Corey Dargel

Corey Dargel (born 1977) is a Texas-bred, Brooklyn-based composer, writer, and singer whose gentle assault on pop and classical idioms creates a tension that pervades his music. Deadpan and detached vocals reveal heartbreaking intimacies, awkward and obtrusive drum patterns struggle against fragile harmonies, vocals and music uneasily oppose each other as songs stumble to their ends. The New Yorker magazine calls him “a baroquely unclassifiable” composer of “ingenious nouveau art songs.” Salon praises his songs’ “rococo ingenuity” and “sustained bursts of lyrical brilliance,” and according to Gramophone magazine, he has “a compositional sense guaranteed to keep close listeners on their toes. Words and music are truly equal partners….”

Dargel’s music has been profiled by Rachel Maddow (The Rachel Maddow Show), Kurt Andersen (Studio 360), Alison Stewart (Weekend Edition), and David Garland (Spinning On Air).

Dargel has released two solo albums, Less Famous Than You in 2006 on the Use Your Teeth label and Other People’s Love Songs by New Amsterdam Records in 2008.  The New York Times calls Other People’s Love Songs “at once wistful and wry, tender and irreverent…. [G]iving voice to the lives and relationships of his subjects, [Dargel] invests melodies with playful melismatic turns, evoking Kurt Weill cabaret….” Jayson Greene of Pitchfork.com writes, “[Dargel] plays the role of a sardonic-hipster Cyrano, translating…tangled and intense feelings into artful, sophisticated pop songs.”  His third album, Someone Will Take Care of Me, was released by New Amsterdam Records in May, 2010, and distributed by Naxos of America.

Removable Parts, Dargel’s music-theater piece about love and voluntary amputation, won the 2007 New York Innovative Theatre Award for Outstanding Performance-Art Production and was hailed by the New York Times as “almost perversely pleasurable… with an intelligent grace that is as moving as it is impressive.” Removable Parts was remounted in 2009 as part of HERE Arts Center’s Culturemart festival and the Public Theater’s “Under the Radar” festival.

Dargel received his formal training in music composition at Oberlin Conservatory, where he studied privately with John Luther Adams, Pauline Oliveros, Brenda Hutchinson, and Lewis Neilson.  He has received awards and residencies from the MAP Fund, the American Composers Forum, the Jerome Foundation, the Aaron Copland Fund for Music, the MacDowell Colony, New Dramatists, and the Atlantic Center for the Arts.


Corey Dargel appears in the following:

Corey Dargel

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

These two songs come from the larger work Thirteen Near-Death Experiences, an art-pop song cycle about different kinds of psychiatric delusions, with a focus on hypochondria. Everyb...

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Custom-Made Love Song

Friday, February 08, 2008

Corey Dargel takes commissions to write personalized love songs. Last year, we offered listeners a chance to win one of these indie pop compositions. Listeners’ love stories poured in, and the letter from Teresa Walsh, from Santa Rosa, California, was selected as the winner.

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Forever 23

Friday, February 08, 2008

Kurt asked Corey Dargel to write a song for his wife, Anne Kreamer. Kurt surprises Anne in the studio with the big reveal, a song all about their first date 30 years ago.

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Bonus Track: "Had I Jumped"

Friday, February 08, 2008

Corey Dargel's "Had I Jumped (for Anne from Kurt)"

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Bonus Track: "My Voice Is in Your Head"

Friday, February 08, 2008

Corey Dargel's "My Voice Is in Your Head (for Katie from Teresa)"

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More from Corey

Friday, February 09, 2007

Love songs aren’t just for lovers. Corey Dargel writes tributes for family members too – like this one, for a friend whose mother was suffering from Alzheimers.

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Enough with Silly Love Songs

Friday, February 09, 2007

Love may be something to sing about, but what if you can’t carry a tune? Hire someone to do the serenading for you. Singer-songwriter Corey Dargel will write and perform a 3-4 minute, custom-built love song for your lover, friend, family member, pet, whomever. Kurt finds out ...

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