Lindi Ortega To Release ‘Faded Gloryville’ August 7th

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On August 7th everyone’s favorite dark country chanteuse, Lindi Ortega, will release her fourth album ‘Faded Gloryville’ out on Grand Tour/Last Gang Records.

Ortega lends her signature crystal trill and lonesome wail to the album, created over three sessions and produced by Dave Cobb (Jason Isbell, Sturgill Simpson, Shooter Jennings), who also worked on her previous effort, ‘Tin Star’ recorded three songs at the Sound Emporium in Nashville. Colin Linden (T Bone Burnett), who was behind her “Cigarettes & Truckstops’ album., produced four songs and the Single-Lock Records heads Ben Tanner (Alabama Shakes) and John Paul White (Civil Wars) produced three songs tracked in Muscle Shoals, including a Nina Simone-inspired update of the Bee Gees classic “To Love Somebody.”

The press release reads “Although all three sessions were different, every one of them focused on live studio takes, capturing both the rough-edged rawness of Ortega’s live performances and the smooth salve of her voice.”

“There’s something about the Shoals that entices artists to forget themselves, to reimagine, to reinvent,” says John Paul White, whose harmonies can also be heard on three of the album’s tracks. “Lindi did a great job of immersing herself in what we do around here, yet retain that thing that makes her indelibly unique. That takes an amount of confidence that most do not have.”

The Canadian ex pat appears to have a cinematic frame of mind for her newest effort. To her “‘Faded Gloryville’ represents a state of mind — a place we all visit on our way to something bigger and better. It’s the dark, dreary town that looms on the near horizon, infinitely closer that the far-off destination we’re trying to reach. Most weary travelers pull their cars into ‘Faded Gloryville’ and stay awhile, beaten down from the long journey. Some are willing to dust themselves off and leave town in the morning, though, determined to chase after their goals regardless of the conditions.”

“‘Faded Gloryville’ isn’t just about music,” she told Rolling Stone Country. “It’s about anything that brings you down, whether it’s dreams not coming true or relationships not working out, and its message is this: you can go to place where you’re feeling really down about things, but it’s what you do afterwards — do you decide to reside there forever, or do you leave and make the situation better — that matters. You have to travel through ‘Faded Gloryville’ to get to Paradise.”

‘Faded Gloryville’ Pre-order

Tour Dates

‘Faded Gloryville’ – Track Listing
1. Ashes
2. Faded Gloryville
3. Tell It Like It Is (Hear below)
4. Someday Soon
5. To Love Somebody
6. When You Ain’t Home
7. Run-down Neighborhood
8. I Ain’t The Girl
9. Run Amuck
10. Half Moon

Ryan Adams’ 2000 Debut ‘Heartbreaker’ Re-Released + Special Deluxe Release

heartbreakerRA

Glide Magazine and JamBase both report that Ryan Adams debut masterpiece get the special re-release treatment as CD and vinyl formats. Look for it worldwide May 26th on Pax-Am (Caroline/Universal). The album will be available for purchase at your local record store as well as online outlets.

The album was recorded over fourteen days at Woodland Studios in Nashville, Tennessee and released September 5, 2000. ‘Heartbreaker’ is heralded as an Americana classic and has been available on always been available digitally on online channels like iTunes but the physical album has been out of print for a few years.

But you might want to hold out for a “special deluxe ‘ version due later this year.

Here’s the classic “Sweet Carolina’ from the album with backup from Emmylou Harris

The 50th American Country Music Awards – My Takeaways

50th American Country Music Awards

Sometimes having a music blog lands you in the unlikeliest of places.

Through happenstance and sheer luck I found myself as a member of the press for the 50th annual ACM Awards show held at the behemothic AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. Locally known as Cowboys stadium or, more derisively, as Jerry World in reference to the team’s zillionaire owner Jerry Jones.

When I told friends that I was attending the event their response was almost across the board “why?”

This is understandable. As a blogger for Americana and roots music what could I possibly see in the glitzy world of commercial country?

