Posts Tagged ‘Ryan Adams’

Image of Dutch Uncles - Big Balloon

Manchester’s idiosyncratic art-popologists Dutch Uncles return with “Big Balloon”, their new studio album, on 17th February 2017 on Memphis Industries.

Big Balloon is the latest chapter in Dutch Uncles’ brilliantly witty, hip-swiveling, left-field adventures. Taking musical inspiration from Kate Bush’s The Red Shoes, Low-era David Bowie, some slightly-less fashionable records belonging to their Dads and East European techno, it’s the fifth Dutch Uncles studio album and the follow-up to 2015’s acclaimed “O Shudder”.
Functioning as ten distinct pieces, each tackling a different topic, including austerity cuts, therapy, fried chicken, paranoia and coming to terms with loneliness, Big Balloon is Dutch Uncles’ finest album to date, taking listeners on an exhilarating cerebral journey.

Image of Ryan Adams - Prisoner

Mixing the heartfelt angst of a singer/songwriter with the brashness of a garage rocker, Ryan Adams is at once one of the few artists to emerge from the alt-country scene to achieve mainstream commercial success and the one who most strongly refused to be defined by the genre, leaping from one spot to another stylistically while following his increasingly prolific muse.
On new album “Prisoner”, Ryan has said: “I was reflecting on the different states of desire and what it means to be a prisoner of your own desire… I felt like I had been robbed of… the most valuable thing in a person’s life…Time.”

The twelve tracks that make up Prisoner came to Adams over a prolific period stretching back as far as the week his 2014 self-titled album entered the U.S. album chart at a career high of #4. During that run, Adams toured the world, recorded and released both his Live at Carnegie Hall collection and full-album cover of Taylor Swift’s 1989,

Image of Tim Darcy - Saturday Night

‘Saturday Night’, the first proper solo album from Tim Darcy (Ought), comes from one of those crossroads-type moments in life where one has to walk to the edge before knowing which way to proceed. Each track is woven to the next in a winding, complex journey through a charged, continuous present. There are love / love lost songs like the standout, almost-New Wave ‘Still Waking Up’ in which a Smiths-esque melody builds upon an underbrush that recalls 60s AM pop and country.

Darcy’s unmistakable, commanding voice and lyrical phrasing are, as they are in Ought, an instrument here – vital to the entire affair. There’s a line in ‘Tall Glass Of Water’, the album’s Velvet Underground-nodding opening track, where Darcy asks himself a rhetorical question: “if at the end of the river, there is more river, would you dare to swim again?” He barely pauses before the answer: “Yes, surely I will stay, and I am not afraid. I went under once, I’ll go under once again.” That river shows up again and again in the lyrics of ‘Saturday Night’. It’s about how wonderful it can be to feel in touch with that inner current. It’s about how good it feels to make art and how terrifying; how you don’t always get to choose whether you’re swimming or drowning as we grow and move through life, just that you’re going to keep diving in.

Image of The Underground Youth - What Kind Of Dystopian Hellhole Is This?

What Kind Of Dystopian Hellhole Is This? (Released 15/02/17) is the eighth LP from Berlin-via-Manchester based psych/post-punk outfit The Underground Youth, and it’s arguably their most accomplished yet. Perhaps what is most exceptional about The Underground Youth is their ability to create a brooding melting pot of Berlin chillwave, post-punk, folk, goth and shoegaze but delivered with a dreamy pop sensibility. With a huge back-catalogue that’s collectively clocked up several million listens from a dedicated global following, Craig Dyer and co have acquired a cult-like status and have consistently been at the forefront of neo-psychedelia since their inception. The band will be heading out on an extensive 25-date EU tour in support of the new LP

Image of Strand Of Oaks - Hard Love

Hard Love, Tim Showalter’s latest release as Strand of Oaks, is a record that explores the balancing act between overindulgence and accountability. Recounting Showalter’s decadent tour experiences, his struggling marriage, and the near death of his younger brother, Hard Love emanates an unabashed, raw, and manic energy that embodies both the songs and the songwriter behind them. “For me, there are always two forces at work: the side that’s constantly on the hunt for the perfect song, and the side that’s naked in the desert screaming at the moon. It’s about finding a place where neither side is compromised, only elevated.”

