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SONG OF THE DAY ARCHIVE

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Monday, April 30, 2018

High Valley – Farmhouse Sessions

High Valley released an acoustic album, High Valley: Farmhouse Sessions, featuring new renditions of some favorite fan tracks, . The project was recorded in their farmhouse outside of Nashville, and includes their debut single “Make You Mine,” their Canadian No. 1 “I Be U Be,” as well as the duo’s current single, “She’s With Me,” which is Top 15 and rising up the charts.

I Be U Be (Farmhouse Sessions) Make You Mine (Farmhouse Sessions) Memory Makin' (Farmhouse Sessions) Roads We've Never Taken (Farmhouse Sessions) She's With Me (Farmhouse Sessions) The Only (Farmhouse Sessions) Dear Life (Farmhouse Sessions)

“We were out on our first headline tour in the US this fall and witnessed so many amazing fans singing our songs back to us,” shared Brad Rempel. “We wanted to be able to share that feeling with everyone so we put together a few of our favorites.”

High Valley opened for Chris Janson last night at his sold-out Ryman show, and are set to head out on a run of overseas dates in the United Kingdom, Germany, Netherlands and Australia.

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Sunday, April 29, 2018

Sam Green And The Midnight Heist – Onsette Return

Alt Americana/Surf Roots Rock Music from the North Atlantic Coast.

Where You're From Leave It There Free Everybody Moving Let Her In

Discover Surf Roots Rock music from the North Atlantic Coast.

Sam Green and the Midnight Heist are an Alt Americana/Roots Rock band from North Devon in the UK. The band is made up of Sam Green (vocals, slide, electric and acoustic guitar), Lucy Green (vocals, banjo and acoustic guitar), Paul Hopkins (vocals and double bass) and Steve Tanton (vocals and drums).

SGATMH’s music is heavily influenced by the blues, west coast folk rock and alt country soul. Taking inspiration from artists such as The John Butler Trio, Gomez and Ryan Adams, the band is proud to release it’s latest 5 track EP ‘Onsette Return.’

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Saturday, April 28, 2018

L.A. Salami – The City Of Bootmakers

London singer-songwriter Lookman Adekunle Salami doesn’t sing so much as ramble adventurously through treatises on the thorniest corners of human nature, from mental illness to the radicalism that leads to (and results from) terrorism, all the way back around to more mundane chronicles of everyday life. He loves to fill the air with words, but those words come freighted with big ideas and bold ambitions — and, at times, welcome jolts of noise.

On L.A. Salami‘s second album, The City of Bootmakers, his ideas have never been more grandiose, as the song titles announce upfront. “Terrorism (The ISIS Crisis)” tackles its subject point-blank, with a jaggedly blurted chorus to hammer home the intensity. “England Is Unwell” diagnoses and dissects the ills of his home country, while “Science + Buddhism = A Reality You Can Know” comes closer than you’d think to living up to the loftiness of its title.

It’s hard to pin down a genre with L.A. Salami’s music: “Folk” is the closest descriptor handy, but that doesn’t account for how thematically far-reaching it is, nor does it account for the notes of grimy aggression. Instead, Salami is best defined by his desire to take huge swings: to make messes, dip down side roads and grapple, eyes wide open, with the biggest picture possible.

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Friday, April 27, 2018

Megan Bonnell – Separate Rooms

Megan Bonnell’s new release, Separate Rooms, is a powerful collection of reflective, genre-defying pop-folk balladry. In other words, more of what the Toronto-based singer-songwriter is so, so good at.

Breakdown Separate Rooms Your Voice What's Good For You Radio Silence Someday I'm Gonna Kill You Where Is the Love Crossed My Mind California Can't Be Undone

Bonnell’s third full-length is more spare than 2016’s Magnolia, and the narrative is decidedly darker this time around. Separate Rooms explores relationship breakdowns (as on the title track, co-written with the great Donovan Woods) and mental illness (“Breakdown”). See also “Someday I’m Gonna Kill You,” though “Radio Silence,” the middle track, feels like the record’s darkest moment.

Rest assured, there’s softness and light here too, on “What’s Good For You” and “Where Is The Love.” “Crossed My Mind” is the anthem the record desperately needs, while “California” jangles and disperses any pent-up energy before “Can’t Be Undone” completes the soul-baring journey. “I’ve changed / I have changed,” she sings, as if to reassure herself and us.

Bonnell’s incandescent voice conceals none of the heartbreak and redemption and nor does the instrumentation. Cleverly, the musician     with her usual co-conspirators, Joshua Van Tassell and Chris Stringer     accentuates the sad-happy storytelling with glittering percussion, piano, and electric guitar, giving shape to an utterly compelling and expansive set of songs.

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Scott Matthew – Ode To Others

“It’s the first album I’ve written that’s not concerning romantic love. Even though there’s a sense of romance to it, but it’s not connected to my personal romantic love at all. It’s about people and places that aren’t concerning my immediate romantic pain”.

