Posts Tagged ‘singer songwriter’

Singer-songwriter Lydia Loveless’ highly anticipated new album, “Real”, was released in August via BloodshotRecords. This record follows the release of Somewhere Else, which Rolling Stone praised as “…an aching, lusty set of twang and sneer wrapped in electric guitar swagger,” while Pitchfork furthered “Somewhere Else [is] both a bracing and a deeply harrowing listen.”

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Lydia Loveless has never been catchier, funnier, smarter, or more of an emotional powerhouse than on this album of hearty roots-rock songs that helped her decide to keep living. The dopey “Midwestern Guys” of her Columbus home base share head space with a passionate romance in “Bilbao,” and “your shitty Indianapolis band” adds to mental noise both metaphysical (“Heaven,” where no one goes) and heartrendingly personal (“Longer,” on which Loveless grapples with a close friend’s death). And then there’s “Out On Love,” secretly the greatest ballad of the year and not so secretly the most radical stylistic departure of her career. Hopefully it proves to be a launchpad for many more.

Memphis-born singer-songwriter Julien Baker has gained a lot of traction online blogs from her emotionally honest tracks, which detail near-death experiences, substance abuse and spirituality. Though the 20-year-old artist originally self-released her heart-wrenching debut “Sprained Ankle” on Bandcamp while studying at college, she later signed to indie label 6131Records for an official release .

“Sprained Ankle” begins with gentle pin drop-like guitar plucking and it’s lent additional weight by her burning lyrics (“Wish I could write songs about anything other than death”), rather than additional instrumentation. In fact, the line isn’t even true, the 20-year-old singer songwriter from Memphis has many other subject matters, although they aren’t exactly light hearted. The album, released towards the end of 2015, was inspired by the loneliness felt whilst at university, finding herself for the first time away from family and friends. The result was nine songs, beautiful in their simplicity, brave, honest, tackling subject matter including car crashes, depression, substance abuse, and anxiety.

Onstage with just a microphone and her telecaster, the singer’s presence is just as unassuming as her songs. A loop pedal allows for a bit more depth in sound, and it is clear from the outset that Julien Baker is an accomplished guitarist. Singing a long way off the microphone, the resulting breathy vocal delivery adds to the ethereal quality of the songs. Subtle and simple, yet beautifully melodic, her music is devastating in its honesty.

Careful, Julien Baker could easily become one of your all time favorite artist.

In June she played her unreleased song Funeral Pyre , Somewhere In Munich. Live…

Watch singer-songwriter Julien Baker perform “Sprained Ankle” the title track off her debut album, during soundcheck at the Drake Hotel on Exclaim! TV. April 19, 2016.

Christopher Paul Stelling is one of those performers you could easily envy, with a superbly salient voice and ultra-skilled fingerstyle-cum-claw-hammer playing technique, all on one instrument. A real talent as well as an engaging character.

As any musician knows, the time that passes between conceiving the idea of an album and hearing it in its entirety can be very long; the songs on there need to have some staying power for the player as well as the audience. Christopher comments ‘Well, yeah, I finished the record back in September last year, and I started writing it in February, so I’m over this one,’ he laughs. ‘I’m ready to start looking at another project. I’m totally glad people can hear it now and I’m happy with how it’s being received, but I haven’t really listened to it for a while now.’

As well as being an effective, exciting 10-tracker, Labor Against Waste was in itself a labour of love for Christopher. ‘The record is out on a label, but my friends and I did the whole thing; I went into the studio initially with The Low Anthem to record a bunch of songs I had, and then I went off to Europe, came back with some more songs and went into the studio with a band and some good gear. It was recorded in segments because studio time is fucking expensive and it was mastered and mixed by us, so in that way it’s a very important one.’