During some much-needed downtime following the release of his previous album, HEAL, Showalter began writing Hard Love and found himself in a now familiar pattern of tour exhaustion, chemically-induced flashbacks, and ongoing domestic turmoil. Drawing from his love of Creation Records, Trojan dub compilations, and Jane’s Addiction, and informed by a particularly wild time at Australia’s Boogie Festival, he sought to create a record that would merge all of these influences while evoking something new and visceral. Showalter’s first attempt at recording the album led to an unsatisfying result—a fully recorded version of Hard Love that didn’t fully achieve the ambitious sounds he heard in his head. He realized that his vision for the album demanded collaboration, and enlisted producer Nicolas Vernhes, who helped push him into making the most fearless album of his career.

Prisoner

If anyone became worried about Ryan Adams and his broken heart following his acrimonios divorce from Mandy Moore, they won’t find much peace after listening to the new album “Prisoner”. From the opening track and lead single, “Do You Still Love Me?,” Adams sets the stage for an album full of heartbreak and confusion, frustration and uncertainty and plenty of questions, with the first being, quite simply, “Do you still love me?”

Though he may never get a clear answer to that question and others, Prisoner is far from a hopeless album. Sure, on a song like “Shiver and Shake,” he sings the heart jerking lyrics, “I miss you so much, I shiver and I shake / I’ve been waiting here like a dog at the door / You used to throw me scraps / You don’t do it anymore,” but then on “Doomsday” he stands up and admits, “My love, we can do better than this / My love, how can you complicate a kiss.” Somehow, in the midst of such significantly personal and affecting lyrics, Adams manages to display a type of confidence one can only find after picking up the remains of a destroyed heart and shaking it off.

Beyond the heartache, though, Prisoner is soaked in reverb and chorus, radiating the best of the ’80s at nearly every turn. Fans and critics alike are quick to point out the undeniable comparisons of Adams’ vocals and the record’s production quality to the likes of Petty or Springsteen, and nowhere is that more obvious than on “Haunted House” and “We Disappear.” When either track starts, close your eyes and you’ll swear you’re listening to a never-before-heard Springsteen outtake.

This ’80s-drenched sound shouldn’t come as much of a shock to fans of Adams; from a production perspective, Prisoner will soon be viewed as a companion piece and ultimately, a fulfillment, to his 2014 album “Ryan Adams”.  In fact, as far as Adams is concerned, he’s finally perfected the sound for which he’s long been looking .

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Throughout the new disc, Adams is at his best and his most brutally honest. Though he may not always find answers to the questions he asks, he manages to dust off his heart, toss it on his sleeve, and continue playing the part of a prisoner in love. Whether fans are drawn to Prisoner because of the pristine sound or the wide-open, unobstructed look inside the singer’s heart—or both—they’ll be greeted with a quintessential Ryan Adams record from start to finish.

Ryan Adams delivered a haunting, solo acoustic version of Radiohead’s “Karma Police” during a Saturday session spot on BBC Radio 2. The singer-songwriter stayed true to the epic OK Computer ballad, even creatively crooning the eerie, descending vocal melody from the song’s bridge.
Ryan Adams also commented on how AC/DC, ELO Inspired songs for his upcoming Album
“I was listening to AC/DC’s ‘Fly on the Wall,’ and that’s when I realized what I had to do for the record,” singer-songwriter said in new interview

“I woke up this morning and I was jetlagged, and I had a full day of press,” he told the BBC. “But I wanted to do a couple of covers. And I know plenty, but I wanted to do something new that I hadn’t done before. So I went, what are two or three songs I could try to learn before I have to go to my first thing. And this was one. I don’t know if I’ve learned it in a great, new and interesting way, but I also thought it’s fitting, because there’s a pretty awful person who just got elected in the United States. So I don’t know why, but that song popped into my head this morning.”
Adams also performed a solo version of “Doomsday,” the anthemic folk-rock single from his upcoming 16th LP, “Prisoner”, due out February 17th.

