Posts Tagged ‘singer songwriter’

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Michael Stovall, who under the name Red Porch Kid, has crafted something pretty spectacular on his new solo project “Rocketship”. The entire album mixes ambient and Americana together to create a beautiful, folky, airy production. It’s not unlike Bon Iver’s ambitious 22, A Million, and at first listen seems at least somewhat influenced . Lyrically it’s a pretty standard growing up record, but sonically it challenges and rejuvenates, and Lord knows we need some more of that these days. Stovall is a founding member of Jackson Jones, who disbanded back in 2008. This is his second solo release, and his first under the name of Red Porch Kid. He wrote, recorded, and produced the record himself, which came out January 27th.

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Red Porch Kid Rocketship Album Cover

Nashville singer-songwriter and producer Michael Stovall has been making a name for himself in the music world for nearly a decade. In 2014, he released his first solo album, Georgia, just months before relocating to Nashville. Since then, he’s focused his time on producing great local music, including a new project of his own. Under the moniker Red Porch Kid, Stovall has crafted an album completely on his own. “Rocketship”, sneaked out this January, was mixed, mastered, produced and recorded in his one bedroom apartment earlier this year.

In his Words: “‘Waitin’ on Something’ was one of the first songs I wrote for the record, and it sorta ended up being the cornerstone for the entire album. Usually I don’t enjoy listening back to the songs that I’ve written and recorded, but I don’t mind listening to this one if it comes on.” comments Michael Stovall. while Good Heart was a song that happened pretty quickly,” Stovall tells. “I was thinking about how different experiences or relationships can often end pretty quickly, but neither side is really to blame. It doesn’t make you a bad person if you lose touch with someone, we’re all human beings. Sometimes things just end, and it’s ok to move on with your life.”

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Boots No. 1: The Official Revival Bootleg CD

A new music video for “Dry Town (Demo)” from Boots No 1: The Official Revival Bootleg watch the delightfully animated film using good old fashioned stop motion, a few plastic dolls and some anthropomorphized shot glasses, created by artist Rachel Blumberg.

‘Dry Town’ came from a live experience I had on a road trip when I was just out of college,” says Welch  “David and I wrote the song shortly after moving to Nashville, after a show where we opened for Johnny Cash. We were so inspired to meet Johnny and see him in the flesh that we wanted to capture some of that narrative swagger and humor in a song of our own. Since the story is front and center, it seemed like a great chance to bring the song to life with stop motion animation.”

Welch said she gave the toy ’71 Buick featured prominently in the video to animator Rachel Blumberg (a former drummer for The Decemberists and Bright Eyes). It soon became the foundation for the video’s whole aesthetic.

Gillian had seen [the stop motion sketch comedy] Robot Chicken recently and thusly had the idea in her head of using action figures to tell the story in the song,” says Blumberg. “There were a lot of moments when I was inspired by the rhythm of a line, from the phrasing and melody, about how the characters should move, or what little moment was happening. Besides the music, the lyrics have a great visual quality and rhythm and it made sense to interpret things in a very literal way, which I think adds to the humor of the piece.”

Dry Town (Demo)” is from Gillian Welch’s Boots No. 1: The Official Revival Bootleg,

New album ‘Boots No. 1 – The Official Revival Bootleg’ out now

On Shakey Graves new song “The Perfect Parts,” The Austin-based musician Alejandro Rose-Garcia turns up the amps for a blues-driven style of guitar playing that would satiate fans of the Black Keys and Gary Clark, Jr. “It’s the aggressive peak,” he says of where the song fits into his new album “And the War Came.”

That said, the song’s been a long time coming. Rose-Garcia says he wrote the melody in high school, but the story within is something more recent. “I was spending a lot of time ogling a certain lady in my home town and I felt very led on,” he says. “In reality I doubt she had any idea that I was pining so hard. We explored the concept of being trapped in your home town and the concept of growing out of a situation.”

Rose-Garcia started Shakey Graves in 2008 while logging time as an actor – he had a reoccurring role on Friday Night Lights, which was shot in Austin. He recorded his debut album “Roll the Bones” by himself and put it up on Bandcamp, where it’s become one of the music distribution site’s biggest sellers.

