"Airwaves" premiered at Billboard December, 2018 -- Nashville musician Andrew Leahey has announced the release of his sophomore LPAirwaves and shared the title track at Billboard, who praised the LP as "a heartfelt homage to Leahey's rock heroes such as Bruce Springsteen, Tom Petty, R.E.M. and others". Airwaves is due March 1, 2019. Written in the wake of a brain operation that nearly cost him his life, Andrew Leahey's sophomore LP,Airwaves, is as carpe diem as they come, an urgent sonic love letter channeling the 1980s FM-radio anthems he cut his teeth on as a kid. “We didn’t have cable TV growing up,” Leahey says, “but my big brother would go over to his friend’s house with a blank VHS cassette and tape a two-hour block of MTV, commercials and all. We’d watch those videos over and over for months. I loved Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band. They looked like my G.I. Joes—Springsteen was positively ripped, and they were all wearing bandanas, playing in front of these huge American flags. They looked like action heroes.”
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Recorded in Austin, TX with The Band of Heathens Co-Produced by Reed Foehl with Gordy Quist and Ed Jurdi On Tour with Todd Snider in March! POWNAL, VT -- With the Feb. 1, 2019, release of Reed Foehl's fifth solo album, Lucky Enough, fans will get a dose of powerful medicine, a cathartic collection of 10 songs that Foehl recorded with help from a mighty musical force, The Band of Heathens, at their Finishing School studio in Austin, Texas. It’s an album that will undoubtedly solidify his standing as one of the most compelling and vital Americana artists around. Other artists have long sung the praises of Foehl. As fellow songwriter Gregory Alan Isakov notes, “Reed has the ability to transport the soul, a true master. One of the great songwriters of our time." Isakov co-wrote the debut track, “American Miles,” a road song that was inspired by traveling and the great american landscape. Glide Magazine premiered the song and writes, “...the vocals in the beginning immediately conjure images of staring out the window of a car as it cruises along a lonesome highway at sunrise. Foehl keeps the instrumentation sparse, letting a lightly picked acoustic and the quiet thumb of a drum create the groove while the occasional flourish of a piano and a tambourine. His vocals have a dreamy folk quality that reflects the quietly reflective lyrics.” Listen to “American Miles”→ http://bit.ly/AmericanMiles_GlidePremiere. Joe D'Urso has announced John Prine as the headliner for the sixth annual Rockland-Bergen Music Festival taking place on the borders of Rockland and Bergen counties in Tappan, New York from June 20-23, 2019. Early bird tickets are on sale now at RBMFestival.com. John Prine, who will hit the stage at German Masonic Park in Tappan, NY on June 23, has been awarded Americana Artist of the Year the past two years and is currently nominated for both the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and the Songwriters Hall of Fame. Other acts confirmed for Sunday, June 23 include Donna The Buffalo, Joe Purdy, Williams Honor and Joe D'Urso's Acoustic Excursion. More artists to be announced shortly. Americana Highways premiered a new song, "Shadrack": http://bit.ly/2Ev2ByK SEATTLE, Wash.—As most people will tell you, there’s an undeniable connection between versatility and variation. Suffice it to say that each depends on the other. In the case of Seattle-based Marley’s Ghost, that eclectic energy has resulted in a broad repertoire that has defied any ability to tag them to any one particular genre. Their dozen albums to date — like the output of The Band — survey a broad scope of Americana and acoustic music in general, refusing to confine them to any singular niche. “It is, and always has been, about the music,” bassist, fiddler, guitarist, singer and chief songwriter Dan Wheetman insists. “That’s what’s kept this band going for so long. It’s always been about digging a little deeper, honing our skills and celebrating the entire playing process. That drives us forward.” For their upcoming album, the aptly named Travelin’ Shoes, Marley’s Ghost veers towards a path that doesn’t detract from that overarched umbrella, but instead helps define it further. Due for release on February 8, 2019, the 12-song set offers an assured selection of traditional gospel tunes, each delivered with the rich, dynamic, vibrant instrumentation and tightly locked communal harmonies that have been integral elements in Marley’s Ghost’s m.o. for well over 30 years.