The songwriter recently announced the album’s limited-edition “End of the World” box set containing 17 previously unreleased B-sides, seven-inch vinyl for each of the 12 songs and a 2-D action play set with assorted action figures.
On Monday, Adams released a video for power-ballad “Do You Still Love Me?.” The clip blends onstage footage with shots of Adams and his production team in the studio.
Singer-songwriter told BBC Radio 2 his performance was inspired by “pretty awful person” Donald Trump

RYAN ADAMS – ” Doomsday “

Posted: January 23, 2017 in MUSIC
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Ryan Adams  begins his latest song “Doomsday” with a pledge: “I could wait 1,000 years my love, I’d wait for you,” he sings. “I could stand in just one place my love and never move.”

“I was listening to AC/DC’s ‘Fly on the Wall,’ and that’s when I realized what I had to do for the record,” singer-songwriter said in new interview

The track on Ryan Adams’ next album, “Prisoner”, blends these earnest, lovelorn sentiments with elements from both folk and Eighties heartland rock. The track kicks off with sturdy strumming and a descending melodic line played on a harmonica; a lead guitar quickly doubles the harmonica riff. The beat is where the Eighties come in: the clipped, echoey drums evoke the popular production style from that decade.  Adams suggested that his latest tracks were inspired by groups like AC/DC, Bruce Springsteen and ELO.

Prisoner arrives via Pax Am/Blue Note, and Blue Note boss Don Was helped produce the record. “I didn’t know if I knew what I was doing,” said Adams. “So when you”re in a situation like that, you gotta get Gandalf – you gotta call Don Was!” Was served a similar wizard role for the Rolling Stones, Bonnie Raitt, Ringo Starr and Bob Dylan, among others. He won a producer of the year Grammy in 1994.

Prisoner hits shelves on February 17th.

New album ‘Prisoner’ feat. “Doomsday”

How the heck are Ryan Adams‘ songs this consistently good? The singer-songwriter is readying his sixteenth (!) studio album, Prisoner, due out on February 17th via Blue Note and his own label Pax/Am, and while we are already thrilled to hear the next dynamic song after its lead-off track “Do You Still Love Me?,” the latest from the album is pure balladeer perfection. The contemplative acoustic number “To Be Without You” surfaced today, and it’s another remarkably strong single in Adams’ vast catalog of strong singles.

New album ‘Prisoner’ feat. “To Be Without You”

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Hear Ryan Adams' Lonesome New Folk-Rock Song 'To Be Without You'

Authoritative and entertaining series featuring original portraits of songwriters discussing the creative process and their inspiration, including exclusive performances and interviews

Peerlessly prolific, multi-Grammy-nominated singer/songwriter Ryan Adams deconstructs his songwriting process, creating a new song on camera, and plays a selection of classic and exclusive new tracks

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Ryan Adams is mining an unexpected influence hard rock icons AC/DC for the sonic design of his upcoming 16th LP,”When I run, I listen to [an iPod] Nano that I have,” the singer-songwriter “I put all the AC/DC records on from back to front, or I’ll listen to the best of stuff from the ’80s: Springsteen, or [Nick] Hornsby, and I’ll listen to what is going on there. I was listening to AC/DC’s Fly on the Wall, and that’s when I realized what I had to do for the record.”

