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Press Contact: Steve LaBate – stevelabate@babyrobotmedia.com
Website * Facebook * Instagram * Spotify
Press Contact: Steve LaBate – stevelabate@babyrobotmedia.com
“CHARMING … CANDID.” – AMERICAN SONGWRITER
Michelle Billingsley is not your typical folk singer. For starters, in her own words, “Folk music does not talk about f*cking.” But she does. Billingsley sings about a whole lot of subjects considered taboo for polite women. Though you might not catch it on first listen—she wraps her charmingly cutting lyrics in boisterous acoustic strumming, her dryly dark sense of humor and a (whip)smart-assed vocal delivery. It all sounds a bit like Emmylou Harris went through the looking glass.
Billingsley’s new debut album for Western Myth Records, Not the Marrying Kind—produced by her friend, multi-instrumentalist Matt Brown—is an Americana gem. Out of the gates, Brown made the sage choice of putting legendary producer/engineer Brian Deck (Modest Mouse, Josh Ritter, Iron & Wine) behind the boards—and the drum kit—for the sessions. The resulting record is genuine, irreverent, unique and fearless. Its spare, moody vibe draws you in close with your guard down, and once you pause long enough to get your head around the songs, the depth of Billingsley’s talent comes sharply into focus. It’s a deceptively heavy record, yet somehow it’s still undeniably fun—fantastic whimsy mixed with black comedy and brisk little melodies that make the journey all the more powerful, human and affecting.
As fully formed of an artistic statement as the record is, it’s hard to believe Billingsley had exclusively been performing other people’s music until she started writing Not the Marrying Kind. Her work was the culmination of much romantic and artistic frustration. “I remember walking down the street because the CTA rush hour buses come every 25 minutes,” the Chicago-based artist says. “I was thinking about how hard it was to find something to sing in my range, and then this bubble burst in my head and I thought, ‘I can write songs and say whatever I want.’”
Many of the songs from this period deal with the dysfunctional relationship Billingsley was caught up in for more than a decade. “I think, ‘I’m great, I’ve moved on,'” she says. “Then I’ll flash wide awake at 3 a.m.—‘How could I have been so stupid for so long?!’ But then I take a breath and I remember, ‘That’s how I got where I am now, and now is good.'”
Billingsley is refreshingly unguarded, and this openness extends to her lyrics. She sings her heart out about emotional abuse, fear of commitment and, of course, sex—all with a wink and a smile. Standout “Mom Jeans” is indicative of her uncanny ability to take a difficult subject—in this case a complex and strained history with a parent—and turn it into a moving yet comedic vignette. “My mom and I are good now, but we did not get along growing up,” Billingsley says. “I wrote ‘Mom Jeans’ looking in the mirror, noticing the parts of me that were my Mom’s—and her mom’s—and it drove me nuts because nothing was mine. There’s that line, ‘Sometimes the apple falls far from the tree / but boy this one hasn’t / Inherited her eyes, her smile, her nose, her boobs and her bad habits.’ It’s an upbeat song, but it’s really a laundry list of inherited features I saw in myself every time I looked in the mirror.”
The chorus of “Mom Jeans” almost leaps up from the music, sad, hilarious and all-too relatable: “I got a short fuse, rotten luck / Another man incapable of love / And yet I keep staying / ‘Cause I can’t come unless my heart’s breaking.” That tail end of that simple but potent last line, in all its self-deprecating honesty, gets at the heart of Billingsley’s brilliance. She can make you sing along, dance, laugh and cry—sometimes all at once.
Along with alt-country icon Emmylou, Billingsley namechecks Leonard Cohen as another major influence. She’s learned much from studying Cohen—a master of subtly tucking some of the pithiest, most caustic barbs into the most gorgeous of songs—and she’s not afraid to channel it while turning the mirror on herself. Consider the unflinching self-assessment of album-opener “Portia,” which features titular lyric “not the marrying kind.” “You just have those days where everything feels like a Jacob’s ladder of things you f*cked up. You wish you could stop, but maybe it’s worse than that—maybe it’s just who you are. With this song, I was trying to think of the worst things I could say about myself to other people before they could say it to, or about, me. And how far I could take that—’Her unformed vowels / conspire to reveal a parade of flaws.” I hate the idea of using a song for therapy—that’s too much to ask from a song. But it’s so dang cathartic to see people dance and have fun while I’m listing off secret insecurities and no one notices.”
Growing up in small-town Michigan, Billingsley was the eldest child—with two younger brothers—and the only girl on her street, which was a dead-end road. Their house was a log cabin with a wood-burning stove, and she spent her days playing by herself, out in the barn with the family’s farm animals exploring the inner world of her mind and making up stories.