Scott Matthew laughs when he says this last sentence. He is laughing a lot in these days. It`s as if not only a weight has been lifted, but rather something new and beautiful in his life has also begun in his music. The pain may not have gone. But on Ode To Others it seems Scott has changed his point of view from the inside out.

End of Days The Deserter Where I Come from Happy End Do You Really Want to Hurt Me? The Wish Not Just Another Year Cease and Desist Flame Trees The Sidewalks of New Year

“God, you must have had such a horrible life” most people might have thought of Scott, he says. “With the last album ‘This here Defeat’ I got really tired of showing that. I didn’t want this new album to be about that stuff. So I set about writing songs about different subjects. Odes to people that I love or admire, even fictitious people – and places that are in my heart. And that was really refreshing to me.”

The Public and the Private, the big things and the small things merge together within the lyrics he wrote for Ode To OthersWhere I Come From is the Ode to his father Ian, Cease And Desist is dedicated to his deceased uncle Paul and in Not Just Another Year he celebrates his best friend Michael, on the occasion of the anniversary of his relationship – which, cursed life – has meanwhile come to an end.

As he views these people, who mean a lot, sometimes even everything, he also broadens his outlook onto places from the past and the present.
Places like his Australian childhood (Flame Trees is a cover from the Australian band Cold Chisel); New York, where Scott has been living for 20 years now, meanwhile as an American citizen (The Sidewalks Of New York, a historic song originally written by J.W. Blake in the late 19th century) or the medieval, Portuguese village Santarém where he assures himself as a ecstatic wanderer his literal access to the world, „What I love most maybe glory lost / Or the sadness that’s sweet / Or the ones under our feet“.

Scott`s eye on the world is the one of a loving, of an admirer, but sometimes of a mourner too. For example The Wish is a song about the massacre in Orlando (June 12, 2016) when a single perpetrator invaded the Pulse club and shot 49 people dead, most of them members of the LGBT community. A few hours later Scott wrote the lyrics, expressing a sense of total powerlessness: „This is an assault against love / Still no-one helps, they just pray above / And I wish I could help / I wish I could have helped”.

However, paralyzing helplessness in the face of unbearable violence should not be the last word. This is clear with the beginning of the new album and the first Song End Of Days, an ode to the resistance and the resisting that, in this case, is directed against the policies of the current incumbent US President. Scott Matthew uses “we” for those who do not want to submit and accept. „We may be trembling with fear, it won’t hold us back / We ain’t going away / We’re gonna stay till the end of days“ . Love directs and fulfills this attitude.The narrator of this song does not want to encounter hatred with hatred, but with the universal power of love that never fades and lasts until the end of days.

None of his last five solo records is as diverse; as beautiful orchestrated and complex in arrangements as Ode To Others. This is the result of the collaboration with Scott’s live guitarist, co-writer and producer Jürgen Stark„I didn’t even know whether I liked my songs – before Jürgen came along and gave them all this personality and all this wonderfully intricate layering“.

He’s very proud of his new album Scott Matthew says: „I think it’s one of the best albums we’ve done so far, for a lot of reasons. The idea of minimalism wasn’t very prominent on this album. But it’s not bombastic to me. It’s still got intimacy, but also all this intricate layers. And in the end – all this history.”

One could think of the album Ode To Others as a musical new beginning of Scott Matthew. But that is not quite true. It is rather the result of a change of perspective. From one who looks out into the world of the present and the past and thereby discovers himself in a new way, as a loving, admiring, sometimes even as a contemptuous observer.

A look at the others can also be a look at yourself, as a view back could be also a view ahead.

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Aisha Badru – Pendulum

Aisha Badru makes an impressive label debut courtesy of Pendulum. The LP puts its best foot forward as the opener ‘Mind on Fire’ takes hold of the ear. With an acoustic guitar clacking out a simple rhythm Badru, uses her melodic vocal tones to hum the backing track. The minimalist … Continue reading

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Thursday, April 26, 2018

Joe Goldmark – Blue Steel

This latest album is Joe Goldmark’s most exciting album to date. He mixes original instrumentals with unusual vocal selections, creating a true Americana blend. Dallis Craft contributes gorgeous renditions of tunes written by Jeff Lynne, Graham Parker and Lefty Frizzell, while Glenn Walters works the R&B side of the street with tunes by Jimmy McCracklin, B.B. King and Rufus Thomas.

Night Flight All Night Worker A Love so Beautiful Ginger Ale The Wobble Warm Rain Howlin' Wind Natty Dread Look What Thoughts Will Do Tacky Tango Beautician Blues I Want to Be with You Forever True Love Travels on a Gravel Road

 

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#NOWPLAYING Grant-Lee Phillips

Grant-Lee Phillips just released a brand new video for his track ‘King of Catasrophes’ of his latest album Widdershins Tweet Continue reading

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Yep Roc Records welcomes Jim Lauderdale!