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I had a lot of difficulties to decide where to put this one should it be in my top albums of the year, having see the guy perform earlier this year . “Labor Against Waste” by Christopher Paul Stelling is an album that is very dear to me.  A great album despite some minor flaws. And those aren’t really flaws.

mitski puberty new album Top 50 Albums of 2016

Mistki has shared the music video for the final track from her 2016 album,Puberty 2, following the releases of videos for “Happy” and “Your Best American Girl.” “A Burning Hill” is a resolvedly drowsy track that begins by quickly declaring “I’m tired of wanting more/I think I’m finally worn” but then closes the album out on the small resolution of “And I’ll love the littler things/I’ll love some littler things”; it’s an ending that’s not happy, per se, but that finds a melancholy peace in the decision to continue to, as one gets older, accept joys that are smaller and smaller.

The song itself is not much longer than 2 minutes, and the video that’s just been released follows suit in being wholly unadorned — focusing most of its brief time on close ups of Mitski’s face or her hand, as it floats through the water or past a landscape in a car, basking in a seeming “love of [those] littler things.”

Mitski said of the filming of the video (which is directed by Bradley Gray):

The director and I spent a weekend just driving around New York and Pennsylvania while the camera kept running, and most of the time I’d forget I was being filmed. It felt like a vacation, but it was also quite emotional, as I was thinking about the song and what it means to me now while jumping in rivers and driving down dirt lanes.

Mitski, A Burning Hill from the record, ‘Puberty 2’ released  June 17th on Dead Oceans.

Butch Walker: musician, rocker, Georgia boy. Composer of dozens of songs that stick in your head; Choruses you want to sing (or shout) along to; Purveyor of authentic stories of exploits and predicaments and romance that are filled with optimism; Architect of albums that have few boundaries, embracing hard rock and ballads, pop rock, Americana and singer-songwriter. Or, as Butch says, “I think it’s all just rock & roll.”

East Coast from Butch Walker’s recent history – including one previously unreleased exclusive song — “Bad Friends”  from the upcoming limited-edition vinyl release Cassette Backs. Find the 12″ vinyl at independent record shops released November 25th, 2016.

“East Coast Girl” from Walker’s 2016 album Stay Gold is a rear-view glance of his move to Los Angeles back in the 80’s.

Remember Martha Wainwright ? Her first album — 2005’s self-titled effort was fantastic, heralding her as a songwriter and performer entirely worthy to be an heir to one of music’s most distinguished family names. Since then, though, she’s suffered from the dreaded tortured-artist who got happy syndrome: she married producer Brad Albetta in 2007, and her albums since have largely reflected her contentment.

Goodnight City‘s lead single “Around the Bend” suggests perhaps things haven’t been quite so idyllic of late: “I’ve been going round the bend/ I’ve been taking lots of pills and things/ I’ve been seeing him again/ There are things I’ve seen and done/ That I would not wish on anyone.” Not coincidentally, it’s the best thing she’s recorded in years. As a listener, it’s not exactly a heartening or pleasant realization that an artist you admire and whose work you enjoy seems to work best when she is in emotional pain. But the fact remains: if its first single is anything to judge by, this is going to be good.

“Canadian singer/songwriter Martha Wainwright considers her fourth solo album and seventh studio record, Goodnight City, to be a turning point in her musical career and emotional state alike. “Most [of my] songs come from a sense of sadness,” muses the 40-year-old, whose last solo album, 2012’s Come Home To Mama, addressed grief in the wake of the death of her mother, folk musician Kate McGarrigle. “But maybe for the first time, there is more joy and lightness on this album,” she adds. “I think because with age has come some comfort and a sense of strength—I am more hopeful.” Though collaborative and stylistically diverse, Wainwright’s elegant, vibrational vocals work within each track on Goodnight City, unifying the album with her powerfully distinct multifaceted emotional spectrum. In listening, one feels a collective comfort—it is a work of community, togetherness, family, and change for the better.”

A very special 10th anniversary edition of Sufjan Stevens’ Illinois.

In 2005 Sufjan Stevens released Illinois, his fourth album and the second in his 50-state project. Sufjan fans with long memories might recall a minor hiccup in our release of Illinois as it related to the inclusion of a certain Metropolis-born man of steel.

