Posts Tagged ‘singer songwriter’

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For the final lullaby recording during South by Southwest 2018, the London-based singer Nilüfer Yanya for her performance in the memory-filled world of Uncommon Objects. It’s a shop in Austin, Texas dedicated to sentimental curiosities of a world gone by. With that in mind, the relatively new musician with a bright future tackles a tune about something old and familiar: fond memories overwhelmed by the pain of love gone wrong.

“Baby Luv” can be found on Nilüfer Yanya’s 2018 release Do You Like Pain?The EP’s title is a line she repeats multiple times on “Baby Luv,” while her choppy guitar punctuates a weary, clock-like rhythm. That ticking beat is then amplified by the saxophone of her bandmate, Jazzi Bobbi while a camera pans a literary world of books that all seem blood-red. Objects once shiny and proud are worn and somewhat torn, with a future as uncertain as the love in this song

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“Fly in Numbers” is the eighth episode of The Light in Demos, a video project produced, written, directed, recorded, shot and edited by The Tallest Man on Earth. Trumpets and French Horns arranged, performed and recorded by CJ Carmieri.

Texas singer-songwriter Alejandro Rose-Garcia, Aka Shakey Graves, is known for twangy, blues-rooted Americana that charms your socks off, the kind fit for dancing barefoot on a back porch in the southern heat. On Can’t Wake Up, his fifth album, he gambles with the very formula that brought him fame. Armed with new instruments and a lifetime of dreams, he forgoes his boot-stomping, cheeky folk for a sound that fluctuates between finely-tuned rock and full-band pop. Alejandro Rose-Garcia pulls it off in large part due to his storytelling prowess; these songs would be welcoming, even enthralling, in any style.

Last December, Rose-Garcia took to Twitter to hint at the change: “Next album. New sound. Sell your suspenders.” While the message is apt in that straightforward folk is nowhere to be found on Can’t Wake Up, it’s best to keep the suspenders on for support given the amount of trekking through new soundscapes. It’s a dense listen Shakey Graves  describes life lessons he’s learned over the years . He says: I honestly don’t want to blab too much about it outside of saying that I couldn’t be more proud of every aspect of this record.  It is vast in sonic range but was built at home the same way I’ve always done it.  some of the songs where it sounds like a small confused symphony is merely one excited boy and a tape machine.

The album’s dioramic artwork depicts Shakey Graves in a ghost town, enrobed in purple and a dazed expression, walking between vibrant violet and magenta plexiglass plates. Above, a human face peers through the clouds, curious as to what could happen next.

As a freshly minted 30-year-old, Rose-Garcia has accumulated a surplus of memories; he dug as far back as high school to pen those that appear on the album. He’s mining for moods and moments, not people or particulars. By utilizing this open-ended storytelling, Shakey taps into powerful feelings: the specific aching brought on by sleepless nights of love-sickness, the stubborn denial of continuing to use selfish excuses, the humanitarian curiosity that arises when comparing your neighbor’s lifestyle to your own. In the album’s most despondent number, “Tin Man,” his final words hang with the asteism of someone who missed the chance to advise his younger self: “Day by day, if the posted limit you obey / Then the biggest shot in your life / Will be dressed with salt and lime.”

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It’s the way Shakey Graves delivers these sentiments that illuminates Can’t Wake Up. He’s evolved from a campfire storyteller into a songwriter armed with a full band, and the rich instrumentation clouds around his lyrics like Broadway set designs: “Aibohphobia” walks through a kitschy, old-timey cartoon thanks to a Mellotron; the use of a retro Optigan makes “Climb on the Cross” sound like it’s playing through a boombox on the beach; “Dining Alone” dances through the countryside with slide guitar and backup vocals by alt-country fellow musician Rayland Baxter (he also joins on guitar elsewhere). Perhaps the biggest trick is how Shakey Graves vocals use slightly out-of-sync double tracking for a dreamy, disillusioned feeling.

Listen closely to the one-two punch of kick drum-heavy “Cops and Robbers” and 1990s ode “Mansion Door.” Though they’re dazzled up in dreams and electric guitar, this is the same Shakey Graves that captured hearts with his debut seven years ago. When creativity and charm are ingrained in your DNA, everything else is malleable.

Can’t Wake Up comes out NEXT FRIDAY, MAY 4th, on Dualtone Records

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“I’m a Stranger Now” is the seventh episode of The Light in Demos, a video project produced, written, directed, recorded, shot and edited by The Tallest Man on Earth.

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Over the course of 10 years, Dan Mangan has gone from a bearded 20-something troubadour playing coffee shop open mics to earning top ten radio hits, scoring Hollywood films, and winning multiple JUNO Awards. Today, the acclaimed songwriter returns to the rich, earnest, sentimental songwriting that he started with as a bright-eyed singer/songwriter in Vancouver.

A new video for Fool For Waiting. You can watch me croon under the spotlight like they do on teevee. Big thanks to Aaron A for directing and putting this together.

From my perspective, this video isn’t meant to be revolutionary or shocking. It’s meant to subtlely convey how far we’ve come as a society in the last several decades. When I was fifteen, my mom took me out for dinner and informed me that our good family friend Liz would be moving in. I was raised in a very open-minded household and had never for a moment considered myself homophobic, but I completely freaked out. I was terrified of being the kid in high school with the “gay mom”. I stopped inviting people over. It took ages to tell my closest friends – to which (of course) they responded, “Obviously, we figured it out. Who cares?”. My mom’s partner, whom she has since married and is still with, has become such a crucial part of my life that it’s pretty much impossible to imagine our family without her. Love is love, and sexuality is not binary. World goings-on are currently worrisome, and we have a long way to go, but we are moving forward. This video celebrates these steps forward amidst the chaos. It’s about celebrating the normalization of a more diverse understanding of love.