Later, in her early 20s, she explored musical- and street theater, then took a detour to Los Angeles to try TV and film acting. It wasn’t for her. “I hated L.A.,” she says. “I had a miserable experience. My boobs weren’t big enough. Nothing was right. I saw the writing on the wall.” After that, Billingsley found her way to Chicago, where she still lives today. It was there she started singing in piano bars, though she was never quite comfortable doing it.
“I never knew what to do with my hands,” Billingsley says. “There are only so many minutes you can hold onto the microphone stand or hide them behind your back. So I was like, ‘Screw this,’ and I got a guitar and marched over to the Old Town School of Folk Music and said, “I’m gonna stand behind something bigger than a microphone.” Thanks to her mother, Billingsley had already played piano since age six, and after learning how to play guitar, she also picked up mandolin and fiddle, which is how she met Not the Marrying Kind producer Matt Brown.
Billingsley chose to work with Brown—who plays fiddle, banjo and guitar on the new record—because he had been a teacher, a friend and someone who’d shown support for her other projects. He was fairly new as a producer, so he thought it’d be a good idea to enlist a veteran like Brian Deck on the project. Together, with a cast of musicians that included bassist Ethan Jodziewicz (The Milk Carton Kids), they recorded at Chicago’s Narwhal Studios, formerly Engine—the same space where Deck helped bring to life a multitude of indie classics, including Iron & Wine’s Our Endless Numbered Days.
The sessions involved plenty of spontaneity and collaboration, informed by Billingsley’s improv-comedy background. Despite a supportive team that gave her complete freedom to mold her songs, the process was still unnerving at times. “You’re so emotionally and creatively vulnerable in the studio,” Billingsley says. “You’re seeing these songs put together and sometimes you’re not quite sure it’s what you want. Then one small idea breaks everything open, and suddenly what you thought was the song flips 180 degrees and now it’s telling you what it wants to do. It’s a wide open frontier, and you can create as you go along. There’s so much growth. Really, the only way to get through making a record is to grow from it.”
Michelle Billingsley’s Not the Marrying Kind is out May 22 on Western Myth Records.Website * Facebook * Instagram * Spotify
Press Contact: Steve LaBate – stevelabate@babyrobotmedia.com
Years before David Burchfield refined his distinctive blend of Greenwich Village folk, Woody Guthrie wanderlust and effortlessly genuine Americana, the Kansas City native earned his songwriting stripes in the trenches alongside like-minded artists Joe Pug and David Ramirez. Growing up in a house soundtracked by Bonnie Raitt & Neil Young records, Burchfield picked up the guitar at age 12, and cut his teeth singing Sunday-morning hymns in the church. Later, he spent his college summers working at a wilderness area in New Mexico, picking old-time songs with friends around the campfire at night.
“I learned a lot from that time,” Burchfield says of his unplugged nights in the Rocky Mountain backcountry. “I developed a deep love of traditional country and folk music, and it also taught me about connecting with an audience in the simplest, most direct way—no lights, no PA, and with just a few feet between us. That’s still my favorite way to perform. It’s all about connection.”
State to State, his newest release, finds Burchfield traveling across the American heartland in search of stability and inspiration. Brimming with coastlines, highways, rolling plains, old hometowns and new destinations, the record evokes a vivid picture of a songwriter’s wandering. Along the way, State to State also shines a light on the people, places and near-death experiences that have shaped Burchfield’s music and outlook on life.
That brush with death is recounted on the pensive one-two hush of “Midnight on the Water” and “You’re OK, It’s Alright.” The former is a quick, solemn hit of traditional fiddle tune, while the latter is a poignant Burchfield original, inspired by a hair-raising crash, and the stark perspective that came in its wake—perspective that ultimately led him to rededicate his life to music. “I’d made two previous albums right out of college, and then more or less quit to move to Colorado and become an elementary-school teacher,” he says. “I was in my second year teaching when a truck hit me while driving my scooter home one night.”
Rushed to the hospital, Burchfield awoke to find he’d escaped with only a broken nose and a concussion. Above all, he was left with a potent reminder of life’s brevity and a fresh sense of urgency. Once again, he picked up the guitar, and out poured “You’re OK, It’s Alright,” the first of the songs that now comprise State to State. His passion for making music was rekindled.
Recorded in American Fork, Utah, with Burchfield’s road band and producer Joshua James, State to State is filled with layers of guitar, upright piano, shuffling percussion, stately fiddle and the detail-rich lyrics of a troubadour who’s seen his share of these United States. On the softly spun “Dishes in the Sink,” Burchfield struggles to settle into an unfamiliar home, pedal steel swooning in the background, while the slow-motion swagger of “Ain’t Gonna Be Easy” finds him reflecting on relationships with his hometown friends over some understated brass and the steady chug of an electric guitar. As this 11-track journey plays out, Burchfield meanders from tender acoustic moments to lushly amplified highlights like the soulful stomp of “Feelin’ Pretty Alright,” a track that would be right at home on The Band’s proto-Americana gem Music From Big Pink. The result is an album that highlights Burchfield’s acoustic roots and electrifying present.
