Jeremy Nail’s internationally acclaimed 2016 release, My Mountain, produced by Alejandro Escovedo, conveyed an intensely personal journey that stemmed from his own harrowing health crisis. On his latest album, Live Oak, Nail once again showcases his poetic, personal landscape of songs but this time takes the listener on a different kind of path, one past pain, to determination to not only survive, but thrive.
Inspired by the national story of a criminal poisoning, and the miraculous treatment & survival, of the Treaty Oak (Live Oak) tree in Austin nearly 30 years ago, the title track to Nail's album demonstrates the inherent symbolism between his battle with, and survival from, a rare form of cancer, in which one of his legs had to be amputated, and the Live Oak’s survival. Today, TDC is honored to premiere the video for the tender and uplifting, "Live Oak." Filmed outside Austin, the serene, yet captivating piece was created by sister/brother team Rachael and Michael Craft who exquisitely balance the imagery of a post-rain peacefulness and life affirming re-birth between the sturdy Oak and Nail's own voyage of perseverance. Nail comments, “Live Oak represents the healing powers of nature and music. Rachael and Michael Craft captured a subtle, serene quality that makes the song feel at home.” Directed by Rachael Craft Cinematography & editing by Michael Craft Enjoy, and share, the video above. For more information visit: Official Website/Facebook/Twitter
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AUSTIN, Texas — The ’60s may have been a time when girls searched for clues in his kiss and pondered whether sweet-talkin’ guys would still love them tomorrow, but it was also the decade when they started questioning the status quo; by the time the ’70s dawned, they knew what they wanted: r-e-s-p-e-c-t, in the house, the House and everywhere else. On their second album, The Whole Shebang, Charlie Faye & the Fayettes hark back to that time on 12 tracks packed like suitcases full of sassy harmonies and swingin’ soul, while folding in modern-day perspectives — and a determination to dance through the madness enveloping our world. Due out February 8, 2019, The Whole Shebang builds on the success of 2016’s Charlie Faye & the Fayettes. This time, Charlie Faye and backing vocalists BettySoo and Akina Adderley arranged their retro-pop harmonies together, perfectly evoking the musical essence of a time when innocence collided with awareness that change had to come — for everyone. Celebrating the former while acknowledging the latter, songwriter and lead singer Faye deftly balances simple odes to falling in love (“1-2-3-4,” “Riding High”) with declarations of independence (the first single, “I Don’t Need No Baby”) and calls to wake up, get wise, speak up, organize (“You Gotta Give it Up [Party Song]”). BLOOMINGTON, IL -- "The story of my life's written on my skin," sings Edward David Anderson on the devilishly sardonic “Bad Tattoos” from his new album Chasing Butterflies (Black Dirt Records - Oct. 19, 2018). The song, like the artist, is brutally honest and has a worn feel; like it's coming from someone that has been around and put in the miles. "I don't think I could have written these tunes when I was 25," Anderson explains. "Everything I've done, the people I've met, all the places I've been, have brought me to this moment." Watch the official video of “Bad Tattoos” here from with shots from the studio showing EDA, Nutt, and Kuhn come together on the song for the group vocals as the “Bad Tatts Choir”→ https://youtu.be/uTbl7w2Hs8Q NASHVILLE, TN – December 3, 2018- Ned LeDoux, in only his third year as a solo artist, has been pulling in huge crowds with multiple sell-outs on his cross-country 2018 tour. Ned has spent the last year on the road in support of his debut album Sagebrush, which was released last November and debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s Heatseekers chart. He will close out his 2018 at the National Finals Rodeo in Las Vegas. LeDoux, a popular draw for the fans at the National Finals Rodeo, was invited back for a two-night stand during the milestone 60th Annual Wrangler National Finals Rodeo performing at the Silverton Casino on December 6 & 7. 2018 Memorable Moments and Highlights: In 2018, in addition to his own heavy touring schedule, Ned joined up with Toby Keith for 10 dates and was invited by superstar Garth Brooks to open for him at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis. NEW YORK, N.Y. – Iconic pop-rock band Hootie & the Blowfish appeared on NBC’s TODAY this morning to announce a highly anticipated return to full-time touring in 2019, as the foursome sets out on the 2019 Group Therapy Tour with direct support from special guest Barenaked Ladies. The band formed by Mark Bryan, Dean Felber, Darius Rucker and Jim “Soni” Sonefeld during their time as students at the University of South Carolina will visit 44 cities on the tour produced by Live Nation, kicking off Thursday, May 30 in Virginia Beach, Virginia and wrapping Friday, Sept. 13 with a Columbia, South Carolina homecoming. Citi is the official pre-sale credit card for the Group Therapy Tour. As such, Citi cardmembers will have access to purchase pre-sale tickets beginning today, Dec. 3, at 10 a.m. local time until Thursday, Dec. 6 at 10 p.m. local time through Citi's Private Pass program. For complete pre-sale details visit www.citiprivatepass.com. Hootie & the Blowfish fan club members can also access an exclusive pre-sale starting today, Dec. 3, at 10 a.m. local time. Barenaked Ladies fans who have purchased VIP packages in the past will receive an exclusive code to purchase tickets early on Wednesday, Dec. 5 starting at 10 a.m. local time before they go on sale to the general public this Friday, Dec. 7 at www.LiveNation.com. "Elaine" premiere at Billboard Lakeland, Fla.