Posts Tagged ‘singer songwriter’

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Jade Bird could have you fooled with her accent. Her Southern drawl translates well into her crystalline power ballad “Something American.” She’s so convincing  she could be mistaken for a Southerner. It’s also a testament to how well she blends into the Americana folk scene despite being a UK native.

Jade Bird is 20 years old but her passion for music has been embedded in her since she began playing piano at seven years old. Her mom gave birth to her at 20 as well, and Jade spent her formative years moving from place to place as an army child. While she doesn’t go into too much detail, she says she’s been in a lot of serious situations where she’s found comfort in the catharsis of music. “It’s very embedded in my experience,” she says. At 12, her parents divorced and she moved to Wales. Her mom found romance with a new partner who played guitar. “There was something quite magical about it,” she says of the instrument. She became immersed in songs her mom’s partner would play by Mazzy Star, Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, and Bob Dylan and eventually started writing songs herself. It became her gateway to Americana and country music.

Her education began at 14 with the now defunct Civil Wars. “I remember seeing them, and I lost my mind,” she exclaims. Their breakup still has an effect on her. “It really upsets me,” she says. But it was Chris Stapleton’s “You Should Probably Leave” that made her contemplate classic country songwriting, which led her to Loretta Lynn and Dolly Parton. She was attracted to their wry humor, but also how they overcame hardship, she says while citing Coal Miner’s Daughter. “I think I’ve always been inspired by country music stories, because these women have to find a way to work despite [country music] being conservative and white male-oriented,” she explains. “I’ve been hugely inspired by their struggles and how they weren’t given anything and it didn’t come easy.”

Despite her affinity for Americana and country music—something she showed off on her 2017 EP Something American—she’s found herself with some pop tendencies. She’s been compared to everyone from Stevie Nicks to Jefferson Airplane’s Grace Slick and Alanis Morissette. Needless to say it’s hard to pin Bird down. In January she released “Lottery,” which had pop undertones because of the albums that have influenced her, the ones she’s nostalgic for. “Alanis Morissette’s Jagged Little Pill is the one I always go back to,” she says fondly. But Bird doesn’t want to be boxed in genre labels. She wants to write piano ballads as much as she does Americana tracks and pop songs. “I always respected country music for its narrative and how it’s so solid, you can get the picture in your mind,” she explains. “I feel like song structure is a real ode to that emotion.” For Bird, that emotion stemmed from the breakdown of relationships in her life. Instead of falling out of love with her boyfriend, it was witnessing her parents and both sides of her grandparents split. Because it’s so intricately detailed with her experiences, her songwriting isn’t generic. “There’s not a line I think you can miss,” she says.

The emotional maturity found in her songwriting comes from having strong women in her life, like her mom who she refers to as her “best mate.” “We’re only 20 years apart, so I’ve always been treated like an adult in my life up until now,” she says. When Bird was very young and her dad was away in the army, her mom worked night shifts and babysat her during the day. Bird and her mom had to move them twice—something she credits her mom for doing all by herself. Her grandma also had a profound influence on her when Bird when she moved in with her in Wales—she witnessed her grandma move forward after her grandfather left her. It’s the women closest to her like her mom and grandma that have impacted the types of narratives she wants in her music. “I don’t really get inspired by landscapes that much, it’s all people,” she says of her inspiration. She aims to emulate and admire the women she grew up with in her craft. “I’ve been surrounded by incredibly strong women: incredibly, unapologetically strong women, and I guess that for me has just been the biggest inspiration,” she says. “It’s just been a total pleasure to grow up with my mom.”

Jade is hoping to get her debut album out this year or in early 2019. If all goes well she says, maybe she’d get Jack White to produce her next record.

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I’m very proud to present the music video I made recently for ‘Strangest Of Ways’.  says Lucy Rose, I thought long and hard about what sort of video I wanted to make to go with the song and for a long time I couldn’t think of anything. And then I remembered an e-mail that I received back in July 2017 when I was doing my worldwide cinema tour showing my documentary about my trip around Latin America.

The e-mail was from the father of a girl called Zoe who had come to my show. Instead of enjoying the documentary, Zoe had found it a hard watch as it made her think about all the things she wanted to do with her life but felt like she couldn’t because of her illnesses and disability.  The next time I saw Zoe was at my Bristol show in November and I asked her if she would be interested in being in my next music video and hopefully we could make something that would make her feel the complete opposite that she felt watching my Latin American documentary.

I asked her to choose a place she’s always wants to go and we would find the time to do it. Last week we boarded a plane and went on one hell of adventure together,

Official video for ‘Strangest Of Ways’ taken from the album ‘Something’s Changing’, out now –

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It seems like kind of a given that one of my favourite music videos of the year so far would feature weird tarot-type cards, an array of pantsuits and a cult leader. In addition, it also accompanies a slice of low-key, sultry pop from London musician Nilüfer Yanya, so I’m not sure how any millennial human could resist.