My response was that I wanted to understand. I wanted to see the world from the inside in it;s biggest event, even if I didn’t love every song that was performed on the stage.

That stage sat at the end of the cavernous space. One that visually and acoustically swallowed the most dazzling light-show or amped up musical production. It was almost a perfect metaphor for an industry that often takes a rare cultural resource of a simple and beautiful song and renders it into something irrelevant, peripheral and disposable.

But this music has ties to the same folk and roots music that I hold dear. So how did manifest in to a Colonel Tom Parker wet dream?

When Chet Atkins, legendary guitarist and producer, was asked to define the adult pop leaning Nashville sound which he was helping to architect, he reached into his slacks pocket, shook the loose change, and said, ‘That’s what it is. It’s the sound of money.”

Atkins was on the forefront of a of a sea change for music row. He is also the pioneer of a school of thought (or rationalization) that country music has to change in order to survive. But that has always begged the question; change into what and what is in the end that that change will ensure to survive?

Music Row is not a culture preservation institution, it’s a business. But implicitly in brand and often explicitly in the subject matter of the songs it releases heritage is held as an ideal of not a practice. Small town values are referenced as beats are dropped and bands rock out to pyrotechnics on stage.

This cultural dissonance, and no discernable evidence of “country” elements in the music, has no place in the endless spring break that is today’s country music.

But it’s a free country with lots of music to choose from with an with an Internet to find it. The Academy of Country Music Awards is a trade show for cultural artifacts. Like any business they abhor risk, and there was nothing left to chance on sunday night’s extravaganza. The stars where all household names and the songs were all performed so the fans could sway and sing along.

And if you wanted “real” country music you could turn off the program and “put on some Sturgill’ as more than one person tweeted to me that night.

Some random takeaways:

As scripted as the music and performances where the action in between appeared unguarded and genuine. Sometimes cringingly so. But so what? It was authentic cutting-up and goofiness brought huge stars to a place where people could relate.

Contemporary society and culture is rank with cynicism. Performers and bands hide behind irony in fear that they might be accused of standing for something. Mainstream country might come off as hokey as The Cracker Barrell, but the hopeful romanticism is intoxicating. People want to believe in something and they want to believe you believe.

Don’t take yourself too seriously. Townes Van Zandt would famously tell corny jokes between masterful songs, many of which can make you feel like opening a vein. That brutally honest song might need some levity as an emotional palate cleanser or you’re going to exhaust your audience.

People paid to see you and deserve a show. You don’t need flames and smoke machines, but if you’ve seen the balls Drive-By Truckers show or the frenetic whirlwind of Old Crow Medicine Show prove you can have quality music and something extra worthy the price of a ticket.

I’ve seen a few of music row’s biggest stars in intimate settings with an acoustic guitar singing Hag or George Jones. These people are really good at what they do and many love the same songs we do. But they have a job and momany, many mouths to feed.

Comradery is in full force. In an industry where a friend one day can opportunistically stab you in the back the next, a familial congeniality and protectiveness was palpable. You need no more evidence than the Randy Travis introduction and Taylor Swift’s speech.

That camaraderie and protectiveness is displayed by fan loyalty. Typical music fans are fickle but in country music they identify strongly with the music and are fans for life. They really don’t care what your you or I think and it’s arrogant to say they don’t have the right to love this music.

Reba has a knack of taking a stand and bring you along with her. Her response to a question regarding women in country radio that “I hope woman don’t get so discouraged that they quit. We’ve had the good old boy stuff for a while.” was my most retweeted from the event. And nary one negative response.

Watch Out! Willie Nelson & Merle Haggard “It’s All Going To Pot” [VIDEO]

Willie Nelson & Merle Haggard "It's All Going To Pot"

It’s no coincidence that Conan O’Brien’s official site held the premiered the new Willie Nelson & Merle Haggard video for “It’s All Going To Pot” on this day, 4/20. If you don’t get the title reference to this day I suggest you Google 4/20. i’ll wait…

Now that we’re up to speed, big horns kick off this uptempo ditty which plays the legendary pair’s reflection on the state of society and their choice of adult recreational activity. Recounting their days of drinking and popping pills and how it just doesn’t compare. And that whatever society and that ‘cacklehaed in the box” says, they’ll stay true to their Outlaw moniker to the end.