Last fall, Adams said his next album would feature material inspired by Bruce Springsteen’s Darkness on the Edge of Town and the Smith’s Meat Is Murder. But he’s since added several disparate influences into the mix – including classic rock acts Bachman-Turner Overdrive (“Takin’ Care of Business,” “You Ain’t Seen Nothing Yet”) and pop hit-makers Electric Light Orchestra, both of whom helped expand his guitar production expertise.
“I was like, ‘Wow!’ I understand the multicolored guitar tone moments now,” he said. “You can layer stuff. I really just learned a lot.”

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The songwriter ended up with “quite literally 80 [songs] probably more!” but trimmed down the track list to 12, working alongside producer Don Was. “How do I make a real distinct record where anybody listens to it and says, ‘That’s the truth from beginning to end?'” he said. “So it’s like exercise. It sucks in the beginning. But then you get into it.”

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Whatever the decision Ryan Adams made to take his news songs and new band to only two public concerts, one in Sydney and the other in Tokyo, for the fans of his music, in those two locales consider themselves blessed. The new band may have been christened The Nuts on Instagram over the last two days, but whatever they end up being called, they truly ignited the sold out Enmore Theatre on Tuesday night.

The buzz of anticipation is always present when Ryan Adams comes to town and tonight was no exception. After doing a surprise invite only gig for a few hundred the previous night at The Factory, tonight was the first paid public performance by this new collective. The crowd was wondering what the band would deliver from Adam’s catalogue and the band were eager to get out in front of a crowd and get some feedback and to show off their licks.

‘Magnolia Mountain’, the song he recorded with The Cardinals, was the starting point tonight.

New material was peppered all the way through, with the bold, damaged songs boasting titles such as ‘Doomsday’ and ‘Prisoner’. Oddly enough, in some ways the tunes most closely resembled numbers from his underrated and oft-ignored heavy metal record, Orion, but in terms of lyrical content they seemed cut from the same tear-and-spit-stained cloth of Cold Roses.  But as ‘Gimme Something Good’ rear-ended into ‘Kim’, with the audience following every power-popped chord, such concerns faded away. Maybe we’ve always been too academic about Adams; too concerned about defining something that does not need to be defined.

As he played the audience up and out with ‘When The Stars Go Blue’, it seemed redundant to confuse personality with art, or try to make cerebral sense out of the music . A gag about the thematic similarity between his songs led to an improvised number about his love of toast and Joy Division bootlegs, and songs like ‘Magnolia Mountain’ were transformed into long, riff-heavy numbers that teetered thrillingly on the edge of collapse

With Ben Alleman on keys, long term producer and bassist Charle Stavish, Nate Lotz on drum and Benny Yurco (from Grace Potter and The Nocturnals) joining in on lead guitars, this was a rock and roll show. The lyrical content of the new songs are raw emotions. As Adams said, “these songs are so raw, that if you were to eat them you would get worms”. Raw they may be, but they do rock and roll and not wither in melancholia.

‘Dirty Rain”, from Ashes and Fire, was delivered with a punch and ‘Do You Still Love Me?’ from the new album Prisoner churned with powerful chords and aching lyrics. With 7 of the 21 songs being brand new to the audience, there was a chance of there being some disappointment in not hearing old favourites. Adams jokingly advised the crowd “not to be scared” of the new songs, but there was no fear at all, as the crowd truly engaged with the new numbers and the new band.

Prisoner appears to be an album of songs that don’t linger long on the jam, but come out with six strings on fire. Alleman played some beautiful keyboard solos through the set, and Yurco and Adams connected perfectly in guitar synchronicity. Even when the amplifiers lost power for a bit and the band waited patiently, Adams was so keen to get going and hoped they would fix them soon because he stated ‘we just want to rock”.

One thing that always pleases us about Ryan Adams is his penchant for jamming off into the sunset. A fairly rote song like Peaceful Valley became a bulging ten-minute opus that allowed his band to flex their muscles and find each other in the maelstrom. It was one of many instances that the group let fly. They work exceptionally well together, and the results were spectacular passages of slick riffing and tumbling minor scale conversations.