Jim Lauderdale, two-time Grammy winner and long time friend of Yep Roc, is officially back on the Yep Roc Records roster! “I’m so happy to be with Yep Roc Records again and back on their great team and roster! Finishing up some new music as we speak. Look for it … Continue reading

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Emily Davis – You, Me & the Velvet Sea

I’d heard the name Emily Davis before and had some vague idea of what her music might be, but didn’t give it much attention, until her latest offering, You, Me and the Velvet Sea, ended up on my desk. I’m always keen to give new things a go, so I put on Emily’s third album and listened with an open mind. I can’t say I was surprised by what I heard, expecting the gentle yet complex melodies, soft-edged guitar folk, with subtle country overtones. What I was surprised by was how much I enjoyed it… there’s loads of depth here that’s well beyond the over-produced and over-rated pop music industry.

Bled for You Lighthouse Moonlight Voodoo Stars Grow Cold Oh Lord Bring Forth the Queen of Mexico Hold On You Bury Me Eve's Blues Heartache

There are guitars with bluesy grooves, soulful violins, nice rhythms and sultry melodies. Emily’s voice is rather nice to hear, completely inoffensive and enticing, she draws you in with each listen. Occasionally the pace picks up with an old time feel, but it never feels quaint or old-school folksy.

 

The first single Hold On is a nice tune, with a decent percussive groove driving things along. The layers of vocal harmonies add complexity that breaches the realms of rock, yet remain characteristic. Other numbers like Eve’s Blues continue the bluesy rock theme, while Moonlight Voodoo ambles along with an interesting gentle swagger, and Lighthouse floats wistfully.

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Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Lloyd Green and Jay Dee Maness – A Journey to the Beginning -Tribute to the Byrds

Clark had left the Byrds by the time the group   s now-classic Sweetheart of Rodeo was released in 1968. Gram Parsons had just joined the group, bringing his country-fueled vision with him. Green and Maness, the two pedal steel guitar players on that album, put together, along with producer John Macy, this beautiful new album on the 50th anniversary of Sweetheart of the Rodeo. The album   s opening track,    You Ain   t Going Nowhere,    features Sam Bush on mandolin and Jim Lauderdale, Jeff Hanna, Matraca Berg, Herb Pedersen, Richie Furay, Jim Photoglo, and Bill Lloyd on vocals. Drenched in the lush steel guitar playing of these two masters, this classic album takes on new life for fans and new listeners alike.

You Ain't Going Nowhere I Am a Pilgrim The Christian Life You Don't Miss Your Water Your Still on My Mind Pretty Boy Floyd Hickory Wind One Hundred Years From Now Blue Canadian Rockies Life in Prison Nothing Was Delivered You Ain't Going Nowhere (vocal version)

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Jill Barber Stands With The #MeToo Movement With Video For “Girl’s Gotta Do,” Reaches #1 On Apple Music Canada’s Singer-Songwriter Chart

Jill Barber Stands With The #MeToo Movement  With Video For “Girl’s Gotta Do” Lead Single From Metaphora  Bows At #1 On Apple Music Canada’s Singer-Songwriter Chart Announces North American Tour   Jill Barber released the video for “Girl’s Gotta Do,” the lead single from her upcoming album Metaphora (out June 22 via Outside Music.) “Girl’s Gotta Do” premiered at CBC’s … Continue reading

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Tommy DarDar – Big Daddy Gumbo

Like so many albums I receive I’d not heard of Tommy Dardar before receiving this album; but why would I? He played in and fronted bands in and around South Louisiana for aeons but sadly died in 2017 before these tracks originally recorded in 2001 would ever be released.
But after reading the accompanying Press Release and listening to the loving way his friends and family have re-worked and polished those recordings I really wish I could have not just seen him playing live; but even met the guy as he sounds a fascinating character.
I’m pretty sure the album artwork would have caught my eye in a record shop and if the man behind the counter played track #1 It’s Good To Be King I would gratefully have shelled out the £10 or so to buy whatever came next.

It's Good To Be King Headed Down To Houma Baby I Can Tell C'mon Second Line Let's Both Go Back To New Orleans Dangerous Woman In My Mind Shake A Leg (Feat. Teresa James) Big Daddy Gumbo

That song is an absolute doozy; opening with some stinging guitar from Johnny Lee Schell and when Tommy’s rich voice and most blues-wailin’ harmonica come in I knew instantly that this was music I would absolutely luuurve.
Oh boy, oh boy….oh boy songs like Baby I Can Tell and Shake a Leg are the type of Rocking Blues music fans like me fantasise about hearing coming from a downtown club somewhere South of the Mason-Dixon line while on holiday.
Then there is Dangerous Woman and C’mon Second Line; oohheee……are these cool or what? Dardar and friends produce the musical sounds that Van Morrison must hear in his head before he goes into a studio; but has failed to reproduce for 30+ years #fact.
Favourite track? How am I supposed to choose only one from this parcel of musical gems; but choose I must.
Perhaps the Honky-Tonk of Let’s Go Back to New Orleans; featuring the legendary Jon Cleary on piano and Tommy Dardar at his crooning best or will it be the funklicious Big Daddy Gumbo which closes the proceeding with even more sizzling guitar and saxophone than a man my age can handle; and don’t get me started on those sexy backing singers!
But I’m going for In My Mind; a slow burning sensual ballad that will bring tears to a glass eye and a song Tommy Dardar can proudly leave as his finest legacy, as is the record itself.

