Massachusetts-based folk singer-songwriter, Dan Pallotta, is sharing Winnebago Dreams, his followup to 2022’s American Pictures. Pallotta describes this new collection of story songs as “a travel diary of a trip through a life fully lived—with all of its happiness, sorrows, ice cream cones and flat tires. It was written to speak to that little lantern inside your heart.
It was inspired by the open road, the love that withstands big changes and hard times, memories of growing up, loss, the ghosts of loved ones gone who shaped who you are, the little things in life that lighten the load, the wisdom that comes with age, and the gratitude you develop for all the ups, the downs, the happy times and the sad on this journey on which we all find ourselves, together—not knowing where we’re going or where we came from—called life.”
Winnebago Dreams features “Pieces,” a tender and emotional piece written following the death of an old neighbour of Pallotta’s named Sue, whose son John was Pallotta’s best friend growing up.
The album features collaborations between Pallotta, fiddle player Suzie Tyrell (Bruce Springsteen), bassist Tony Garnier (music director for Bob Dylan), Ross Petersen (Springsteen), Jon Gordon (Suzanne Vega), Megan Gould (John Mellencamp), and Brian Mitchell (Levon Helm).
“‘Pieces’ are what make up the whole of us. Every time someone we love dies, or an era passes, some piece of us goes with them or with that,” reflects Pallotta.
“In that sense, death doesn’t occur all at once in a final moment. Parts of us are dying as we go on living, and when the moment of passing finally comes, there may not actually be that much of us left anymore.”
Winnebago Dreams as a body of work reflects where Pallotta is at now in his at the age of 62. “You see things from that perspective that you cannot see further down the mountain, and I wanted to articulate those things,” he explains.
“The main theme is about the fulfillment of living life fully—of opening yourself to love, to intimacy, to children, to friendship, despite the pain those things may one day cause you—that you not die having never experienced the joy that comes with living full out for fear of the loss and the pain that goes along with that. Helen Keller said that life is ‘either a daring adventure, or it is nothing at all.’ It’s about living that way.’”