While we do love balloons, we’ve always missed the imminent presence Big Blue brought to the album’s cover art, short-lived though it was. But things are very different in 2015 than they were in 2005, and different times call for different heroes.

So today, exactly ten years after we released the double LP of Illinois, we’re proud to announce a special 10th anniversary edition of the LP that includes Chicago-born Blue Marvel on the cover.

Sufjan Stevens - Illinois (Special 10th Anniversary Blue Marvel Edition)

The double LP will include an “Antimatter Blue” and “Cape White” vinyl colors. The audio for the special edition comes from a 2014 remastered version of Illinois. We commissioned children’s book artist and the original Illinois cover artist Divya Srinivasan to portray Blue Marvel in the style of the original art. We’re pressing 10,000 double LPs of this edition. And we might include an extra surprise so stay tuned.

Big thanks to everyone at Marvel for giving us permission to feature Blue MarvelBlue Marvel, who made his first appearance in the Marvel Universe in November 2008 in Adam: Legend of of the Blue Marvel #1, is a rising star in the Marvel universe. Here is Blue Marvel’s official biography:

In the 1960s Adam Brashear was a young man who served his country as a U.S. Marine. When he discovered his super-powers, he fashioned a secret identity with which to protect his country; the Blue Marvel! He served as a hero for years, and was one of the most popular heroes of his time. Yet Adam had a secret, he was an African-American, a fact not lost on the government. As a precaution against so much power in the hands of a black man, they took steps to control him, even going so far as to plant a Spy for him to date. His career as the Blue Marvel ended after he faced the Anti-Man, with his ethnicity revealed, Adam was pressured by the government to retire.

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Here is a note from my label, Anti- records to whom I’m very grateful to for understanding my desire to release this song sooner than later: CHRISTOPHER PAUL STELLING DELIVERS RESPONSE TO UNCERTAIN TIMES

Tumultuous times inspire passionate art. It’s how our humanity fights back. Singer-songwriter Christopher Paul Stelling has delivered an appropriate response during one of the most divisive and angry years in modern American history. Listen to his electrified new single called “Badguys” .

“We’re gonna round ‘um up and put‘m in the stew. what you hear is not me, it’s just some horse-shit fantasy that they cooked up now they’re selling it to you.” he intones hauntingly before the rousing chorus confirms what we all fear, “the darkness has taken over again. Let us not forget that we are merely children of men – only thing worse than original sin, is the knowledge that the bad guys always, bad guys always win.”

Stelling commented: “At first I wasn’t sure where this song came from and honestly, i don’t have much of a recollection of writing it but i remember it frightened me. i assume it was written at the beginning of the political circus we’ve all been living through, and the end of which we thought for a time would bring us some relief. I’ve always been one to hope for the best and prepare for the worst… and of course to never underestimate the ignorance of the uninformed and easily manipulated masses. I’ve been traveling non-stop now for two years. I’m writing this from Sardinia. What i’ve learned from my travels and talks with people all over Europe is that this is about so much more than just America… We’ve placed ourselves in this position as a global power, and our behaviors and action reach far and wide… We are better than this. We owe it to ourselves and to the rest of the world to set a better example… Everyone now is left with such a feeling of uncertainty. We have to be certain about something though, and that is that history tells us it never works out to just “wait and see”. it’s time to fight for our souls. there is too much at stake.”

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Listen to Gordi's Haunting Acapella Cover of Bon Iver's "00000 Million"

The Australian musician and 21 year old Sydney indie-folk singer songwriter known as Gordi recently covered her Jagjaguwar labelmate Bon Iver’s “00000 Million.”