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Heather Whitney Is “Moving On” With New Album And MTS Management Group

Heather Whitney Is “Moving On” With New Album And MTS Management Group Texas-based country singer-songwriter, Heather Whitney has signed with MTS Management Group. Her album, “Moving On” features her latest single, “Movin On Song.” What gave me strength to complete my album, was knowing that I was not alone, & … Continue reading

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Tuesday, April 24, 2018

The California Honeydrops – Call It Home Vol. 1 & 2

This album, like this band and its members, cannot be put in a box. Though very much ‘of this time’, the music and stories on this album take you through many eras, places and points of view. Some songs might find you reminiscing, cruising your old neighborhood a sunny day with a full orchestra pouring out of the stereo. Then suddenly you hear tambourines and voices pouring out of a storefront church. You may find yourself sweating out a weeks work on the dance floor at a house party or just singing round a campfire with a guitar and washboard. You might find yourself taken from a street parade surrounded by mournful horns, to gazing up at the starry sky contemplating your place in the universe, all in a single song. There are many journeys and emotions awaiting the listener on Call it Home. You never know where the Honeydrops will take you, but where ever you end up, you’ll want to dance.

Call It Home Coming Around Cry For Me Standin' Still Blues Hold It Down Your Sweet Love Those Days Live Learn Only Home I've Ever Known Silicon World Tell Me (I Wanna Know) Drop By Drop Good Good Lovin' Things We Used To Do In My Baby's Arms Starr Child

This album is the work of people that spend their whole lives on the road playing music. They play in all sorts of music in all sorts of places for all kinds of people, from big cities to small towns, from barns to theaters for audiences young and old, hip and unhip. They love all kinds of music and don’t feel the need to package a particular sound for the radio. Sometimes they dress up sharp, sometimes they perform naked. Clothed or unclothed they always love to make people dance. They believe the purpose of music is celebration, healing, and spreading love and joy.

How is Call It Home: Vol 1 & 2 different from prior albums?
Lech: It’s our first double album. In a way it’s our first concept album.

The concept being the idea of home?
Lech: That’s a subject that’s been on my mind since I was a kid. I was born in Warsaw, Poland. My parents brought me here as a kid and we moved around a lot. They were always talking about missing where they were from and I was always wondering who I was in that way; the question of whether I was Polish or American or both. I didn’t set out to make an album about that, but these songs were coming out that way. Also, the place I’ve been living here in Oakland has changed so much since I’ve lived here. It was a place I felt really comfortable in when I came, but I don’t feel comfortable anymore; it’s a place I can’t really afford to live in anymore.

Being called a party band is and always has been perceived as a compliment. How much of a task has it been getting that same atmosphere in the studio?
Lech: We did a little bit of both. There are certain tracks where we were just seriously partying as we’re recording the album. We had to bring the same vibe as we do on stage, otherwise it’s not going to feel right. Then, there are certain tracks that are more painstakingly focused in a way that we aren’t usually onstage.

Call It Home started with Lech’s growing catalog of original material, followed by demos recorded at the band’s home base—“The Blues Cave”—and finally tracking in Bay Area facilities such as Decibel Recording, Tiny Telephone and New and Improved studios.
Lech: 16 songs made the album. We went through 25 or 30 songs that we demoed. Once we were in the studio we wanted to be ready and happy and comfortable—in a creative place musically to flow with it and get that on the wax. The setup for each song was completely different, which made things take a long time. We were trying to capture a lot of different eras on this record.

Recording took a year and a half, with studio time divided by touring—including opening for legendary singer and guitarist Bonnie Raitt on her extended U.S. tour. What effect did touring with Raitt have beyond her appearance on the record?
Lech: The band ebbs and flows. I think we got better at playing a song. That helped us immensely in the studio. We definitely are more comfortable now just knocking out some songs, having fun with them. To me, Bonnie is a person that’s really focused on the meaning and emotion of each song. She’s kind of a master at communicating that. The main thing that has stuck with me is putting that intention behind each song, and knowing emotionally where I’m going and finding ways to communicate that with people.

In an age when albums have become, once again, secondary to singles, and in an
industry that has tacitly branded music, with its delivery system of downloads and streams, as disposable as ever, along comes this wildly diverse album from The California Honeydrops—to be issued on vinyl as well, no less. Why make an album like this now?
Lech: There are a lot of different reasons. One main thing I wanted to do is paint a picture of who we are as a band. We’ve had many albums come out in the past. I wanted to have something that encapsulated the 10 years of grind that we put in; all the different styles we’ve gone through in that time; all the different aspects of our lives that those 10 years have contained. This was a breakthrough year for the band. I wanted something that captured the totality instead of doing something small. That’s why you’ve got the whole cosmos on the album cover. This is my life. This band has never been for sale. This band has been everything for us. It’s something that we do for the love. I’m proud of that.