Austin Lucas returns to his hometown of Bloomington, Indiana,—both creatively and physically—with his seventh studio album, Immortal Americans. Written after a tumultuous period that found him getting sober, supporting his partner through a battle with cancer, and breaking up with his longtime record label, Immortal Americans is a clear-eyed album for murkier times, rooted in stripped-down heartland rock songs that find the artist reflecting upon the changes in both his hometown and himself.
Earlier in November, Austin Lucas stopped by NYC's City Winery where he performed three of the album's songs for an intimate Cellar Session held in the Winery's barrel room. Rooted in impactful lyricism, "The Shadow and Marie", "Killing Time," and "A Shallow Inland Sea" reveal the singer-songwriter at his most honest and vulnerable, dealing with darkness, yet finding the light in a life worth living.
Austin provides insight into the tracks
"Killing Time": I wanted to write a country song that challenged gender stereotypes. I’m a cisgendered white male of Jewish ancestry who fully passes as a blue-eyed gentile boy. As a result, I have been in the room with people when they have said heinous and racist shit about my people and many others. When I spoke up, I was abused myself and when I said nothing, I felt guilt for keeping my mouth shut. As a result, I’ve fought for my whole life against racist, sexist, homophobic and anti-Semitic assholes and it’s not ever been easy. I was also short and a bit feminine compared to most of the men and boys I grew up around. I let myself get wrapped up in a lot of guilt from not being as much of a “man” as I thought I was supposed to be. This song is about escaping to drugs and alcohol because of the fear, anger, and guilt that came from those experiences. "The Shadow and Marie": I discovered a lump in the left breast of my former partner, Missy Marie on the night that we met. What occurred very quickly after was a drastic change in both of our lives. I may have saved her life, it certainly was extraordinarily lucky that I found it. Once we started dating the focus on getting her healed sort of saved my life though as well. I was really coming out of a very difficult time and finding the strength to be her rock and caregiver also gave me a lot of strength to get through what I was going through. I wrote this song for her, to remind her of how alive she is and about how beautiful she was to me, even though chemotherapy had sapped her of energy, taken her hair, and surgery had cut away her breasts. She was still so vital and lovely to me and I hoped to tell her so in the best way I knew how. She’s now one-year cancer free and I think this song still helps remind her of the struggle she went through and how much stronger it made us both. "A Shallow Inland Sea": This is a reflection on youthful love and idealism from the perspective of a grown person. It’s about how everything can fade away when you’re in the arms of a lover. Watch, and share, the video above. For more information visit: Website/Facebook/Twitter/IG/Spotify Boo Ray Gets Ya in the Spirit with His Holiday Playlist: 'Songs to Cure Your Xmas Hangover'12/13/2018
Ah the holidays.....trimming the tree, making cookies, opening presents, time with family and the (oft required) over-imbibing - which leads to the inevitable hangover. While you can treat those head and bellyaches with liquids and greasy foods, you also need to replenish the soul with some tunes while your're recuperating. what to listen to? No worries in that department because Nashville's resident singer-songwriter and guitar slinger Boo Ray has ya covered.