If there’s anybody in your life that this message might resonate with, please do share this with them.

“Fool For Waiting” is about “finding someone who makes you feel less crazy, or at least someone who finds your craziness endearing because it’s real and honest,” says Mangan. “And that real, imperfect love is not always as fantastical or magical as a wild romance, but that it’s worth waiting for.”

Produced by Simone Felice (Lumineers, Bat For Lashes) and engineered/mixed by Ryan Hewitt (Johnny Cash, Red Hot Chili Peppers), the song’s vocals, piano, and drums were recorded live off the floor as a duo with Mangan and Matt Johnson (Jeff Buckley, St. Vincent). “The take feels a bit imperfect in a nice way,” says Mangan. “There’s a moment at the end where I chuckled on the line ‘Oh, and they tell me’. Simone liked it because he couldn’t tell if I was laughing or crying. And ain’t that just life…

Music video by Dan Mangan performing Fool For Waiting. © 2018 Dan Mangan Music under exclusive license to Arts & Crafts Productions Inc.

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Emma McGrath is an 18 year old singer-songwriter heralding from Harpenden, North London. Writing her own material since the age of 12, Emma self released her first EP, The Judgement, in November 2014. This was followed up in December 2015 with the self released single Sit With Me, which caught the attention of key media including BBC Introducing who awarded it ‘Track Of The Week’ twice and Radio 2 where it received plays from both Dermot O’Leary and Bob Harris.  Topping off a great 2015, Emma was awarded The PRS Foundation’s Lynsey de Paul prize.

Over the past 18 months Emma has been working hard building up a close network of writers who have helped to develop her craft and hone her sound.  Recognising this The PRS Foundation recently awarded Emma a Women Make Music grant for the development and subsequent release of a mini album. She is now recording with several highly qualified and exciting producers .

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At only 18-years of age, London singer-songwriter Emma McGrath has a ton of talent already bursting out of her. We first discovered her through her latest single “Love You Better,” taken from her sophomore EP Silent Minds.   Emma McGrath is an singer-songwriter heralding from Harpenden, North London. Writing her own material since the age of 12, Emma self released her first EP, The Judgement, in November 2014. This was followed up in December 2015 with the self released single Sit With Me, which caught the attention of key media including BBC Introducing

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“Butterfly,” another track also taken from the EP, is another promising slice of indie rock that has some elements of pop mixed with delicate traces of folk-rock that give it a good ebb and flow. Check out the session clip of McGrath performing “Butterfly” live at Urchin Studios.

Recorded at the WXPN Performance Studio on February 11th, 2018 by James Clark Conner. Videography and assistance by John Vettese. Haley has a wonderful voice and the lyrics are poetic and heartfelt. Musically it’s sometimes reminiscent of early Velvet Underground in that many of the songs quickly build into frenetic and emotive climaxes. The difference here is that these crescendos dissolve into tender moments of unabashed vulnerability, rather than fragmenting into splinters of drug-fueled confusion. It’s beautiful and heartfelt. For fans of Velvet Underground, Angel Olsen and Cat Power.

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“Night Shift,” the opener on Lucy Dacus’s sophomore LP, is a scorching kiss-off to an unworthy ex that starts quietly and builds slowly. Dacus sings softly at first, her dark, honeyed voice gaining momentum as the acoustic guitar picks up support from bass, drums and then, two-thirds of the way through, an overdriven electric guitar that punches through the facade of calm as Dacus lets her voice loose. “Addictions” is no less impactful: chiming guitar at the start rolls into a chugging riff on the refrain, punctuated by a huge brass fanfare that immediately retreats—and never exactly repeats. The genius of the song is the way Dacus steers it in unexpected directions, the horns circling her voice here and veering off on their own there in a way that makes the tune take flight. It’s a talent she demonstrates throughout Historian.

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Performing at Omeara was so incredible! Looking out and seeing so many faces left me speechless, I’m so excited to be able to share it with you all. My new live album ‘Live At Omeara’ is available soon. Very excited that next week I shall be releasing a new 11 track live album “Live At Omeara”
Performing is one of my favourite things, meeting you after the shows, hearing your stories – it makes this so special.
There’s lots of new music that I’m working on now that I can’t wait to share, I wanted to give you something now as a thank you for your support so far.

Freya Ridings delivered a poignant performance at London’s Omeara that was well beyond her 23 years of age.

The singer’s ambient and, at times, ethereal sound, places her somewhere in between London Grammar’s Hannah Reid and Florence Welch in terms of range and vocal power.  Brimming with soul, that voice played quite the juxtaposition to her much softer – almost nervous – speaking voice, as she got comfortable with her surroundings, delivering a set which combined her own original material which yo-yoed between the sombre and the upbeat: and her own unique covers of tracks by artists including Hozier and the Yeah Yeah Yeahs.

The London native’s family were also in attendance, Ridings dedicated “You Mean The World To Me” as a heartfelt ode to her mother, and subsequently her father and brother by proxy, to a chorus of laughter at what was ultimately a homecoming of sorts. The feel-good atmosphere clearly spurred Ridings on at the sold-out show: she grew in confidence as the night progressed.

Backed by her band and playing the keyboard, Ridings showcased her ability to keep an audience transfixed as if she were telling a story. Each song and every lyric was delivered impeccably and with heart, demonstrating there was real angst and emotion entwined within those words, nowhere more evident than with her encore performance of her latest single, the stunning “Lost Without You”.

This is a version of one of my favourite Hozier songs ‘Work Song” performed live at Omeara in London. So excited for all my up and coming shows – I can’t wait to see you there. The next few months are going to be really special.