And a double-album, at that.
Lech: We just had so many songs. I’ve been writing tons and tons of songs. We had this material and it didn’t really seem to go on just one album. So, it became two volumes. These days everyone wants you to put everything into a neat package. That’s not the way this band is. This band has consumed our entire lives over the last 10 years. This album includes everything—all sorts of music that don’t all go together on a record in a certain way, don’t all fit the same genre. I felt no pressure to do that. We as people, we’re infinite, manifold, all kinds of things. In this world of selling yourself, of branding yourself, you try to pigeon-hole yourself so that it’s clear to the consumer what they are consuming. But, that’s a disservice to yourself. Why would you want to limit yourself? You have to express all parts of you so that you can stay sane.

And for those that prefer downloads or streams?
Lech: You can cherry-pick. All the songs are good. But I do think it’s put together so that it flows well. We did certain things to make the songs like one long loop. It’s a lot of music, but it also works really well as two short albums.

It took two volumes this time to convey the diversity and dazzle of The California Honeydrops. Does that mean you have a better understanding of what makes a Honeydrops song?
Lech: I think there is something that makes a Honeydrops song, but we don’t know what that is. For me, thematically, I’m very cautious of things I want to put out there; the types of messages I want to put out and hold myself to playing night after night. I want it to be something that it helps for me to feel day after day. Something that uplifts, and maybe it’s sad, but it has to have some kind of positive function. I’m kind of a believer in that.

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Video: Darlingside “Best Of The Best Of Times”

A new video for the final track from their outstanding new album Extralife, this is the wonderful Darlingside, one of the best new bands to emerge in the last few years. Tweet Continue reading

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Jenny Van West – Happiness to Burn

Shortly after Van West first emerged as a performer in Portland, ME, she quickly established herself as one of the top songwriters the Northeast, winning the 2015 Maine Songwriters Association songwriting contest with her song    Nellie.     With a crystalline voice that has been characterized as    somewhere between Aimee Mann and Bonnie Raitt,    she released her first album Something Real in 2015 and the EP Honey & Hive in 2016.

Happiness to Burn Live in a New Way Never Alone 45 Where I Stand Empty Bowl Twenty-Seven Dollars Threshholds Can't Have You Now Embers

For the new album, internationally-acclaimed producer Shane Alexander assembled a dream team of LA   s top musicians: Jesse Siebenberg / lap steel, pedal steel, dobro, (Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real / Supertramp), Carl Byron (Jackson Browne), / piano, organ, accordion; Ted Russell Kamp (Shooter Jennings) / bass, Justine Bennett / vocals (Jacob Dylan, Adam Cohen), Austin Beede (Grateful Shred, Todd Hannigan) drums.

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Monday, April 23, 2018

Hedy West – From Granmaw & Me

Should your knowledge on the history of American folk music be a little rusty, Hedy West, who passed in 2005, aged 67,  was one of the leading lights of traditional folk music. She is probably best known for her song 500 Miles. West was born in Cartersville in the hill country of northern Georgia. She was the daughter of Don West, a miners trade union organiser and poet who also ran a couple of folk music centres. She started singing early in her life,  winning first prize at the Asheville Annual Folk Festival in the mid-50s when she was just 12, she was later invited by Pete Seeger to sing alongside him at Carnegie Hall. She signed to Vanguard and released her debut album in 1963 with the snappy title of Hedy West accompanying herself on the 5-string banjo, followed a year later by the no less imaginative Hedy West, Volume 2. A regular visitor to England, she spent seven years there in self-imposed exile, recording three albums for Topic and one for Fontana, moving to Germany in the early 70s, releasing a further two albums on Bear Records before eventually returning home to America.

Lil' Old Mountain Shack Once I Had An Old Grey Mare Blockader Mama Ollie & Rillie Seay (Story) Two Sisters Jack & Joe Sally Carter I'll Never Get Drunk Anymore Frog Went Courting Granmaw's Frog Story The Uncloudy Day

She withdrew from the spotlight in later years and eventually stopped sing completely when she was struck down with cancer; however, prior to her death she had put together this until now unreleased album of songs learned from her grandmother, Lillie Mulkie West, a collection of songs gathered by the family over the years. Indeed, it was Lillie, born in 1888 in Gilmer County,  herself who selected the material and who serves as the album’s narrator, hers the voice first heard as a prelude to the scene-setting Lil’ Ol Mountain Shack, the song co-penned by Hedy and  her father. It’s the only non-traditional number, the first of which comes with Once I Had an Old Grey Mare with West on banjo and accompanied by fiddle player Tracy Schwarz. It’s followed by Blockader Mama, featuring just West’s voice and guitar on a song, set to a tune she wrote in 1977 based around The Orphan Child, about impoverished mountain folk women making bootleg whiskey for their menfolk to sell, such as sixteen year old sisters Ollie and Rillie Seay, the subject of Lillie’s subsequent recollection.