The music video for “Thanks 4 Nothing,” Yanya’s latest single, is grainy and surreal, starring her as a person who may or may not be a charismatic cult leader, and lots of mid-century modern furnishings. It looks fantastic, and its lack of over-the-top drama compliments the mood of the track exactly; evocative rather than in-your-face, bubbling from beneath with a sense of power and pressure.

The impeccable taste on display here is yet another reason to keep an eye on this artist as she makes her inevitable ascent – and let’s face it, there probably won’t be a more understatedly zeitgeist-y visual than Nilüfer Yanya draped in a red dressing gown casting a hand over some magic cards this year.

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LA singer/songwriter Sunny War began her career as a busker, which is usually the kind of CV that results in loud, strummy songs that emphasize volume and ferocity over nuance and melody (see: those first few Billy Bragg records). So it’s a joy that War’s third album, With the Sun, is not a record of belted-out jeremiads, but instead a gorgeous, meticulously-constructed record that touches on folk and blues and country without ever owing a clear debt to any single one of them. It’s even more remarkable considering War spent her formative years kicking around the LA punk scene, playing house shows with rambunctious bands like FIDLAR. But she emerges clear-eyed and self-assured from the get-go, on the gorgeous album opener, “If It Wasn’t Broken.” War’s guitar fluttering down like falling feathers, and she delicately applies her voice to the spaces in between, delivering the song’s matter-of-fact chorus with wisdom and grace: “How would you know had a heart/ if it wasn’t broken?/ if it wasn’t broken?” When the songs do veer political, they’re handled not with blunt force but with a carefulness that makes the sentiment they express that much more powerful. “I get home and turn on the TV,” War sings on “I’m Human,” against a twitching guitar figure and gently-brushed snare. Then, she sighs out the verse’s dark kicker: “They killed another man who looks just like me.” With the Sun is a powerful showcase for a singer and lyricist who seems to have arrived fully-formed, with a natural gift for simple, gentle melodies and a knowledge beyond her years.

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Anna Burch is an indie pop singer-songwriter working out of Detroit. Years ago, she was the front of a band called Failed Flowers, and she had been in other bands, but she took some time away from music to go to grad school. After that, she moved to Detroit and started a solo career. She got a big break when she was spotted by fellow Michigander Fred Thomas, who was once a member of His Name is Alive, and was also the front of the indie pop band Saturday Looks Good to Me. Thomas has also put out a few solo records and contributed to dozens of albums across many genres. As the story goes, he sent her demo to Polyvinyl Records with a note that said “This is not a drill. You need to hear this”. They liked it, and they quickly signed her. Her debut album “Quit the Curse” will be out on February 2nd

This has all happened very quickly. Thomas sent the demos in the summer of 2017. She had a bunch of songs written, and she had also caught the ear of Collin Dupuis, who has mixed records by Angel Olsen, Mynabirds, The Black Keys, Grant-Lee Phillips, and many others. He helped her fine-tune those songs, and the end result is Quit the Curse. Only six months passed from the time Thomas said “listen to this” to the time Polyvinyl said “We’re putting this record out”. They announced the signing in late October and started promoting the album in November. I’ve been getting emails about a couple of the songs, and with the release date just a couple of weeks away, it’s time.
Some say she sounds like the brilliant no-fucks-given mid-90s indie rock of Liz Phair. Some people say she’s like Courtney Barnett. I get that, but I hear other things like the precision, power and punk-lite beauty of That Dog combined with the gritty and angular but silky smoothness of Julie Doiron. Boil all of that down, add a dash of Mitski, and I get Anna Burch. I love all of her songs that I’ve heard, but I love this one the most:

“Tea-Soaked Letter” is taken from Anna Burch’s debut album Quit the Curse, out 2/2/18.

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The music world’s focus doesn’t tend to drift far from the English speaking countries of the Western world, One artist who has become of note though is songwriter Nadia Schilling. Hailing from Caldas da Rainha in Western Portugal, Nadia put out her excellent, slow-burning debut album, “Above The Trees”, back in November, and it seems only now to be garnering the attention is so richly deserves.

Written on the archetypal battered old acoustic guitar; Above The Trees is a record that emerges from a difficult time in Nadia’s life, her songwriting inspired by her mother’s death. At times it feels deeply personal, Nadia exposing her own feelings, whilst simultaneously penning a beautiful tribute to loss and the act of grieving itself. Nodding equally to the raw, honesty of Cat Power or Elliot Smith, and the bruised beauty of Portishead, it is a record of breath-taking intensity that demand’s the listeners full attention to truly deliver its stunning charms. Above The Trees is a record spreading on word of mouth, and one that is thoroughly deserving of.

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Nashville based alt-popper, Molly Jewell first came to our attention last year with excellent single, I Wish You Loved Me Like You Started To. The track was a flamboyant and passionate introduction; Molly’s vocal possessing the same raw, rasping quality of Margaret Glaspy, accompanied by vivacious piano flourishes, buzzing synths and thrilling, fuzzy guitar. The track was the first taster of Molly’s debut EP, due out at the end of January.