From the new album from Austin Texas favourite Shakey Graves the album is titled “And The War Came”

Andrew Combs’ sophomore album, All These Dreams, marks a huge step forward for the Nashville singer-songwriter. Using his gifts for lyricism and wry observation, Combs weaves tales of love, sin and redemption, in a style that brings together classic country and contemporary pop.

What is it about Combs vocal journey across its registers that evokes both deep sensual pleasure and sadness “Fake Plastic Trees.”  is one of Nashville’s most poetically gifted young singer-songwriters Andrew Combs , echoes the work of these greatest in “Dirty Rain,” the first song from his deeply heartfelt third album “Canyons Of My Mind”, out April 7th on New West Records.

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Combs, on Canyons. The album’s orchestrations are still highly evocative, but less directly suggestive of shiny modernity. “Dirty Rain,” is a nostalgic lament for wide open spaces that’s really a protest against Nashville’s rapid gentrification, gains intensity from the swirl of a string section mid-song; the crescendo is gentle, however, mirroring his undulating vocal line and the hazy circles of Jim Hoke’s pedal-steel guitar. “What will all the little children say, when the only place to play is in the dirty rain?” Combs ruefully intones,

 

 

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Preston’s ludicrously talented teen-songwriter Pip Hall is set to release a new EP, James, on My Little Empire in March, ahead of that release Pip has shared the second taste of the record, with a brand new track, “Turn Over”.

Built around layers of melodic electric guitars, and sturdy percussion, “Turn Over” showcases a more moody indie-rock side to her craft than Pip’s previous output, but it suits her well and the layered vocals remain a harmonious treat. There’s shades of Honeyblood at their most groove-driven, or even 100 Broken Windows-era Idlewild. Like its predecessor, Devil You Don’t, “Turn Over” again showcases a young and talented musician with a huge future – remember the name Pip Hall.

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With any songwriter, or artist in general, there’s a question about how much of yourself to give away to your audience in your songs. Some songwriters are naturally open, capable of taking on the most painful and honest emotions and sharing them without a hint of concealment. Many more artists are more guarded, wrapping up their truth in a web of poetry and disguise, giving the listener only snapshots of their truth. Sometimes this can be more rewarding, there’s a joy to discovering a songwriter’s story that you’ll never get with a heart on their sleeve, confessional songwriter spelling out their pain in giant letter for the whole world to see. A little deceit and pretence can make a songwriter’s sincerity all the sweeter.

the superbly talented singer songwriter Gallery 47, is a vessel for the songwriting talents of Jack Peachey and a revolving cast of largely Nottingham based backing musicians. Jack has released his third album, tiltled “Clean”, the follow up to 2014’s All Will Be Well, an album that’s success saw Jack tour Europe in support of the somewhat unlikely figure of Paul Weller.

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Jack has so far shared a pair of tracks from Clean in the shape of recent singles, Some Of You Don’t Get It and Mother’s Plan. These tracks suggest a gentle re-imagination of his previous folkish output.

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Just a quick one to tell you all that my new single Killing Me is now available EVERYWHERE*

Ethereal, passionate and moody. Luke Sital Singh’s is a voice of pure beauty. the 26-year-old Londoner is conquering hearts and minds with rousing and intense tunes fraught with heartache and candour, which carry the listener on an emotional roller coaster. It’s fragile, downtempo, and some might even say, gloomy.

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It’s called Killing Me. It’s sad. There’s also a B-side called Darling. Less sad.
Please go listen, save, share, repeat.

The Wells Fargo Theater, Los Angeles, 26th January 1995

While Joni Mitchell had made a few one-off appearances around this time, she hadn’t actually committed to a tour in more than a decade. Secondly, Turbulent Indigo was the revered singer-songwriter’s first album in three years, and first for Reprise Records since 1971. So Joni Mitchell s informal show in the Griffith Park facility’s Wells Fargo Theater was promoted by local triple-A station KCSA-FM and featured a selection of nearly two hundred invited guests. Here, Mitchell confirms once again that she’s an artist with a promising future as well as a celebrated past. Never one to rest on her illustrious laurels, she opens with Refuge of the Roads from Hejira, before making her way through a loosely thematic set of songs emphasizing her recent oeuvre.