An impressive musical tome, State to State reads like an Americana travelogue stocked with songs borne of a restless spirit and adventurous heart. David Burchfield has never sounded more at home.Facebook * Instagram * Twitter * Spotify
Press Contact: Steve LaBate – stevelabate@babyrobotmedia.com
“A gargantuan juggernaut of melodically-tinged ferocity.” – Riff Relevant
“An exciting blend of doom, stoner rock, and post-rock elements, masterfully put into a musical story.” – CVLT Nation
“Albion is markedly consistent, and a genuinely beautiful sonic experience.” – Sleeping Village (top 10 EPs/splits of the year)
“[Goliathan is] clearly more interested in developing their own take than emulating that of others.” – The Obelisk
“As a theme or tale, and one fully realized in under a half-hour, Albion works as an ideal introduction to Goliathan. Parts of ‘Albion’ reminded me of one of my favorite instrumentals of all time.” – Zero Tolerance Magazine
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Press Contact: Steve LaBate – stevelabate@babyrobotmedia.com
PRAISE FOR THE REAL BILLY KEANE
“The tone of Billy’s voice—it’s calming. No matter what he’s saying, Billy makes me feel like everything is going to be alright, which is a really nice thing to feel right now.” – Sarah Lee Guthrie
“Billy Keane shines a beacon of hope in these difficult times. His voice cries out in hopeful pain to never give up and it gives me a good feeling.” – Mark Miller (Garth Brooks, John Prine, Paul Simon)
PRAISE FOR THE WHISKEY TREATY ROADSHOW
“Defiant and driven, laced with everything from harmonica (from Arlo Guthrie!) to roadhouse-worthy guitar solos.” – Rolling Stone
“Something truly unique in the Americana space.” – Relix
“Has the fingerprints of the legends who inspired the band all over it while staying true to the topical songwriting that has become a stable of the band.” – American Songwriter
“Melodies and choruses designed to fire up any crowd.” – Folk Radio UK
“A combination of that veteran savvy, but with a newcomers’ kinetic energy, which results in the album’s cathartic feeling” – No DepressionThe Real Billy Keane – “Never Give Up”
Western Massachusetts singer/songwriter The Real Billy Keane, a founding member of Americana group The Whiskey Treaty Roadshow, is preparing to release his latest single “Never Give Up” April 14. The song—an anthemic ode to strength and solidarity in these trying times of the Covid-19 pandemic and quarantine—was written and recorded in a flash of inspiration just as the nation was ordered to shelter in place.
With The Whiskey Treaty Roadshow and as a solo artist, Keane has been covered by Rolling Stone, Relix, American Songwriter and No Depression, and has shared bills with Kris Kristoferson, Trampled by Turtles, Steep Canyon Rangers, The Indigo Girls, The X Ambassadors, the Gin Blossoms, Los Lobos and more.
“We’re all in seclusion, but we need to stick together and make good through these situations,” Keane says. “I want to rally people in a way that’s positive.”
The song’s instantly catchy musical foundation ably carries Keane’s aching and soulful melody. And the chorus demands to be sung en masse as it shines brightly and defiantly in the face of tribulation. “I know we’re strong enough,” Keane sings. “Let me hear you say no / I will never give up.”
Keane was discovered by the Berkshires’ first family of music, Kim and James Taylor, and recently opened for ‘90s power-pop sensations the Gin Blossoms to a sold-out crowd. Keane deftly moves from Americana ballads to indie-rock anthems, but the key to his approach is to just sing about things that are most important to him (and hopefully all of us): freedom, love and peace.
As a member of The Whiskey Treaty Roadshow, Keane was an integral part of the group’s debut album Band Together, released in January 2020, and featuring Wilco’s Pat Sansone on bass and ex-Black Crowes drummer Steve Gorman. The collective of songwriters—Keane, Tory Hanna, David Tanklefsky, Greg Smith and Chris Merenda—has toured all across the nation, performing at festivals like Freshgrass at MassMoca, The Kate Wolf fest (at Hog Ranch Farm in California) and selling out venues across the country.
Keane has developed a strong reputation writing protest songs and carrying forward the folk tradition of creating socially relevant music. “Close To The Edge”—a moving tribute to the contemporary American struggle with racism and hatred—brought hope and peace to many during the aftermath of the terrible events at Charlottesville in 2017, and Keane’s Women’s Rights anthem, “Hey Lady”, along with its deeply moving music video, received critical praise after its November 2019 release. The Real Billy Keane is currently prepping for his debut album, slated for release in early 2021.
To set up an interview with The Real Billy Keane, or get your hands on press passes, advance music, hi-res photos, album art or videos, contact Baby Robot Director of Publicity Steve LaBate.