Posts Tagged ‘singer songwriter’

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This weekend sees the debut LP from Héloïse Letissier, the performer also known as Christine and the Queens, who is already behind a series of critically acclaimed hits, accompanied by some startling videos. Her rapid ascent to national prominence led to admiring profiles in French newspapers Le Monde and Libération but although her reflective songs and audacious creative philosophy sound about as French as it is possible to imagine, the original inspiration for Letissier’s act came from England.

Christine and the Queens

After an unproductive period at drama school, Letissier came to London “in exile” in 2010 and befriended a trio of transgender “singing drag queens” in a London club. “They convinced me to attempt singing. They were my Queens,”  Although she performs alone, as her alter ego of Christine, she sees herself as representing a force ranged against the cliche of the pretty pop stars. Her act, as seen in her video for the song Saint Claude, is polished and restrained – and determinedly asexual. She wears a trouser suit and expresses herself, like Michael Jackson

Born near Nantes in 1988, Letissier’s father was a professor of English literature and her mother taught French and Latin. She played the piano from an early age and remembers an obsession with performance. Classical dance training that began when she was five ended early with a painful foot injury and modern jazz took over for a while.

Her stage persona is in the playful tradition of English singer Jane Birkin during her period singing Serge Gainsbourg hits in the 1960s, but her style is more confrontational and less naive.

The French singer, dancer, performance artist and composer, who is 26 this year, lives alone in the brash 19th arrondisement of Paris, near Pigalle, with her two cats and finds it hard to keep friends. She is often melancholy and says she is obsessed with death:

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On 16th February, Marika Hackman releases her striking debut album ‘We Slept At Last’. Today she’s unveiled the latest track to be taken from the Charlie Andrew-produced first work. She’s also announced plans to host her own exhibition, documenting the expansive album art,

‘Animal Fear’, and several examples of Marika expanding the folk parameters that contained her first two EPs. Herself and Andrew seem intent on pushing the boat out, with this latest take sporting reverb-lined guitars and deep, spacious production. Within it all is a lurking darkness – no surprise, given the song’s about resisting the urge to become a werewolf.

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18th February sees Marika Hackman performing her album in full at The Cob Gallery, with 70 tickets available.  Alongside the performance, the gallery will host photographs that make up the 24-page art booklet for ‘We Slept At Last’.

When the 28-year-old Texas native Andrew Combs first surfaced in Nashville a few years ago, his highly melodic, moody songs earned him some lofty comparisons: People talked about Townes Van Zandt and Mickey Newbury. On his second album, Combs honors those heroes and the moment of their flowering, when country craftsmanship met folk storytelling and the sweet flash of post-Gram Parsons pastoral rock. Andrew Combs’s voice is so evocative on “All These Dreams”, and the settings he creates with his collaborators (led by the outstanding guitar duo, Steelism) are so rich, it’s a damn good thing his lyrics live up to the presentation. This might be the Americana album of 2015.

hissgoldenmess

It’s taken five relatively unappreciated albums, but on “Lateness Of Dancers”, M.C Taylor’s band otherwise known as Hiss Golden Messenger seems to have finally found an audience for their rootsy-Americana style. Well received by many critics, and absolutely adored by Uncut Magazine, the timing of his new found audience might just be perfect, as his music has never sounded better, fitting neatly alongside the likes of Bill Callahan, Jonathan Wilson and Bonnie “Prince” Billy at the very top of the genre.

His seemingly mundane tales of being “a grown up US male with a couple of kids and a marginally successful career” may not sound that promising a starting point, but the honesty and relatable nature of his words make for a more intriguing listen than you’d imagine. His way with words allows him to be rueful and contemplative without ever getting too downbeat or miserable.

The music fluctuates from little more than a vocal and an acoustic guitar, to rich full bands tracks that showcase the quality of his musical companions, from the spectacular organ that closes “Lucida”, to the surprisingly tasteful banjo in the title track or the impressively meaty guitar riff in “I’m A Raven (Shake Children)” It’s a truly majestic album from a musician at the top of his game!

Lateness of Dancers: Under the Hiss Golden Messenger banner, songwriter M.C. Taylor has committed to tape one of the most affecting and emotionally resonant catalogs of the 2010s. “Lateness of Dancers”, named for a Eudora Welty story, might be his most generous LP yet, tender, open, and deeply funky. There are strains of the Band, J.J. Cale, and Van Morrison in the grooves of songs like “Lucia,” “I’m a Raven (Shake Children)” and “Black Dog Wind,” but Taylor and company (fine company, it should be noted, including members of Megafaun, Alexandra Sauser-Monnig of Mountain Man, guitarist William Tyler, and Scott Hirsch) do more than emulate; they synthesize funk, reggae, American blues and folk, creating a sumptuous vehicle for Taylor’s humanistic musings, his reflections on duty, on family, and digging deep for any salvation that can be scrounged up.