I was surprised to see this product which is a radio concert from January 1995. Anything new from Joni Mitchell is worthy of investigation and here she was promoting the Turbulent Indigo album in front of just 200 invited guests and prize winners at the Wells Fargo Theatre in Los Angeles with a, for this period, rare fully acoustic performance. It’s an intimate setting which informs some of the inter-song stories, charmingly told and revealing too. To hear Joni live from this period is a treat indeed, with “Refuge Of The Roads”, “Hejira” and “Song For Sharon” being especially welcome to these ears. The concert is clear, though with evident background hiss and a radio ident towards the end between tracks, revealing its origins, and at 72 minutes good value too. For someone who has spent many happy hours listening to “Miles Of Aisles” and “Shadows And Light” finally hearing a later concert to compare these with is a find. Recommend for any Joni Mitchell fans.

Track listing

1. Refuge of the roads
2. Being Roy (rap)
3. Sex kills
4. Moon at the window
5. Night ride home
6. Loves cries
7. Yvette in English
8. Cherokee Louiseq
9. Sunny Sunday (rap)
10. Hejira
11. Just like this train
12. Happiness is the best facelift
13. Song for Sharon

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Warren Zevon would have been 70 years old today. A songwriter’s songwriter, he never found the same fame as his contemporaries–the Eagles and Jackson Browne among them–but he had plenty of fans, including Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan, Hunter S. Thompson, Stephen King and especially David Letterman, who hosted Zevon’s last public appearance on The Late Show Zevon’s first tour in 1977 included guest appearances in the middle of Jackson Browne concerts, one of which is documented on a widely circulated bootleg recording of a Dutch radio program under the title The Offender meets the Pretender.

But, as he wrote in 2000, Life’ll Kill Ya, and the man who famously sang “I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead” who died September. 7th, 2003 from pleural mesothelioma, a lung cancer caused by exposure to asbestos. And though he left us too early, he left behind a comparatively small but genius catalogue far beyond the hit “Werewolves of London.”

Nothing indicates that a person is well-read and clever like finding out that they have some well-loved Zevon records in their collection. These five albums are essential for any collection, and though they don’t cover his whole discography, they’re enough to get any listener started on a journey .

Excitable Boy (1978)

Yes, this is the one that has “Werewolves of London,” “Excitable Boy” and “Roland The Headless Thompson Gunner,” three of Warren Zevon’s best-known songs, produced by Jackson Browne and guitarist Waddy Wachtel  to critical acclaim and popular success. The title tune (about a juvenile sociopath’s murderous prom night) name-checked “Little Susie”, the heroine of his former employers the Everly Brothers, tune .

Zevon used deadpan humor to wed geopolitical subtexts to hard-boiled narratives. But it also has so much more. From the warmly exuberant opening licks of “Johnny Strikes Up The Band” to the sublime melancholy “Accidentally Like a Martyr,” to the slick ‘n’ dirty funk influence on “Nighttime in the Switching Yard,” and the just-shy-of-Lite-FM ballad “Tenderness on the Block,” Zevon here crafted an album that not only defines the sounds of sleezy 1970s Los Angeles, but takes the listener far beyond Mulholland. Many would imitate to much success, but you can’t beat the original, especially not with lyrics like “He dug up her grave/and built a cage with her bones.” Awwooo, indeed.

Sentimental Hygiene (1987)

There comes a time when nearly every singer-songwriter feels compelled to write about how terrible fame is. Hell, Billy Joel, a fellow 70s piano man with has dedicated a sizable proportion of his career to bitching about how much his job sucks. But Sentimental Hygiene is a simple and sober musing on LA life, written after Zevon went to rehab to battle alcoholism in 1984. But drying out didn’t dry Zevon’s wry sensibilities, still strong on “Detox Mansion” and “Even the Dog Can Shake Hands.” Nor did it dull his storytelling talents, with a ballad about legendary boxer Ray “Boom Boom” Mancini and another funky history foray, “Leave My Monkey Alone.” It’s catchy, clever, heartfelt and intimate in the way only Zevon could be.