 

The next track is actually titled Two Sisters, but has no connection to the narration, being, instead, a variation on the familiar English folk ballad also variously known as The Twa SistersThe Wind and the Rain and Cruel Sister although West’s version, while still having the bones of the drowned girl’s bones turned into fiddle screws and bow, makes no mention of any sororicide.

West and Schwarz augmented by David Qualley on guitar, a waltzer drawn from the Music Hall tradition, Jack and Joe unfolds another siblings tale, the former asking the latter to take care of his sweetheart while he’s off making his fortune, only to find on his return that the pair have married.

 

I have no idea of the provenance of Sally Carter, a bluegrass banjo tune driving a song about a feckless wife though the sleeve notes suggest the lyrics Lillie learned from her father involved an elderly mill worker crapping in her stocking and giving it to her boss. Its origins lying in a traditional Irish song about the pitfalls of inebriation and with the earliest documented recording being by Riley Puckett in 1925, the waltzing sway-along I’ll Never Get Drunk Anymore is the catchiest track, Tracy Schwarz again on fiddle and joined by wife Eloise  on harmonies. Probably the best known and certainly  the oldest – song here is the much-recorded Frog Went Courting  which dates back to at least 1548 and, while  it may once have had a political context, has long been a children’s nursery rhyme staple. It prompts the last of Lillie’s contributions, a whimsical never give up allegory,  about two frogs falling into a churn of milk and being saved because one kicks around so hard he turns it into a lump of butter.

 

Sung by Hedy and Eloise with banjo and guitar accompaniment, it ends on a gospel note with the redoubtable hymnal The Uncloudy Day, written in 1879 and later popularised by The Staple Singers, the tune drawing on the Scottish traditional Will Ye No Come Back Again? and also serving as the basis for Hank Williams’ I Saw The Light.

All praise to Fledg’ling for not only rescuing this superb collection from wherever it had been gathering dust but, in the process, bringing West’s name back into the spotlight she deserves as one of the great revivalists of American folk music alongside the likes of Baez and Seeger and, it is to be hoped, inspiring a fitting career-spanning anthology of her previous work in the not too distant future.

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Bishop Briggs – Church Of Scars

British singer-songwriter Bishop Briggs’s    River,    however, is the kind of song you might have heard sandwiched between Paula Cole’s    Where Have All the Cowboys Gone?    and the Spice Girls’s    Wannabe    on the radio in the late ’90s. The track’s mix of blues-rock and more contemporary elements   like handclaps that morph into trap snares   feels like a throwback to the alternative-pop bands that infiltrated Top 40 stations just before the turn of the century. And Briggs’s debut, Church of Scars, delivers in kind, with a series of gothic-soul dirges and blues-inflected pop.

Tempt My Trouble River Lyin' White Flag Dream Wild Horses Hallowed Ground Water The Fire Hi-Lo (Hollow)

The looped refrain on    River    sounds like it was lifted from Adele’s 25, an album that could have, in turn, used some of Briggs’s trip-hop edge. Church of Scars harnesses the soulful blues-pop that Adele has so deftly deployed on hits like    Rolling in the Deep.    Standouts    Wild Horses    and    Hallowed Ground    are defined by canned horns and reverb-drenched vocals, while the classic R&B tropes of    Lyin’    and    Hi-Lo (Hollow)    are juxtaposed by pitched-down and diced-up vocals, respectively.

Spread across 10 tracks, though, Briggs’s formula ultimately reveals itself to be one-note. The incessant box-stomping and earnest belting on    Dream    obliterates the subtlety of the song’s pensive acoustic guitar strains and gospel humming. For all its sermonizing and church-y fundamentals, the album is largely joyless.    Why can’t I let my demons lie?/Keep screaming into the pillow,    Briggs laments on    Wild Horses.    When, two-thirds of the way through Church of Scars, the singer cynically bemoans that    there’s more pain in love than we can find in hate,    her dour disposition has grown exhausting.

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Perfection is not attainable, but “Ma Polaine’s Great Decline – The Outsider” gets close.

Described as “like a young Billie Holiday gate-crashing a Tom Waits Swordfishtrombones recording session”, blues and roots duo Ma Polaine’s Great Decline continue to build a reputation as an intriguing and hard to pigeon-hole act. 2016’s EP release Small Town Talk gained rave media reviews, building on 2015’s nomination as … Continue reading

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Sunday, April 22, 2018

Arkansas Dave – Arkansas Dave

It is only a couple of years ago that recent Justin Timberlake collaborator was seen as the outsider underdog of whiskey soaked Country. Although he had enjoyed modest success as part of The SteelDrivers, his 2015 debut album Traveller became the album you had to claim to have discovered before all your friends. Fast forward three years and he is now on the brink of global superstar status and has numerous awards to his name. This leaves room for another grassroots act to slide slowly into public consciousness as the new favourite unlikely icon. With his eponymous debut album finally ready for release, our bets are on Arkansas Dave sneaking in and stealing his crown.