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These brilliant throwback soul jams from Crowley’s Leon Bridges are pretty undeniable. We don’t know much about Bridges at this point, and it’s hard to believe that this kid channeling a young Sam Cooke comes from our own backyard, or anywhere, but we can’t escape the promise of greatness we keep hearing in his timeless songs. Recorded in Fort Worth and produced by Austin Jenkins + Josh Block of the band White Denim; download either of these songs “Coming Home” + “Better Man”  this young soul revivalist from Texas is this year’s miracle man. A former aspiring choreographer who took up music because he thought it was a more viable career (what a dreamer!), Bridges was stuck playing open mic nights until he he ran into White Denim members Josh Block and Austin Jenkins, hanging out in a Fort Worth club. Impressed with his snappy style, the fuzz-rockers invited Bridges to jam — and discovered his dazzling ability to conjure the spirit of the young Sam Cooke. Soon enough, they were making an album together. One stellar Nashville show ignited a fire among music-biz insiders; now Bridges is signed to Columbia Records, is planning a tour, and winning more hearts — even with the few rough mixes he’s put up on his Soundcloud — every day. It’s always nice when a new voice makes classic sounds relevant again.

sandydenny

Today is Sandy Denny’s birthday: gone but not forgotten. She left us way to early, but she also left behind many beautiful Bob Dylan covers.  Sandy was nominated at the Melody Maker awards in 1970 where she was voted Best female singer. Alexandra Elene MacLean “Sandy” Denny (6 January 1947 – 21 April 1978) was an English singer and songwriter, perhaps best known as the lead singer for the folk rock band Fairport Convention. She has been described as “the pre-eminent British folk rock singer“.

Had she not sadly passed away at the age of 31, today would have been the British singer’s 68th birthday. Yet for all the continued chatter about her contemporary, the late Nick Drake, Sandy’s name gets lost in the mix. We forget that Denny invented the female folk rock blueprint, weaving together the purity of revivalist vocalists Anne Briggs and Shirley Collins with the passion of Jefferson Airplane’s Grace Slick.

Echoes of her unique sound can be heard in 21st century music from Florence Welch’s majestic mysticism to Laura Marling’s no-bullshit balladry. “Aesthetically, her songs are really inspiring to me – they’re really bold strokes that feel sort of theatrical and they’re interested in story,” said Newsom in 2012, one of many artists who’ve name-checked her significance on their work. Ineffably modern, Denny’s style was gutsier than her contemporaries. While Joni Mitchell was whispering into the wind in Laurel Canyon and Vashti Bunyan painting daisies onto her gypsy caravan, Sandy was sat in a South London pub, hollering out traditional folk songs over a brimming tankard of ale.

Hard-drinking and hard-living, Sandy’s belter of a voice was rooted in beer and bolshiness, but could be tender as well as tough. First Aid Kit and Cat Power – who covered Sandy’s most well known song, the melancholy ‘Who Knows Where The Time Goes’  have also taken up the baton when it comes to mixing that powerful strength with fragility.

Psych-folk troubadour Lyla Foy has uncovered a haunting live session version of “Rumour”, and she kindly filmed it too. Lyla Foy, formerly known as Walls, released her debut LP Mirrors The Sky” during the Spring on Sub Pop Records.

Her new session of “Rumours” takes the potent emotional core and jazzes it up with some stark, high-contrast imagery replete with kaleidoscopic shimmers. The track remains as spine-tingling as ever, and the rawer quality that the live setting brings only serves to plunge the knife deeper into your feels.

 

Joshua James is an American singer-songwriter currently based out of American Fork, Utah and Lincoln, Nebraska. His original digital release of “The Sun is Always Brighter” reached the top of the service’s Folk Album list in 2007 and sold in excess of 25,000 copies by the end of 2008. The album caught the attention of the indie folk scene, with Paste Magazine naming him one of their “Next 25 Artists You Need To Know” in their September 2008 issue.

NPR has also cited James in one of their “Song of the Day” publishings. They featured his “The New Love Song” as one of the best new songs from a previously unknown artist in a long time, James recorded his second album, entitled Build Me This“, in 2009. It was released in September 2009 on Intelligent Noise/Northplatte Records.  James “a young Midwestern singer-songwriter who writes hard-bitten songs of family tragedies and sings them in a voice that’s as sun-bleached and wind-battered as a Nebraska cornfield.

James’s third album, “From The Top of Willamette Mountain”, was released in November 2012, via Northplatte / Intelligent Noise Records. It was produced by Richard Swift, who also collaborated on it with James. They recorded it at Richard’s home studio dubbed National Freedom Studios. Evan Coulombe, long time friend and band mate played Electric Guitars on the record.

Over the span of a year and half Mr. Evan Coulombe and Joshua recorded, when time allowed, cover songs of older Modest Mouse songs. These collaborations / covers were put into a proper recording and released as “Well, Then, I’ll Go To Hell” in 2013.

Joshua founded Utah based record label Northplatte Records with co-founder/friend McKay Stevens in 2006. He also owns “Willamette MTN Farms & Studio” and produces/records WRECKORDS for other artists/bands

 

Steve Earle performing the song “Rex’s Blues” written by Townes Van Zandt from Ft. Worth Blues live at Factory Theatre in Sydney on 8 April 2012