The cut can be found on the upcoming collaboration album ‘Django and Jimmie” to be released June 2nd. Pre-order it on Willie’s Official Online Store or Amazon.

Live Review: Chris Stapleton at City Tavern, Dallas TX – 4/16/2015

Chris Stapleton at City Tavern

Chris Stapleton is someone who straddles,and thrives in, the stylistic and cultural divide between factions of contemporary country music.

He pens hit songs for the likes of Tim McGraw, Brad Paisley, Dierks Bentley and Luke Bryan, whose version is up for for Song of the Year at this Sunday’s Academy of Country Music Awards. Though they are chart topping these songs are a cut above the bro-country radio fodder currently resulting from the Music Row songwriting sessions assembly line.

As a singer/songwriter his burly baritone gives testimony of a personal journeys that can hush a room or stir a crowd into a ruckus, as he does on this night.

Fresh from his television debut two nights’ before, making it onto the tightly restricted list of David Letterman’s musical guest before his retirement, Stapleton didn’t display airs as he
worked his craft on the road.

You’d be forgiven for overlooking Stapleton as just a member of the audience. Slightly unkempt hair and beard frame his unassuming features. His weathered straw cowboy hat sports a front feather splay emanating from a center turquoise stone. The kind of hat that could come from Johnny Paycheck’s closet.

Stapleton might have an ear for what makes a current country hit, but they’re built from an appreciation and deep understanding of style and stories manifested in classic 70’s country gold. A variety largely abandoned by Music Row in pursuit of money that enjoying a resurgence with artists with greater aspirations, like Sturgill Simpson, Whitey Morgan, Sarah Gayle Meech and Kelsey Waldon.

The Kentucky native resemble many of the crowd that break into hoots and hollers as he climbs on the small stage.

“Sounds like we’ve got some hillbillies here tonight.”

The band slowly build into the heart beat cadence of “Nobody to Blame,” from his anticipated “solo debut “Traveler.” It’s a swampy blue-collar mea-culpa of a man taking responsibility for a list of his wife’s retaliation in response to his unsaid transgressions.
This song is made even more poignant as his wife, the singer-songwriter Morgan Stapleton, sings harmony on the chorus his eyes locked with hers, where they remain most of the evening.

He payed tribute to Texas by performing songs from two of our state’s greatest performers; George Jones’ “Tennessee Whiskey” ( also on “Traveler.”) Stapleton’s version is a slower, more melancholy one showcasing his smooth croon and thrilling soaring vocals across the well-worn terrain of temptation, love and salvation.

A young woman requested from the front of the stage to hear the his version of Waylon Jenning’s “Amanda,” as it was her name as well. He graciously obliged , going off setlist to perform the song. The woman, now smiling and flushed, fanned her face as tears ran down her face.

Between shots of fan-bought whiskey (the sweetest kind) Stapleton also paid tribute to his Grammy-winning stint with the new-grass band The Steeldrivers by performing a revved up, honky-tonk version of “Drinkin’ Dark Whiskey” and the southern soul murder ballad ‘If It Hadn’t Been For Love.’ famously covered by Adel on the UK version of her album album ’21.’

Stapleton’s delivery of that , and all the songs tonight, make it easy to imagine what ran through Adel’s mind when she first heard that song. “That voice!” And she knows a thing or two about vocal range and texture.

The just repaired air conditioning makes it to the stage too late to bring comfort to Stapleton , who by the time he gets to the last song “Outlaw State of Mind,” his black, pearl snap shirt, was drenched through. ‘Outlaw…’ is a perfect sonic bookend to “Nobody to Blame.” It’s slow swampy build, and rebel-theme, build to a full-tilt bombast to send the grinning crowd into warm Texas night.