Bad at Being Good On My Way Think Too Much Bad Water Chocolate Jesus Squeaky Clean The Wheel Rest Of My Days Jubilee Something for Me Diamonds Hard Times Coming Home

Why? For Arkansas Dave boasts the same authenticity as Chris Stapleton. And he does so without any pomp or ceremony. He delivers kick-ass tunes that say something just because he knows how. It is this raw realness that sets his apart from many of his contemporaries. He isn’t simply pursuing a path as it is on trend, he is doing it because he has something to say and this is his expression.

Life hasn’t always been easy, or particularly fair to the Arkansas native. Having worked his way through an array of bands, while he struggled to find a balance between the fundamental Christianity of his up-bringing and the drug-fuelled partying he had discovered, he found his only solace was in the songs that he has crafted for this truly unforgettable collection of songs.

Making the unusual decision to tease the release with a cover of Tom Waits’ Chocolate Jesus, as opposed to unveiling one of the original compositions that form the record, it is clear that he is not an artist that does things the easiest or most traditional of ways. However, his reworking of a true classic showed he was an unafraid musician who was willing to put his own spin on one of the most untouchable and iconic songs out there.

Unsurprisingly his own compositions prove equally breath-taking. With snippets of pop, punk, rock, blues and country to fuel the album’s 13 tracks, the relentless energy and explosive presence is one that will grip you from the moment you press play to the moment you click to repeat the experience. From channeling everyone’s inner grunge teen on album opener Bad At Being Good, through to showing he can make you hot under the collar on Something For Me, Arkansas Dave has many guises but each one equally enjoyable.

We highly recommend you go out and purchase the album and a ticket to his upcoming tour, as you definitely want to be able to turn around to all your mates in 6 months and tell them you were the one who discovered him first.

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The Shires – Accidentally On Purpose now out.

The Shires have given fans quite the exciting lead up to their third studio album Accidentally On Purpose. Causing quite the concern when a so-called intern accidentally sent out an email to fans which was intended for Ben and Crissie for their approval on the album artwork, fans started tweeting … Continue reading

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Ciaran Lavery – sweet decay

Sometimes you have to mine the darkness to unearth the gemstones. Ciaran Lavery is no stranger to either, with his second album, Let Bad In – a meditation on love, life and loss delivered suitably lugubriously – winning the 2016 Northern Ireland Music Prize.

Its follow-up sees the small-town Antrim man framing his songs in a similar setting, although the addition of numerous guest musicians, including Saint Sister, adds volume and verve to the track list.

Everything Is Made To Last 13 To Chicago Bones 4 Blood Wicked Teeth Your Artist Beast At My Door Two Days In Savannah Wells Tower Song Morning Bell Sweet Decay

Many of these songs retain the Springsteen-like quality to Lavery’s sound that was liberally strewn through his last album (particularly audible here on songs like 13Bones 4 Blood and Two Days in Savannah), while others, like the laidback strum of To Chicago and the earthy, breezy rumble of Everything Is Made to Last, lift the tone.

Ciaran Lavery: To Chicago

There is desolation in spades, too – particularly on the evocative Beast at My Door, which addresses his mental-health struggles – but Lavery’s finely crafted lyric sheet, influenced by literary greats like Carver and Salinger, means that no emotion is wasted.

Coupled with the smoky quiver of his voice and the slow-burning atmosphere of his musical palette, it may just be his best work yet. ciaranlaverymusic.com

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Donovan Woods – Both Ways

When Donovan Woods first began visiting Nashville from Toronto to write with some of the city’s pro songwriters, he was attempting to write songs for the radio – he liked what country artists were doing, but no one seemed interested in his compositions. Instead, he found that when he wrote … Continue reading

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Saturday, April 21, 2018

Charley Crockett – Lonesome as a Shadow

Growing up with a single mother in San Benito, Texas, the hometown of Tejano star Freddy Fender was not easy for blues singer Charley Crockett. Hitchhiking across the country exposed Crockett to the street life at a young age, following in the footsteps of his relative, American folk hero Davy … Continue reading

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Ally Venable – Band Puppet Show

East Texas has produced yet another formidable young guitar player with award-winning, Ally Venable on her newest Connor Ray Music release, Puppet Show, due out April 13th. Powerhouse singer and guitar player, Ally Venable was the 2014 and 2015 East Texas Female Guitarist of the Year, and the Ally Venable Band won 2015, 2016, and 2017 honors as East Texas Blues Band of the Year.

Devil's Son (Feat. Gary Hoey) Bridges To Burn Cast Their Stones Back Water Blues She Caught The Katy (And Left Me A Mule To Ride) Puppet Show Comfort In My Sorrows Survive Waste It On You Sleeping Through The Storm

Ably backed by drummer Elijah Owings and Bobby Wallace on bass, along with some thrilling and enthusiastic guest appearances by guitarists Gary Hoey and Lance Lopez, and Eric Steckel on keys, Puppet Show features eight originals and two covers. It is another solid step forward in the early stages of what will likely be a long and interesting career for the still teenage blues sensation, Ally Venable Band.

