and bright destination.”

    Bruce Molsky

  • "Swaying through joyous and mournful moments"

    Brittany Haas

  • “These fine musicians and lovely people think about each note they make and it comes together in something bigger. Simply beautiful music.”

    Maeve Gilchrist

  • “Deep grooves, beautiful songs, exceptionally rendered fiddle tunes, and playing of the very highest level. Big fan!!"

    Joe K. Walsh

  • “Corner House have created a gem of a second EP…an intricately arranged, wonderfully listenable mix of songs, instrumentals and styles.”

    Natalie Haas

  • “Creative and dynamic arrangements with no shortage of good ideas here."

    Stash Wyslouch

  • "Caribou Party weaves together lush instrumental textures, thoughtful arrangements, and intimate lyrics, culminating in an exciting collection of tunes and songs that will keep you listening to the twists and turns, while drawing you into the space of four friends making music amidst a global pandemic.”

    Allison de Groot

  • “Virtuosic instrumental prowess and natural musicality that puts shivers down one’s spine”

    Gabe Hirshfeld

Tour Highlights

2023
Rochester International Jazz Festival
Maine Folk Festival
Bellingham Folk Festival

2017 - 2022
Freshgrass Festival
Red Wing Roots Festival
Roxbury Fiddler's Day
Ossipee Valley Music Festival
Grey Fox Bluegrass Festival
One Longfellow Square, Portland ME
Springville Center for the Arts, Springville NY
Club Passim, Boston MA
Falcon Ridge Folk Festival
Folklub, Glasgow, Scotland
Lyth Arts Centre, Lyth, Scotland

Releases

May 27th 2022

How Beautiful It’s Been features five songs and four instrumentals, which serve as soundscape meditations between each lyrical offering. Several of the instrumentals, such as “2 Rights Make A Chicken”, showcase the Celtic influence in the band, with gorgeous cello and fiddle melodies calling Alisdair Fraser and Natalie Haas recordings to mind. In this context, however, they are also accompanied by rhythmic and arpeggiated mandolin and guitar, emerging into improvised solos before returning to the melodic backbone of the tune.

Fun-filled and vibrant. There’s also a beautiful groove going on throughout this piece that makes it highly addictive and danceable.
— Folk Radio UK

March 5th 2021

Caribou Party comes out of a time of global crisis, after displacement and a newfound abundance of time. This music sits in a proud place in the heart of Corner House. The hope is that the minute your finger touches play, you feel the gravity the band felt listening to the notes leave their little music boxes. Come celebrate as this small blessing is released in the middle of a chaotic upset in human history, and know that we all still have the capacity to be grateful for ourselves, for love, and for the music that we share with one another.

Smart Folks is the first EP from Corner House which includes Casey Murray on cello and claw-hammer banjo, and is a diverse mix of sounds and textures, songs and tunes. The first cut, a collection of Irish slip jigs (Farewell to Whaley Range and Soggy’s Slip Jig) combines swirling melody and counterpoint. Following that is one of two Hawkins-penned tunes on the recording. Happy Now is a musing on family and depression, brought to life by the band. The title track, Smart Folks, penned by Setiawan, works with odd phrase lengths and a singing melody to create a unique profile, characteristic to his writing. The album closes with a banjo tune by Murray. Through the Snow-Covered Pines evokes the Appalachian string-band side of the band, finishing the album on an uplifting note.
The tunes and songs that make up Smart Folks came to be over a period of several months, before being committed to recordings in March 2019.

September 13th, 2019

Singles

released October 1, 2021

Written by Ethan Hawkins
Engineered by Peter Atkinson at Blue Jay Studios, March 2020
Mixed and mastered by Ethan Setiawan, Sassafras Hill Records
Artwork by Louise Bichan

released July 17, 2021

Recorded in Massachusetts in March of 2020.
Written by Casey Murray
Engineered by Peter Atkinson
Mixed and mastered by Ethan Setiawan
Video by Louise Bichan