‘Kim’, ‘Gimme Something Good’ and ‘I just Might’ were a trio of songs off his eponymous 2014 record that fit into the attitude of the set list tonight. There was to be no acoustic guitars and harmonica, this was a rock concert simple and beautiful. ‘Cold Roses’ bookended the set with some more meandering gorgeous guitar jams and truly a magical moment on the night.
The band seemed like they wanted to play for hours more but they closed it down by getting to a couple of classics.

‘Shakedown On 9th Street’ from Heartbreaker had the room vibrating one more time with everyone joining in on the chorus. For the fans who wanted something from Gold, they were left wanting more, after a splendid closing version of ‘When the Stars Go Blue’.

Ryan Adams And The Nuts truly demonstrated a pulsating delivery of the new songs from Prisoner and this will truly be one of his best records based on the first instalment of them done live. I do believe this band will morph into something very special once the tour proper kicks off next year his fans hope they come back to show us what they have achieved a year from now.  You know what else? Ryan Adams is funny as shit.

  1. Outbound Train
  2. Haunted House
  3. Fix It
  4. Prisoner
  5. Gosh, I Love Toast
  6. Breakdown
  7. Let It Ride
  8. To Be Without You
  9. Kim
  10. Doomsday
  11. When the Summer Ends
  12. Gimme Something Good
  13. I Just Might
  14. Shakedown on 9th Street
  15. I Love You But I Don’t Know What To Say
  16. Encore:

Prisoner [Explicit]

Ryan Adams finally has annouced his new album  will be released on February. 17th, 2017 titled Prisoner. It’s his first project since last year’s 1989, a song-for-song cover of Taylor Swifts record of the same name, and first album of new, original material since his self-titled effort of 2014.

He made the announcement on social media, posting a picture of the cover art and giving the release date. He added that the first single, “Do You Still Love Me?” will be out tomorrow (December. 7th).

Adams spoke about the record back in September, noting that he had written around 80 songs for it and that its sound was inspired by listening to classic rock on his iPod while running. “I was listening to bands like AC/DC”, he said, “and that’s when I realized what I had to do for the record.” However, the guitar sounds were inspired by Electric Light Orchestra and Bachman Turner Overdrive, adding that he finally understood what those bands were doing musically. “I was like, ‘Wow! I understand the multicolored guitar tone moments now. You can layer stuff. I really just learned a lot.’”

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The track listing is below, Ryan Adams recently debuted the new songs at an invite-only show in Sydney. They  also found a clip of him performing “Do You Still Love Me” earlier today in Sydney, which was posted by a fan on Instagram.

Ryan Adams, ‘Prisoner,’ Track Listing

1. “Do You Still Love Me?”
2. “Prisoner”
3. “Doomsday”
4. “Haunted House”
5. “Shiver And Shake”
6. “To Be Without You”
7. “Anything I Say To You Now”
8. “Breakdown”
9. “Outbound Train”
10. “Broken Anyway”
11. “Tightrope”
12. “We Disappear”

Ryan Adams - Willow Lane

The last installment of Ryan Adams’ prolific PaxAm singles series . The “Willow Lane” 7″ vinyl also features B-sides “Yes Or Run” and “Red Hot Blues.” The first two are prime examples of the ’80s roots-rock feel that crystallized on Adams’ self-titled 2014 LP, while “Red Hot Blues” is a 12-bar blues goof sung in a fake Louis Armstrong/Cookie Monster growl.

We’re takin’ a ride
Down to the Court Street tonight
[?]
You feel like you could die

This ain’t right
Well they shuffle your name
Three cops under the bridge on the lookout haunt
Watch you speed away

One, the one that walked away
As you drive
To Willow Lane

I thought I knew the right things to say
Thought I knew the right things to say
I thought I knew the right things to say
But you’re fadin’ away
On Willow Lane
You could count the stars
Johnny’s gonna count the money in the bag
You could count your blessings
But how many have you really had?