Set List:

Nobody to Blame
Traveller
Fire Away
Tennessee Whiskey (George Jones cover)
You Don’t Know How It Feels (Tom Petty cover)
Amanda (Waylon Jennings cover)
If It Hadn’t Been for Love
Drinkin’ Dark Whiskey
Whiskey and You
Outlaw State of Mind

Watch Out! Chris Stapleton: “Traveller” – David Letterman

Chris Stapleton: "Traveller" - David Letterman

Chris Stapleton has worked behind the scenes of Music Row for quite some time. He’s written hits for mainstream artists like Luke Bryan, Tim McGraw, Brad Paisley and Dierks Bentley. He’s also showed his melodic diversity by penning songs covered by Adele, Vince Gill and Sheryl Crow. He’s also up for Song of the Year at this Sunday’s Academy of Country Music Awards, for Luke Bryan’s “Drink a Beer.”

The man know his away around the craft to chart and to speak to the heart.

His first foray into the spotlight was as the lead singer and guitarist of the neo-bluegrass band The SteelDrivers from 2008–2010, where he was was nominated for three Grammy Awards as a member.

Chris Stapleton’s next act will be the release of his much anticipated debut “Traveler” (May 5th.) Not only will the album feature Stapleton’s tremendous talent but it will feature some of the best musicians going. If that weren’t enough for your hard earned dollar it’s notable that the album is produced by Dave Cobb, tha man at the boards for two recent stellar roots albums, Sturgill Simpson’s ‘Metamodern Sounds in Country Music’ and Jason Isbell’s ‘Southeastern.’

Last night, the singer-songwriter joined a long and prestigious list of country, Americana and roots musicins that have graced the stage of the Ed Sullivan Theater apperaing as a musical guest for the Late Show with David Letterman.

Stapleton performed the title song, wrapping his big Southern soul beautifully around his wife and collaborator Morgane’s accompaniment. Backed by a steady, smooth cadence by Derek Mixon on drums and JT Cure on bass, and, notably, the whining to and from of Robby Turner on pedal steel (To Letterman likening the the skill to flying a helicopter is probably not far off. )

It’s both sad and startling to hear this much soul and subtle beauty in country music.

Stapleton will open for Eric Church on April 30th in Boston. He will begin his solo tour tonight in Dallas and will perform at Good Records on April 18th for Record Store Day before continuing on tour.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YADQ6MhQuuU&feature=youtu.be

Watch Out! Sturgill Simpson – ‘Listening to the Rain’ – Live from Coachella, April 12, 2015

Sturgill Simpson - 'Listening to the Rain' - Live from Coachella

Sturgill Simpson continued his meteoric career with a day performance at Indio, California mega-festival, Coachella on Saturday.

Check out the clip below as Stu and his extraordinary band – Guitar slinger Laur “Little Joe” Joamets, Bassist Kevin Black, drummer Miles Miller and keyboardist Jefferson Crowe – organically build and riff on the Osborne Brothers classic ‘Listening To The Rain.’

You need no more proof that this to underscore this is one of the finest touring bands – of whatever genre – in America.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ytxnj19Ll14

Sturgill Simpson – Billy Bob’s Texas – 4/3/2015

Sturgill Simpson - Billy Bobs 4/3/2015

Billy Bob’s Texas was erected in 1981 in the heart of Ft. Worth’s historic Stockyards district to capitalize on the Urban Cowboy fad, booming at the time. This hyper commercialization of country music was due to the passable Texan impersonations by actors John Travolta and Debra Winger in the movie of the same name, and it’s best-selling soundtrack scooped up by people in love with the blue-collar atmosphere the movie mythologized.

This effort delivered millions of new country music fans (and boosted Stetson, Justin and Lone Star beer sales,) but not all was rosy. Many argued that the singular focus on chasing sales diminished the classicly “authentic” country sound.

This is not the first time the “losing authenticity ” argument had been leveled at Music Row. the same grievances are claimed against the current manifestation of commercial country radio known as bro-country.

Now, just as then, there is hope in this dark hour.