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The EP is soon to be preceded by the superb new single, I Can’t Fill You Up; Molly’s exploration into a relationship where, “you feel like someone needs you, but at the same time, you’re never enough for them”. Musically the track is a more muted affair, warm Rhodes-like piano and sombre guitar lines accompanying a downbeat, bruised vocal line as Molly sings, “I can’t do it anymore, I can’t fill you up, I have some of what it takes but I don’t have enough”. Singer-songwriters as intriguing as Molly Jewell don’t come along all that often, a musician with the pop-nous and experimental vision to make a huge splash in the year ahead.

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Sink into the autumn-colored, nostalgic world of singer-songwriter, Molly Jewell, where moody arrangements cradle her lilting confessions about the complications of human relationships, heartache of many kinds, and wandering through it all.

Written & Performed by Molly Jewell. Produced & Arranged by Goffrey Moore.
Performed & Tracked at Club Roar, Nashville TN; Engineered by Colin Dupuis.
Overdub tracking (acoustic guitar, vocals, synthesizers, electric bass, Rhodes) at Goffrey Moore’s studio, Nashville TN; Engineered by Goffrey Moore.
Overdub tracking (acoustic piano & vibraphone) at Middletree Studios, Nashville TN; engineered by Joe Pisapia.
Mixed & Edited by Goffrey Moore. Mastered by Alex McCullough at True East Mastering, Nashville TN.
Vocals, Wurtlitzer, Rhodes, Piano, Synthesizers, Vibraphone & Various Musical Toys: Molly Jewell
Electric & Acoustic Guitars: Goffrey Moore
Electric Bass: Steve Mackey
Drums & Percussion: Steven Nistor
Background Vocals: Goffrey Moore & Molly Jewell

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Courtney Marie Andrews spent over nine months of 2017 on the road, with multiple trips across the US, Canada, Europe, Australia and New Zealand. That’s nothing new for Andrews, though. She’s been touring relentlessly since leaving her Arizona hometown at 16. It’s a life that inspired much of her 2016 breakthrough album, Honest Life. While that album’s themes spoke to the isolation and rootlessness inherent in a life on the road, most of its songs were actually written during an intentional, extended break. The success that followed its release, however, didn’t afford her the same break to write the material for her new album.

Courtney Marie Andrews performing live in the KEXP studio. Recorded September 7th, 2016.

Songs: How Quickly Your Heart Mends,  Irene,  Table For One, Rookie Dreaming,

Hello, It’s me. My new EP is finally out. It features my versions of songs by Crosby, Stills & Nash, Big Star, Neil Young & Jackson Browne. You can read a bit more about how each song came about down below.

Just A Song Before I Go,

I just love this song. It’s an effortlessly good driving song, perhaps owing to the fact that Graham Nash wrote it whilst in a taxi to the airport after his driver bet him he couldn’t write a song during the 15 minute drive.

Late for the Sky
What can I say? This is one of the greatest songs ever written. I’ll always remember my first time traveling to San Francisco and stumbling into a free festival only to find myself watching Jackson Browne, my favourite songwriter, singing this song to thousands of people. Since then I can never travel through the US without this tune ringing through my head.

Harvest Moon
For the longest time people would say my voice was reminiscent of Neil Young and I’d nod and say thanks having only the slightest idea of who they were talking about. Eventually I thought I should probably listen to his music. Harvest Moon was the first song I ever heard of his and I’ve never looked back. It was like discovering my primary musical influence long after I’d started writing songs. A bizarre experience but one I’ll never forget.

Thirteen
I came late to Big Star. Like real late. My manager turned me onto their first album ‘#1 Record’ and I was hooked instantly. There’s just something effortless about the songwriting and timeless about the recordings. As cliché as it sounds it’s always the slower acoustic ballads that jump out at me on rock records and Thirteen is one hell of a ballad. This entire record is my go to driving album. The first thing I put on when starting another long drive to the next place.

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Small Crimes by Nilüfer Yanya released on Blue Flowers Music, The frighteningly-talented songwriter Yanya – who dropped that awesome cover of The Pixies “Hey” last year DEEK-label head Bullion’s covers album – has followed up with her next track “Small Crimes”. It’s a song that brushes touchpoints like John Martyn and The XX while managing to be something entirely new.

“I’ve been working on this project for a while,” Yanya tells us. “I started writing songs when I was really young so things have very slowly evolved into the music I’m making now. It’s kind of weird to view it as a project because it is just me (and my music), I find it hard to think of them separately in that sense.”

On “Small Crimes”, Yanya’s masterful gossamer melodies toy with silence as much as the chiming interplay between vocal and guitar. Yanya began playing classical piano as a child but moved to guitar in her early teens and comes with an endorsement from Dave Okumu, who mentored her on the six string. She also credits  composer, writer and multi-instrumentalist Sorana Santos for encouraging her put voice to her songs. “I originally never planned to sing any of my songs,” she explains, “but I had some really great teachers and friends at school [who] encouraged me to do so.”