Members of R.E.M  Bill Berry, Peter Buck and Mike Mills served as the core of Zevon’s next studio band when he re-emerged in 1987 by signing with Virgin Records for the recording this album. The release, hailed as his best since Excitable Boy, featured a thicker rock sound and taut, often humorous songs  “Bad Karma” (which featured the R.E.M. lead singer Micheal Stipe on backup vocals), and “Reconsider Me”. Included were contributions from Neil Young, Bob Dylan, Flea, Brian Setzer, George Clinton,

During the Sentimental Hygiene sessions, Zevon also participated in an all-night jam session with Berry, Buck and Mills, as they worked their way through rock and blues covers . Though the sessions were not initially intended for release, they eventually saw the light of day as a Hindu Love Gods. 

Warren Zevon (1976)

His Asylum Records debut opens with the deceptively simple melody for “Frank & Jesse James” before bringing in the rest of the band for the sort of narrative ballads that would win him fans in the literary community, including Carl Haissan and Mitch Albom. But in-between the high-end folk songs like “Mama Couldn’t Be Persuaded” (inspired by his own parents, a ruthless mobster and a fragile Mormon) are the kind of rollicking bad-decisions-set-to-song, including “Poor Poor Pitiful Me” and “I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead.” And then there are the dark characters who populate every Zevon album, from the heroin addicts of “Carmelita” to the sad gold digger in “The French Inhaler” to a raw and intimate portrait of Zevon’s own despair in “Desperados Under The Eaves.” a chronicle of Zevon’s increasing alcoholism.   The Warren Zevon debut album produced by Jackson Browne was only a modest commercial success, but it was later termed a masterpiece often cited as Zevon’s most realized work. Representative tracks include the junkie’s lament “Carmelita”  and “The French Inhaler”, a scathing insider’s look at life and lust in the L.A. music business (which was, in fact, about his long-time girlfriend and mother to his son Jordan).  a chronicle of Zevon’s increasing alcoholism.

Bad Luck Streak in Dancing School (1980)

With grinding guitar on tracks like “Jungle Work” and “Play It All Night Long,” even the sardonic title track has a series of handclaps reportedly made by dry-firing a Smith & Wesson into a garbage can full of gravel to make an album that alternates between the brutal and the silly. Though the album is most famous for utilizing the word “brucellosis” in what might be Zevon’s darkest song, “Play It All Night Long,” there are some light-hearted tunes as well, including “Gorilla You’re a Desperado,” a catchy little ditty about a gorilla who steals the narrator’s BMW and woman, only to discover life outside the cage might be more than he bargained for. How can you not love a song that includes the line, “Most of all, I’m sorry I made you blue/I’m bettin’ the gorilla will too.”

It also contained a collaboration with Bruce Springsteen called “Jeannie Needs a Shooter”, and the ballad “Empty-Handed Heart” featuring a descant sung by Linda Ronstadt, which dealt with Zevon’s divorce from wife Crystal

The Envoy (1982)

Zevon’s last album with Asylum Records before the drug-and-booze binge that landed him in a rehab stay that gave us Sentimental Hygiene, The Envoy is smart, ugly and hopeful all at once. Opening with an eponymous track inspired by US diplomat Philip Habib would be a dangerous choice for a lesser artist, but for a master storyteller like Zevon, it’s practically a James Bond movie, all in three minutes and 12 seconds. “Ain’t That Pretty At All” is a hellish carnival ride, and followed by “Charlie’s Medicine,” a minor-key melody about a murdered drug dealer paints the album in a bleak light, but it wouldn’t be Zevon without a little levity, including “The Hula Hula Boys,” about a man who loses his wife to the Hawaiian dancers on vacation, and the resigned-but-hopeful “Looking For The Next Best Thing.”
Transverse City, Stand in the Fire, The Wind (his incredible last album) and Wanted: Dead or Alive are also available on vinyl, and hopefully, one day we’ll get vinyl re-issues of Mutineer, Mr. Bad Example, Life’ll Kill Ya, and My Ride’s Here, some of which came out in super limited pressings in Europe that now sell for an arm and a leg.