His pretty badass playlist, 'Songs to Cure Your Xmas Hangover', contains fourteen of his favorite holiday tracks that pair perfectly with your drink of choice - pre or post hangover. Give the playlist, which features artists like Nikki Lane, John Prine, and Dwight Yoakam, a listen or two (or more) and read the accompanying notes from Boo who tells what draws him to the tunes. "All Strung Out Like Christmas Lights" Because Elizabeth Cook is the coolest. Dwight Yoakam "Santa Can't Stay" I love the line “he threw a present really hard and almost hit mama’s new boyfriend Ray”. This song’s full Yoakam’s signature rockabilly vocal licks too, which I love. That 80’s production will complement any Christmas sweater, from the gaudiest candy-cane/snowman aplique to the homeliest moth eaten Uncle Fester pea-green cardigan. Merle Haggard "If We Make It Through December" Since I was a kid I’ve always liked how contemporary and musical Merle Haggard’s arrangements and songs are. There’s a singer songwriter quality to Hagg and an virtuoso ensemble sound akin to the way James Taylor, Leland Sklar and Jim Keltner made music sound. Erin Enderlin "Cowboy Christmas" Cowboy songs have some specific criteria for me. The language, vernacular, and meter have to be just right. I heard a Tommy Lee Jones interview where said the language of Cormac McCarthy’s characters is perfect. Erin’s Line “Barb wire and fence posts like garland on trees” gets right to me. Nikki Lane "FaLaLaLaLove ya" I totally dig the song. The Christmas bells, the production, the melody and Nikki’s vocal are real stylized like a Hollywood Christmas TV Show number with fake snow falling and lens flares in holiday colored lights. John Prine "Everything Is Cool" John Prine’s meter is kind of like what Brandlford Marsalis said about Louis Armstrong’s minalmist trumpet playing, “There’s a whole lot of information in those couple of notes.” “I was walking down the road... man” is so plain t’s actually funny” almost like a Steven Wright bit. In contrast, the next verse “I saw a hundred thousand black birds just a flying through the sky- they seem to form a teardrop from a black-haired angel’s eye” is brooding poet/ bleeding heart romantic territory. I love that Prine covers those two nearly opposite poles of perspective with complete dexterity. JD McPherson "All The Gifts I Need" Great sounding recording. I dig JD’s songs and style, the way his vocal melody rides on Jason Smay’s drum beat is a thing for sure. The songs got a smart lighthearted spirit to it. Johnny Cash Family Christmas "Opening Dialogue" The first thing that really got to me about Johnny Cash was that antique automotive/farm equipment machine sound that he made with his band, seeming to emulate the sound of V-8 motors, tractors, horses hooves, and the click clack of trains. It's powerful, clever, creative, real singer/songwriter sounding, intricate and simple at the same time. Then I got into his rockabilly look and wearing all black. But it's always really been about the sound of his voice and his story telling. Even as a kid I'd watch that gospel series he filmed in Jerusalem because I just liked the sound of his voice and listening to the way he'd spin a yarn. Corb Lund "Just Me And The Ponies" Excellent cowboy Christmas song. Corb's cowboy correct to me like Wynn Varble, Willie Nelson & Chris Ledoux are. That stuff has to be handled just right; the meter, vocabulary, vernacular and stoic nature of the story teller. The Band "Christmas Must Be Tonight" Rick Danko's bass sound just slays me. It's the deadest, most flatulent sounding thing ever. I'm damned crazy about it. I dig Danko's vocal on the verse a bunch and I love how Levon's accent and tone jump out on "how a little baby boy"... Yeah man this is a perfect ramblin', good stiff eggnog of a song. Cheers!!! Little Feet "Six Feet Of Snow" It'd make sense to me if someone called Lowell George a musical humorist. His subtle, clever impish wit is my favorite. The honk, plink and twang of the guitars on this track are funny as hell to me. It's absurd and wonderful because of it, and Lowell leans into it too with lines like "It's raining in stilettos from here clear down to Mexico". Maybe if you could trace the DNA of a particular kind of humor Lowell George and Billy Gibbon might be kin. Lindi Ortega "Blue Christmas" The 6th tuned lap steel/dobro can't help but suggest the Hawaiian pacific sound. And who doesn't want to waller in the extra bittersweetness on another holiday not spent on a deserted island with Lindi Ortega. Can you imagine what she'd look like wearing coconuts and palm leaves? For real though, Lindi Ortega's Christmas album "Tennessee Christmas" is a blast. The Mavericks "Baby Please Come Home" I'm crazy about The Mavericks and think they're on fire right now musically. Raul sings with a belting cheers