On the decision to do an acapella cover, the musician says, “I think words can be best understood when they are all you can hear.” Listen to Gordi’s beautiful and haunting cover

Gordi will support Bon Iver at his upcoming Hammerstein Ballroom show in New York on December. 10th. Leading up to that show, she will support The Tallest Man on Earth for a string of Australian dates.

mitski

Not many artists have had better years than Mitski. With the release of her celebrated album “Puberty 2” (via Dead Oceans Records), Mitski only got bigger and bigger, but always on her own terms. On November 21st, she played her largest headlining show in New York yet, with a sold out performance at Webster Hall, along with two great openers in Weaves and Fear Of Men. It was even more impressive to see the hold she had over Webster Hall crowd during every living moment of her personal 15-song set. She attracts a young and passionate fanbase, who are devoted to every word and line she delivers, singing it back even more emotional than it was originated. There’s a sincere power to her voice, and it’s hard not to be swept up by it all.
Mitski is only going to garner more accolades as the best of the year lists continue to file in, it’s safe to say that her star will only rise even more over the years. It’s been a great pleasure to watch her grow as an artists, and here’s to whatever she does next.

In “A Loving Feeling” from her new album Puberty 2, Mitski Miyawaki asks, over static and guitars, “What do you do with a loving feeling/ if a loving feeling makes you all alone?” It’s a question she poses, in various forms, throughout the record, sometimes in a hopeful whisper, other times in an enraged, accusatory shout. By the end of “Puberty 2″, it becomes clear that it’s a question she can only answer herself.

The album’s title positions it as a sequel—the awkward, cruel extension of a life stage few people would willingly revisit. She depicts that tension and confusion with particular pointedness in “Happy,” where the titular emotion finally visits her, only to leave a mess behind. “Well I sighed and mumbled to myself/ ‘Again I have to clean,’” she sings in amusement. The sax riff and dry applause that follows land like a punch line.

Subtle images of “pinky promise kisses,” of being the little spoon that “kiss[es] your fingers forever more,” of taking one last look at a lover in the rear view mirror, convey a vulnerable intimacy; it’s as if Mitski, in the midst of self-doubt and anxiety, wants to make herself smaller. Yet throughout the album, those subtleties give way to sudden, explosive moments of exhilaration and self-assertion: slow doo-wop declarations of love in “Once More to See You,” ragged howls and aggressively-strummed guitars in “My Body’s Made of Crushed Little Stars,” the invasive flash of sweet memories during “one warm summer night” in “Fireworks,” and the fierce look of love on “I Bet on Losing Dogs.” By the record’s end, it’s clear that Mitski has made peace with her question about a “loving feeling.” She finds all of the strength and peace she needs simply by loving herself. She may be alone, but she’s never lonely.

Mitski — Puberty 2

That might make Puberty 2 sound meek. It is anything but. Mitski and her sole collaborator and producer, Patrick Hyland, trade the slightly rustic quality of 2014’s Bury Me At Makeout Creek for grungy sharpness and spacey ambience, These 11 tracks creep up on you, as her coiled melodies suddenly explode into cavernous freak-outs or build to a crescendo of unbearable catharsis.

Mitski – Puberty 2 (Dead Oceans Records)

Puberty is a motherfucker. It’s a time when your body’s doing weird stuff, your hormones are running wild, and every little problem seems like the end of the world. But things gets easier. Your emotions don’t go away or even get smaller, necessarily — you just learn to deal with them, to manage them, to live your life anyway. That’s what growing up is, and Puberty 2 is the sound of Mitski growing up.

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The fuzzed-out indie-rock that’s become her signature is supplemented by drum machines, synths, even a saxophone, blossoming from the soft/loud dichotomy of Bury Me At Makeout Creek to a more nuanced spectrum of sound. Lyrically, Mitski is focused on what basically amounts to Newton’s third law of emotion: for every feeling, there is an equal and opposite un-feeling. On opener “Happy,” that endless and inevitable cycle is cause for hopelessness and exhaustion. But by the closing track, you get the sense that she’s figured out the secret to living, which is that that there isn’t really a secret to living — you kinda just have to do it. Or, as she sighs in the album’s closing lines: “So today I will wear my white button-down/ I can at least be neat/ Walk out and be seen as clean/ And I’ll go to work and I’ll go to sleep/ And all of the littler things.” Puberty 2 might be a huge achievement, but it’s the sound of all the littler things that get you through the big things. It matters.