You can watch the moon rise
Or you could watch it go down
There ain’t nobody lookin’ for you, baby
Nobody lookin’ for you now

I thought I knew the right things to say
I thought I knew the right things to say
Thought I knew the right things to say
But you’ve faded away
Down to Willow Lane

There’s shuffle out the heartbeat, stuck inside a drum
If it was topsy and turvy fallin’ down the stairs into a bunch of drums
And I ain’t got no time for you, I ain’t got no time
Ain’t got nothin’ to say, I ain’t got nothin’ to confess for awhile

I thought I knew the right things to say
Thought I knew what would take you away
Thought I knew the right things to say
But you’re fadin’ away
To Willow Lane

I was born and raised in Jacksonville, North Carolina. A city where the salt in the air eats away at the paint on the houses and anything made of metal rusts or discolors like sweat lines in black t shirts long before its time.
When I was in middle school my family moved from an extremely haunted house into a house over behind the High School, a part of town that was edged against the woods, where I first listened to Black Sabbath on my headphones, where I first heard the call of the wild and would find myself winding the woods late at night. Where I first saw Night Flight on tv and heard Sonic Youth, Voivod and Bad Brains and where I was able to see the documentary “Another State of Mind” about Social Distortion and Youth Brigade- which my life has been about since- That movie changed me forever. Living in that little house with my new step-dad his outdoor cat had a litter of kittens ( although I protested daily they would not allow animals in the house, strangely, even though they were like wild animals in their own way )… I feel so in love with the smallest kitten who couldn’t get to his food cause he was always trampled on and the only one who was almost all grey save for a single white foot. I loved him more than I had ever loved anyone or anything besides my grandparents and my Sacred Heart, Dio album. His name was Bully.
To this day my entire childhood is wrapped around this mysterious cat. He was so trusting he would allow me to put him on my lap and ride with him on my bicycle. Every single day the bus pulled up to the end of the street to drop me off ( we lived in a street that turned into a cul-de-sac so the bus couldn’t go down it ) He must have heard the sound and knew I was home… literally every day he would walk to meet me and I was run to his side. Before I reached him as he walked towards me on the sidewalk he would flop over and purrrrr. I miss him everyday.
I came home from summer school, in High School years later and he was laying exactly where he was when I was on my way to school that day and it was raining. He was laying on the front steps of my house. He had been poisoned. I would sneak him into my home and he would get kicked out. Seeing my cat like that destroyed me. I cried for three days. And then I packed a backpack full of some clothes and cassette tapes and I left home for good.
In this track Willow Lane, it was late night and I think me and Marshall were just jamming at PaxAm… I had a lot on my mind. I had recently come back from being in North Carolina for the first time in years reacquainting myself with my father and sister after a long time. My then wife didnt know how bored the Jacksonville Police Dept was or how menacing. I knew it well having grown up running from the cops for skateboarding and other acts of madness. I often wondered what percentage of kids I grew up with eventually just went to jail who stayed there. There is a feeling of bleak desperation in the summer there. I used to feel it and taunt it growing up when the warm lights of my Grandmothers house offered me so much love, like a shelter from this raging storm of nothingness outside. It made it strangely fun.
On that trip, it was just us, me and my other-half, standing in the yard of the now empty house that belonged to my GMa, the sense of loss was tremendous. I would soon lose her neighbor and my life-long band mate and brother, Allen.
We ventured back to the house, the house I moved to from South Willow Lane, this bizarre home that stood in shadow while all other house were in sunlight. The entire neighborhood was starting to fall apart. Had it always been this way?
I stood over where Bully had been buried and I could feel the sharp and awful pains of missing him so much in me. Holding him in my arms. So many days of my life were just him and me, laying in the yard reading comics- me talking to him. He was my best friend. He will always be the first and most special relationship in my life. He loved me everyday and for who I was. And our connection was intense and not at all like a boy and his cat. People who comment that he was more like a human or a dog, really and no matter where I went when I left the house he would run after me, even after the car- to the point where we would have to pick him up and bring him back home.
This song and this single are for him. I love you, Bully. I do it all for you. I only believe in the other side so I might hold you close once more and lay with you in the sunlight and not waste a single moment again of our time.
Yes or Run is a continuation of the Blue Light sound that I have been chasing, Mike V and Charlie helped me take this raw jam that was sitting on tape and shape it into something new and it makes me so proud and so happy that we continue those crazy nights at Pax…. and Red Hot Blues was a funny accidental comedic jam, many of which happen at PaxAm, one night during the writing sessions for the self -titled record- and that’s Tal on bass and Marsh on drums. Doc Patt filled in the accordion at the end of Willow Lane– so if you cry it’s partially his fault too.
Keep on Keeping On
Dispatch from Wilmington DE, May 2015
DRA