The Urban Cowboy craze laid the path to the reenergizing of the genre by artists like Steve Earle, Dwight Yoakam and led the way to alt,country a few years later. Bro-country has led to the same kind of galvanization and created a hunger for something more genuine and less contrived. There is an opportunity for those that can deliver.

Enter Sturgill Simpson. The singer/songwriter has been riding a storybook year of late night TV appearances, a Grammy nomination, an Americana Music Award for Emerging Artist if the Year (10 years into his career.) There have been critical accolades and brisk sales of an album with the unlikeliest of titles “Metamodern Sounds in Country Music.” On top of all this he inked a big label deal with Atlantic Records in January.

Not too shabby.

Not one to sit on his laurels Simpson booked a few Texas dates around his taping of the first episode of the Austin City Limits 41st season. Just a few months after his heralded sold-out at Club DaD he’s back in the metroplex. This stop is the “The Worlds Biggest Honky Tonk,”

The 6000 plus crowd (roughly 10 times that of DaDa for those keeping score) was a study in his growing and expansive demographic appeal. Bearded and tattooed hipsters, camoed rednecks , spangle-jeaned cowgirls, pro shop dandys and North Dallas socialites packed together to witness country music’s climbing star.

His name spread not due to carpet-bombing commercial radio play or a calculated, million dollar media roll out. His was a grassroots effort of pilled-up shirt-sleeves, dogged perseverance of the man, his band and his management team.

I’ve seen Simpson put on generally the same show for 6 people as he did for this crowd of 6 thousand and his appeal, and power, come from his creativity, but also his work ethic. He’s glade you showed up, but if you didn’t the show would go on at the highest level possible.

On this night that workman-like focus, and display of musical dexterity, was in full display. As Simpson delivered bratone blasts of his road weary lines from ‘Living The Dream’ as if describing his current state “Time and time again Lord I keep going through the motions – A means to an end but the ends don’t seem to meet – Walking around living the dream anytime I take the notion – Til the truth comes bubbling up so bittersweet.” This was the man’s life imitating the man’s art.

The setlist revolved around his two studio albums, Bluegrass standards from the Stanley Brothers as well as selections from Texas legend’s Lefty Frizell and his spiritual guide Waylon Jennings served up to woops of appreciation from us locals. It was striking how well Sturgill’s songs bent time and meshed with songs created decades earlier.

The most striking moment was when Sturgill performed his gut wrenching cover of ‘The Promise.’ It was the one time in the show that the chatty crowd focused and synched to sing and sway along to the torchy reimagined tune by 80’s pop band When In Rome.

The show was taut and free of filler and flash. His roughly 90-minute set stood in sharp contrast to the upcoming American Country Music Awards – the rhinestone hype-fest set to take place in a couple of weeks at Jerry Jone’s palace of excess, AT&T Cowboys Stadium.

How his growing popularity, and his inevitable shift into a structure accommodating the change in his professional stature, will affect his viewpoint, and ultimately his music, remains to be seen. But at this point his music, from the heart and the gut, resonants with a growing audience wary of shiny radio fads. There’s a hunger for authenticity and Simpson has shown, with his confessional lyrics, low-key stage presence, and his reluctance to be country music’s savior, is the man for the job.

Like the Outlaw movement he’s most often associated with his outsider status comes from a man living according to his own vision. It’s an imprecise and romantic notion, but that’s exactly why it’s so compelling.

Watch Out! Raelyn Nelson Band ‘Brother’ [VIDEO]

Raelyn_guitar_downtown_600

On their new single. ‘Brother,’ Raelyn Nelson and her crackerjack band plays like a hot rod with a cut break line. They swerve and careen near the edge pulling back just in time to ensure safe passage.  The alt.country influenes are undeniable as they brew a hard cow-punk concoction so infectutous and fresh that it would cause the Bottle Rockets and Old 97s to join the mosh pit. 

Not bad for a uke slinger.