and the Christmas bells and sleigh bells through the whole song deliver a fully manic holiday experience. Their whole Christmas album is a must have. Dale Watson "Santa And My Semi" Yep, lets finish off this playlist with a swanky Texas sounding Dale Watson number. I dig when certain Texas singers have a particular kind of crooning voice and the way their accent sounds real Trucker. Merry Christmas and shiny side up to all the truckers out there working in tough weather this holiday season. Website/Facebook/Twitter/Spotify/Pre-Order Tennessee Alabama Fireworks Tennessee Alabama Fireworks was tracked live to tape over five days at Nashville’s Welcome to 1979 Studio, which has recently seen the likes of Rodney Crowell, Steve Earle, Jason Isbell and many more capturing their sounds within. “Making a record at Welcome To 1979 was a real powerful creative experience,” says Boo Ray. Producer Noah Shain, whose pedigree includes work with fellow outlaws Nikki Lane and Badflower, among many others, captures Boo Ray’s full-band storytelling style as vivid cinematic soundscapes that hit right at the heart and pull no punches. In addition to his music, Boo Ray spends some of his free time doing custom leather work, making hand tooled guitar straps and belts for his guitar picker pals, truckers, bikers, cowboys and rock & rollers. His customers have included Johnny Knoxville, Juliette Lewis, Billy Gibbons, and other household names. Singer/songwriter/actor Tyler Hilton has released his latest single "How Long 'Til I Lose You" today. Listen to "How Long 'Til I Lose You" on all streaming platforms and purchase the track HERE. About the song, Hilton says, "A long time buddy of mine confided in me one night that he and his wife were gonna split up. He was still in shock. I was too, they seemed like the couple who had it all, you know? I couldn’t shake this feeling that maybe it’s not “if” we’ll lose people we love but “when”." Following a very busy fall that saw Elise Davis open shows for Ray LaMontagne, SUSTO, and Lissie, the Nashville-based singer-songwriter has just announced a headline tour and support tour with Donovan Woods in 2019. Find a full list of tour dates below and on her website. Earlier this year, Davis released her critically-acclaimed sophomore album Cactus, which was just named one of the The Bitter Southerner's 30 Best Southern Albums of 2018. Cactus is now available via Apple Music, Spotify, and Amazon. Men's Journal recently named Davis one of the "Hottest New Artists of Fall 2018" and said, "Lucinda Williams + Big Star + The Breeders = Elise Davis." For Immediate Release – Ray Charles’s Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music, Volumes 1 & 2 are major landmarks in American culture. Charles demonstrated that great songs with signature performances work in all genres. “I Can’t Stop Loving You” was a standard in country, soul and R&B, as he proved. Modern Sounds also brought America together during the Sixties’ civil rights movement. Charles became one of the first recording artists to have ownership and complete control of the masters. Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music has been listed among the greatest albums of all time, along with the Beatles, Dylan, Motown, Springsteen, Hendrix and the Beach Boys. These groundbreaking albums, Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music, Vols. 1 & 2 are being reissued on digital and CD on February 22nd, 2019 via Concord Records, also becoming available for the first time on streaming platforms. Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music, Vol. 1 will be re-released on vinyl for the first time since 2012, with a deluxe edition version containing both Vol. 1 and Vol. 2 on high-fidelity, 180g vinyl. Pre-order the album here and watch "Take These Chains From My Heart" from 1963 here. This past fall, Ray was honored by the Grand Ole Opry with An Opry Salute to Ray Charles, with performances celebrating the iconic Modern Sounds tracks and his contributions to country music. In addition, Charles was inducted into both the Austin City Limits Hall of Fame, a program on which he performed multiple times, and the DownBeat Jazz Hall of Fame. WATCH “FREIGHT TRAIN” HERE PRE-ORDER PRIMETIME ILLUSION Xtra Mile recording artist TRAPPER SCHOEPP has announced today’s premiere of “Freight Train,” the latest track from the Wisconsin-based singer-songwriter’s eagerly anticipated new album, PRIMETIME ILLUSION. Originally written and performed by San Francisco alt-rockers Sister Double Happiness, “Freight Train” – which powerfully chronicles the grim realities faced by those suffering with AIDS – is joined by a new companion visual. PRIMETIME ILLUSION arrives worldwide via Xtra Mile Recordings on January 25; pre-orders are available now. |
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