‘Willow Lane’ is the main song of the last Paxam Series single that Ryan Adams is releasing in august

Ryan Adams is a multiple-Grammy-nominated singer songwriter from Jacksonville, NC who has released a veritable onslaught of critically acclaimed and commercially successful albums since 2000. Among the most recent of these was September 2014’s Ryan Adams. Written and produced by Adams, the album led off with “Gimme Something Good,” the first vinyl single to go #1 at the Amazon.com music store, and entered the Billboard chart at career high #4. The album earned two nominations at the 56th Annual Grammy Awards: Best Rock Song for “Gimme Something Good” and Best Rock Album. In Fall 2015, Adams commemorated the release of his full-album cover of Taylor Swift’s 1989 by appearing as the first music guest on The Daily Show with Trevor Noah, then opening Jimmy Kimmel Live’s week of shows airing from New York, playing (of course) “Welcome To New York” from 1989.
Among the other monuments in the Adams canon are: Ashes & Fire, his 2011 Glyn Johns-produced “”gorgeous, shimmering solo album” 2007’s Easy Tiger which opened on the U.S. chart with Ryan’s biggest first week sales to date and wound down the year with “Halloweenhead” making Rolling Stone’s Best Songs of 2007; 2005’s Cold Roses and Jacksonville City Nights; 2004’s Love Is Hell; Ryan’s 2001 major label debut Gold, which has sold nearly a million copies worldwide to date and features “When Stars Go Blue,” quoted in Stephen King’s Lisey’s Story and widely known as “”that Tim McGraw song the kid did on American Idol”” or “”the song the Corrs did with Bono”; and his 2000 solo debut Heartbreaker, released on Bloodshot Records and including “My Winding Wheel,Oh My Sweet Carolina (featuring Emmylou Harris) and “Come Pick Me Up.”

Ryan Adams is also CEO of his own PAX-AM label through which he has released numerous singles and albums including the 15-LP exclusive vinyl edition of his 2012 Live After Deaf box set that sold out its entire pressing in eight minutes. He has also produced albums for Jenny Lewis, La Sera, Fall Out Boy, Willie Nelson, Jesse Malin, and collaborated with Norah Jones, America, Cowboy Junkies, Beth Orton and many others. His current band The Shining has accompanied him on world spanning rave-reviewed tours since 2014.”

Ryan Adams and the Shining, “When The Stars Go Blue” – Outside Lands 2016 – Aug. 7th

Ryan Adams (Jason Isbell) – Oh My Sweet Carolina, Let It Ride & To Be Young – August 7th SF-Live at Outside Lands Festival

Full Setlist 

    • Trouble
    • Gimme Something Good
    • New York, New York
    • When The Stars Go Blue
    • Let It Ride  
    • Shakedown on 9th Street
    • Cold Roses  
    • Fix It  
    • To Be Young (Is to Be Sad, Is to Be High)
    • Everybody Knows
    • Goodbye Two Balloons (improv)  
    • Magnolia Mountain  
    • Oh My Sweet Carolina
    • Peaceful Valley

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