Raelyn’s father was Billy Nelson, the third child from Willie’s first marriage to Martha Matthews. She shows that the outlaw gene might just be hereditary as she blazes her own path with such confidence that she’s been placed on Grandad’s stellar 4th of July Picnic alongside other newbloods like uncle Lukas Nelson and Sturgill Simpson.

She’ll fit right in.

The iPhone shot video for ‘Brother’ displays just the right amount of social media twitch to match the song’s frenetic pace. The theme of fraternal revenge and firearms might be a bit rough for those with tender sensabilities, but it rings as true as the music.

Of the song, video and her unique take os releasing music Raelyn says: “The song came about when I was watching a tv show and got inspired by the story of a girl getting her three older brothers to track down her unfaithful boyfriend. JB (producer Jonathan Bright) and I got together and wrote it and we were trying to come up with a video concept that we could do on our own. It was DIY in every sense, and we shot it all with one gopro camera. The “band side” was done with a tripod, some cheap workshop lights and a clear shower curtain as a light “diffuser”. The other side was just JB running around with the gopro strapped to his head. Then with some tips from friends,YouTube tutorials, and editing software we managed to pull it off. And we came in right on budget! Which was zero….

“As far as part of a larger project, I think we’ve decided this year to skip the traditional “cd release” and just release a single every month or so, with a video and new t-shirt to go along with it. We have the songs, but it makes more sense to us to release them as singles and have something new to offer each month, instead of beating a record to death for a year.”

Listen Up! Emmylou Harris and Rodney Crowell – ‘The Traveling Kind’

Emmylou Harris and Rodney Crowell -  'The Traveling Kind'

Emmylou Harris and Rodney Crowell know a good things when they have it. The country/roots music legends will follow up 2013’s Americana Album of the Year Grammy-winning ‘Old Yellow Moon’ a second duets collection, ‘The Traveling Kind,’ out May 12th on Nonesuch Records.

Produced by Joe Henry (Billy Bragg, Elvis Costello), the record will feature 11 duet tracks, including six new songs written by Harris and Crowell with co-writing by Mary Carr, Cory Chisel, Will Jennings, and Larry Klein as well as versions of Lucinda Williams’ “I Just Wanted to See You So Bad” and Amy Allison’s “Her Hair Was Red.”

Of the project, Harris comments, “In the words of Willie Nelson, ‘The life I love is making music with my friends,’ and there’s no better friend for me to make music with than Rodney. I can’t wait to get out there on the road with him and play the songs from this new record.”

Crowell adds, “Emmy and I co-wrote six of the eleven songs on The Traveling Kind, which was recorded in a six-day span with our Glory Band, Steuart Smith and Billy Payne. Joe Henry was at the helm as producer and Justin Neibank did the recording. The experience was pretty much akin to falling off a log.”

‘The Traveling Kind’ Tracklist:

1. The Traveling Kind (Rodney Crowell/Emmylou Harris/Cory Chisel)
2. No Memories Hanging Around (Rodney Crowell)
3. Bring It on Home to Memphis (Rodney Crowell/Larry Klein)
4. You Can’t Say We Didn’t Try (Rodney Crowell/Emmylou Harris/Cory Chisel)
5. The Weight of the World (Rodney Crowell/Emmylou Harris)
6. Higher Mountains (Rodney Crowell/Emmylou Harris/Will Jennings)
7. I Just Wanted to See You So Bad (Lucinda Williams)
8. Just Pleasing You (Rodney Crowell/Mary Carr)
9. If You Lived Here, You’d Be Home Now (Rodney Crowell/Emmylou Harris)
10. Her Hair Was Red (Amy Allison)
11. La Danse de la Joie (Rodney Crowell/Emmylou Harris/Will Jennings)

Harris and Crowell will play a series of intimate shows in support of the record this May:

May 7 San Francisco, CA The Fillmore
May 8 Napa, CA City Winery
May 10 Chicago, IL City Winery
May 21 New York, NY City Winery
May 26 Nashville, TN City Winery
May 27 Nashville, TN City Winery

Hear the title track from ‘The Traveling Kind’ below.