Scott H. Biram
The One & Only Scott H. Biram
|
| | Alejandro Escovedo
Echo Dancing
|
|
|
Sue Foley
One Guitar Woman
|
| | Sarah King
When It All Goes Down
|
|
| Dawn Landes
The Liberated Woman's Songbook
|
| Sarah Shook & the Disarmers
Revelations
|
| The Secret Sisters
Mind, Man, Medicine
|
|
|
| From ONE, to TENN.
The video series features one-of-a-kind performances recorded at the Schermerhorn Symphony Center during AMERICANAFEST 2023.
This week's artist: William Prince
|
|
|
-
The Reverend Shawn Amos continues to expand his rock-blues fusion repertoire with "It's All Gonna Change (For the Better)" from his upcoming LP Soul Brother No. 1 (out May 3). Listen here
-
Rebecca Fraizer pulls together an all-star cast of musicians for the bluegrass jam-packed single "Make Hay While the Moon Shines." Listen here
-
Proclaimed by Benjamin Tod as the "best song I've ever written," Lost Dog Street Band confronts the darkest times and personal struggles on the title track of the band's forthcoming record Survived (out Apr. 26). Listen here
-
After touring together last year, Angel Olsen and Maxim Ludwig team up for an electric cover of Lou Reed's "I Can't Stand It" for the compilation tribute album The Power of the Heart: A Tribute to Lou Reed (out Apr. 19). Listen here
-
Charlie Overbey joins forces with Marcus King and Jaime Wyatt for the swinging, honky-tonk blues tune "Champagne, Cocaine, Cadillacs and Cash." Listen here
-
Stephanie Sammons and Mary Bragg unite for the wistful, reflective "Living and Dying" from Sammon's upcoming album Time and Evolution (out May 4). Listen here
|
|
|
-
My Morning Jacket and Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats announced joint headlining shows together for their Eye to Eye Tour with the first stop slated for September 10 in Wilmington, NC. See full list of dates
|
|
|
The Brothers Comatose & The Deslondes
"Mama Lou" (Cover)
|
| | Gary Clark Jr.
"Triumph"
(CBS Saturday Sessions)
|
| Fantastic Cat
"All My Fault"
|
|
|
Sierra Ferrell
CBS Mornings Interview
|
| The Lone Bellow
"Victory Garden"
|
| Arlo McKinley
"Watching Vermont"
|
| Ashley Monroe
"I Like Trains"
|
|
|
-
"We're tracing his bluegrass career. From what I have learned from his family and early collaborators, he was completely obsessed with the banjo. He played it for hours, and he would be playing it while he was carrying on a conversation with you." — Carly Smith, curator of the Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame & Museum, shares how the museum is telling the story of Grateful Dead's Jerry Garcia's upbringing, his history of playing the banjo and his love for bluegrass. Read more
-
"I would talk about it, but it's also so sacred to me. I didn't want to allow people to turn it into a product. But in the pandemic it really hit, like, This is my life. It's gonna end at some point. And I want to remember." — Alynda Segarra, known by their stage name Hurray for the Riff Raff, profiles their life and hardships that helped mold their artistic approach and vivid songwriting style. Read more
- Kelly Willis, Brennen Leigh and Melissa Carper came together to form a group known as The Wonder Women Of Country, but the origin spawned from their time sharing bills and building friendships from the ground up. Read more
|
|
|
|
-
Sierra Hull sits down on the 22 Hours Podcast to talk about her experience as a bluegrass prodigy, signing a record deal by age 13, attending Berklee for college and her career performing with other country and americana legends. Listen here
-
Tim O'Brien stops by Toy Heart: A Podcast About Bluegrass to discuss his upbringing in West Virginia, his inspiration from Doc Watson and Merle Haggard and being a mentor to the new generation of bluegrass musicians. Listen here
-
Aoife O'Donovan joins NPR's World Cafe and reveals how she was commissioned by the Orlando Philharmonic Orchestra in 2019 to write a song in commemoration of the 100th Anniversary of the 19th Amendment, which parlayed into inspiration for her latest record, All My Friends. Listen here
|
|
|
-
Tigers Blood by Waxahatchee debuted at #5, Sierra Ferrell's Trail of Flowers debuted at #7, and Revelations from Sarah Shook & The Disarmers debuted at #23 on the Americana Radio Albums Chart. View the full Americana Radio Charts
|
|
|
| This newsletter is not sponsored.
Keep us in the loop of artist news here.
|
|
|
Manage your preferences | Opt Out using TrueRemove™
Got this as a forward? Sign up to receive our future emails.
View this email online.
|
PO Box 128077 | Nashville, TN 37212 US
|
|
|
This email was sent to .
To continue receiving our emails, add us to your address book.
|
| |
|
|