Posts Tagged ‘Grand Jury Records’

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New York-based singer/songwriter Samia Finnerty’s debut album, “The Baby”, is about learning how to be yourself, by yourself. Embarking on her first tours––far away from friends and alone in green rooms across the country––she began to untangle just how much of her own identity had been created by those she held close. Each of the twelve songs that make up The Baby find Samia holding up her relationships as a mirror, reflecting her own truths and learning how to show up for herself when there’s no one else around. The result of this introspection is an album that is bold and authentic, philosophizing while surgically examining the mundane.

On whiskey-tinged standout “Big Wheel”, she provides a status report on those closest to her, checking in on a liar in Montana and an old friend in Japan who just bought new shoes. The breathtaking Stellate finds her grappling with power imbalance and a fear of confrontation: “​you buy me a big bucket/and I scream into that/and when it overflows you want your money back.”​ She laments the closing of downtown East Village haven St. Dymphna’s, facetiously boasts getting Fit and Full off apple cider vinegar and kale and threatens to get fully naked in a hot restaurant. She vacillates between humorous and harrowing often within a single line, a skill born from growing up with the internet and all of its simultaneous horrors and pleasures. Each song is centred by Samia’s incredible voice, which effortlessly glides between campfire intimacy and 90’s rock panache.

After a string of hushed ballads and spirited pop/rock tunes, Samia Finnerty (aka Samia) began drawing ears and eyes. The New York-based singer/songwriter’s debut album “The Baby” centers on her low, rather soulful voice, and it finds her at her most self-assured. Operating in a ’90s and 2000s pop/rock lane, Samia thrives on soaring hooks, which carry even more power thanks to her impressive vocal range. Upbeat rock songs like “Fit N Full” and “Big Wheel” possess yearning and the type of humour that everyone’s craving these days, and they bring instantaneous choruses, too. Her downtempo side is just as moving, if not more so—“Pool” and “Stellate” are packed with desire, with the former embracing a more ethereal pop airiness and the latter leaning into stripped-down, contemplative rock.

Samia is a gift that keeps on giving. Just one week on from “Triptych,” the New York songwriter returns to our column today with the track “Minnesota.” Lifted from her recent album The Baby, it’s a melancholic strut about the irrationalities of love, with “Bennie and the Jetts”-esque chords backing Samia as she sings about losing control of her feelings.

My first album is called The Baby and it’s coming out via Grand Jury on 28th August 2020. Made it with my friends Caleb Hinz, Jake Luppen, Nathan Stocker and Lars Stalfors
The 2nd single off the record is called Fit n Full and I wrote it Tom D’agustino Donating my pre-sale proceeds to NAACP Legal Defense Fund, -a legal defense organization fighting for racial justice !!.

Twin Peaks surprised me with their mature new album Down In Heaven which came earlier in the year via Grand Jury Music. It’s a very grown up next step for the band who took their sound into a new direction that makes me even more hopeful about their potential future than I already was. They’ve honed in on their songwriting craft, proving them to be one of the most exciting bands making their way up the ranks of the current rock and roll scene.

Not to be confused with the short-lived David Lynch show—or maybe that’s kind of the point?—Chicago’s Twin Peaks are a young band. In fact, its members were barely born when the program went off the air in 1991. But on their third full-length release Down in Heaven, the band’s sound reaches a level of maturity that wasn’t present on 2013’s Sunken or 2014’s Wild Onion. Yes, they’re still brash and reckless and, more than anything, fun, but with a few extra years on them, they’ve molded that reckless spirit into a multifaceted collection of songs that brings to mind the Rolling Stones at their twangiest.