-based Americana singer-songwriter Michael McArthur has announced a January 25th release for his debut LP Ever Green, Ever Rain and has shared the lead single "Elaine" at Billboard. "I've always done things a little bit differently," says singer/songwriter Michael McArthur, who wrote the most vibrant album of his career, Ever Green, Ever Rain, during the darkest season of his life. Songwriting has always been a form of therapy for McArthur. Over the past decade, the Florida native has filled a handful of EPs with his own mix of raw soul and lushly layered folk, working with producers like David Bianco (Tom Petty, Lucinda Williams) and Greg Wells (Adele, One Republic) along the way. He makes his full-length debut with 2019's Ever Green, Ever Rain, an album that's by turns warm, woozy, and wistful. The album shows the full range not only of McArthur's voice — a gorgeous instrument that soars and swoons, flecked with vibrato and palpable emotion — but his songwriting, too, bouncing from the soft acoustics of "Elaine" to the percussive pulse of "Save Me From the Fire." Recorded with Grammy-winning producer Ryan Freeland and inspired by McArthur's long period of isolation and self-repair, Ever Green, Ever Rain is both earthy and anthemic — the sound of a songwriter who's unafraid to shine a light on his own faults. AUSTIN (November 29, 2018) — Parker McCollum and lifelong friend, Koe Wetzel, usher in the holidays with their seven-date “Naughty or Nice” tour starting December 3 in Stephenville, Texas. The intimate, acoustic shows will feature Parker and Koe on barstools singing holiday classics — and a selection of brand new songs —offering what fans say feels like a “living room session.” "As much fun as we have on the ‘Naughty or Nice’ tour, and as wild and crazy as it gets at the shows, I really look forward to seeing the fans’ reactions to my new songs,” says Parker. “They’ve never heard them before, and because the shows are acoustic, it is the test of all tests.” Parker spent last week opening for the Randy Rogers Band in Boston, D.C. and New York City, and in all three markets, audiences sang along to his songs. Denver-based quartet Dearling is set to release its new EP, Silver and Gold, on February 22, 2019. Following the success of its debut album, Inheritance, the band knew that its second offering would have to be different and that it would need to challenge what they had already created. Silver and Gold is the result, and it hails back to band vocalist Rachel James’s modern country start in her musical career. “The first song that ever got me a real paycheck was a country tune,” she says. “I loved going back to that and creating songs that aren’t just love songs. A couple of these tunes are real stories, people deciding to do the right thing at the right time. It’s about the heroes we never talk about culturally. We idolize people for all sorts of reasons: fame, success, money, athletic ability. I wanted to sing and create some songs that promote those who give when no one is looking, without an agenda. They just live right.” Nashville-based recording artist Trae Edwards has released his new single, “Color Blind.” The song, featuring a powerful, heartfelt duet by contemporary R&B singer Eliz Camacho, is a stirring anthem of racial reconciliation that offers an uplifting message of love and healing. “Color Blind” is available today for purchase and streaming on all digital platforms, including Amazon, iTunes, Google Play, iHeart Radio, Spotify and Pandora. A companion music video also releases today. View it here: https://youtu.be/x2QG8pww48U Inspired by the heartwarming true story of an unlikely lifelong friendship, “Color Blind” tells the true story of two southern, Caucasian sisters and the African-American caregiver they met as children in pre-segregation Mississippi. Acclaimed Nashville singer/songwriter and "Americana Queen" (Noisey) Mary Bragg announced today the release of her new album Violets As Camouflage on March 1st, 2019 via Tone Tree Music. Self-produced and self-engineered at her home studio in Nashville, TN, the fourteen-song collection is both beautiful and blunt, the work of an artist only just beginning to embrace the full range of her talents. This morning, Bragg released her new single "Fixed," a tender, string-flecked track which takes on the skewed self-perception that many women grow up battling. Listen to "Fixed" HERE. "It started as a message of, 'There's nothing wrong with you. You don't need to be fixed. You're so perfect; Please can't you see that?' kind of thing," Bragg told Billboard who debuted the track yesterday. "It's certainly how I grew up feeling. It's a message that I hope lots of young girls, and boys, will hear and actually consider as a possibility that, 'Oh, I don't have to be like what I'm seeing on my phone or on TV. I'm alright just the way I am." |
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