The collection starts with the powerful, riff-driven “Devil’s Son.” The impressive guest guitar work from Gary Hoey is almost beside the point as we’re introduced to Venable’s powerful vocal belts and confident guitar-handling.

Two more scorchers follow with “Bridges to Burn” and “Cast Their Stones” both raising the stakes with sharp vocals, tight and more-complicated-than-they-might-sound rhythms and the kind of guitar work you’ve already come to expect from Ally, even if all you’ve ever heard before is the opening track of this album. “Bridges to Burn” also features guitar slinger, Lance Lopez.

“Back Water Blues” gives the listener a bit of breather, taking you back to the front porch at twilight with some sweet vocals, harmonica and unadorned guitar – for the first minute. Of course, the intro interlude soon gives way to a beer-soaked Texas-blues style rave-up. This is the tune that could go very long in a live set and no one would probably complain. Next up, we hear Ally’s unique take on Taj Mahal’s “She Caught The Katy.” Though not quite as gritty as the well-known Blues Brothers cover, her powerhouse vocals will still definitely hold your interest.

Landing near the middle of the collection, the title track “Puppet Show” gives us a hint at the decades of solid songwriting and lyrical soul-baring we are all hoping lies ahead for Venable and her band. She also demonstrates some adult touches in the tender vocals of torch song-y “Comfort in My Sorrows” that still leave room for her equally expressive and atmospheric guitar break.

A warbling and insistent organ sound drives “Survive” giving the tune that big ol’ Blues Hall weight and groove that you can feel the entire band leaning into with gusto. The additional organ sound also gives Ally something new for her guitar to play off of, raising the intensity for everyone. In fifteen or so years “Waste It On You” will be a classic song about no-good men. For now, it is a good song about clueless boys, but I have a feeling this tune will age well and take on new meaning for Venable – and for her many fans.

The album closer “Sleeping Through The Storm” rolls in a more bouncy style than most of the tracks on the album, but it gives Venable’s lead guitar one last spotlight while it manages to touch on the central themes that played out in the nine songs before it: Ally is sharing her message of hope and perseverance in the face of the struggles and battles that everyone is going to have to face sooner or later, and isn’t that usually the whole point of singin’ (and listening to) the blues?

For more information on Puppet Show and Ally Venable:

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TME.fm Radio on the screen?

This weeks crop of videos for you to watch and listen. Tweet Continue reading

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Friday, April 20, 2018

Trixie and The Trainwrecks – 3 Cheers To Nothing

FROM BERLIN AND LONDON LED BY TRIXIE AND HER 3 MEN BRINGS US THE RAW AUTHENTIC TRAIN HOPER BLUES TRASH FOLK COUNTRY FROM THE STREETS DIRECT INTO YOUR EARSWAYS

Daddy's Gone God Damn Angels Poor & Broke No Good Town 3 Cheers to Nothing God Damn USA Commuter Baby Everybody Wants to Go to Heaven End of Nowhere Yodelin' Bayonne Blues I'm Leavin' Lonesome Whistle This Train

TRIXIE TRAINWRECK:
Wild child, Trixie Trainwreck aka Trinity Sarratt was born in San Francisco and moved to Berlin on a whim when she was 18. She started her musical endeavors in the underground trains back in 1999 and went on to make a name for herself working in and promoting shows in almost every bar in town as well as touring the EU and the USA with a handful of bands (Kamikaze Queens, Cry Babies, Runaway Brides) and most recently with her one woman show as Trixie Trainwreck No Man Band. She’s probably the hardest working girl in showbiz…and a mother, too!!

LINE UP :
Trixie Trainwreck: vocals & rhythm guitar
Charlie Hangdog : blues harp
Paul Seacroft: lapsteel & lead guitar
Bruce Brand: drums & percussion

 


THE RECORINGS:
When Dylan Walshe introduced Trixie Trainwreck to Charlie Hangdog on the premise of playing around London, no one could have predicted what would happen next. After a handful of shows and what may have been a one- off session with Bruce Brand (Thee Headcoats, Milkshakes, Holly Golightly, Hipbone Slim) and Paul Seacroft (The Selector, played with members of Jim Jones Revue, Urban Voodoo Machine, Prince Buster) they would end up recording a whole album with Ed Deegan at the amazing Gizzard Studios for Voodoo Rhythm Records! Well, that’s just what happened and this is what we got just 3 action packed days later! Recorded 99% live and analogue, here comes 13 overdriven-long-gone-broken-hearted-country-blues-trash numbers from the wrong side of the tracks. And it feels so right. “3 Cheers to Nothing” sums up the last 18 years of the San Francisco born, Berlin based Trixie Trainwreck in exile, taking you along on her personal adventures and inner struggles with the ghosts of yesterdays past, angels, demons, and everything in between. The sound is just as unexpected as the rest. We call it Trainwreck Blues!

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