This song, titled ‘Burn the Witch’, from the talented artist and the golden throat Sarah Peacock, you will really like it. She touched us emotionally with her confident and distinctive vocal. Her creative and catchy writing style, along with her great singing, plays a role in making this song beautiful and impressive. The production here is unique and shows real talent, and personally I believe that there is no perfect song without professional and unique production. Enjoy! READ MORE…
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Listen: Captain Americana Spotify playlist for 1/15/20
Listen to this week’s Captain Americana Spotify playlist featuring:
Neon Moon – Darlin’
Brittany Howard – Stay High
Coma Girls – Smoking Gun (Baby Robot Records)
The Black Lips – Gentleman
Andrew Weiss and Friends – This Might Hurt a Little
Wilco – Love is Everywhere (Beware)
Caitlin Anne Webster – Powhatan River Blues
M. Ward – Migration of Souls (ANTI)
Karen & the Sorrows – Jonah and the Whale
Radiator King – On the Mountain
Elijah Ocean – Back to the Lander
Jeff Crosby – Laramie
AJJ – Normalization Blues
Mary Bragg, Drivin N Cryin – Don’t Walk Away
John Salaway, Bri Murphy – It’s All in Your Mind
Craig Gerdes – Drank My Wife Away (Sol Records)
Wisetale – Fix
Roan Yellowthorn – We Just Disagree (Blue Elan Records)
Tre Burt – Caught It from the Rye
Mary Chapin Carpenter – Our Man Walter Cronkite
Early James – Blue Pill Blues
Fruition – Where Can I Turn
Rob Ickes and Trey Hensley w/ Taj Mahal – World Full of Blues
Khruangbin, Leon Bridges – Texas Sun
Lauren Morrow – Do Better
Luke Lalonde – Waiting for the Light to Change
Kacy & Clayton – How To Fight Loneliness (New West Records)
Judy Collins, Jonas Fjeld, Chatham County Line – Bury Me with My Guitar On (Cleopatra Records)
C.J. McKnight – Stinker Lets Loose! (Burger Records)
Heather Pierson – Goodness Knows
Dustbowl Revival – Runaway
Marcus King – Wildflowers & Wine
Sonny Landreth – Blacktop Run
Or check out the YouTube Playlist:
Glide Magazine hails Pond Diver’s new single, “Loosen Up,” calling it “A soaring, soulful rocker.”
Born of the legendary Muscle Shoals, Alabama, music scene and boasting contributions from local luminaries John Paul White, Dylan LeBlanc, Thad Saajid, and The Pollies, Pond Diver’s debut EP Flashbacks is a promising entry in the region’s deep and eclectic musical canon.
The Bluegrass Situation Features Alan Barnosky’s Track, ‘Lonesome Road’
In Their Words: “I typically have a less-is-more approach when it comes to writing music. My first record from 2017 definitely reflects that, it was a stripped-down songwriter album with all songs performed solo or as a duo. However, when it came to recording again I felt that six of my songs really worked best in more of a full-band arrangement, so I pulled together some of my musical collaborators and good friends and we recorded this EP to showcase those songs specifically. The focus of this record is still very much on the song, but it also features musical aspects that are harder to achieve as a solo or duo, like instrumental solos, some three-part harmonies, and an instrumental tune that highlights the individual players. Although there are more musicians on this record than my last, it is still very simple in terms of production.
Billboard premieres Andy Brasher’s “21”
After six years and three albums as part of Brasher/Bogue, Andy Brasher is going solo again with his first outing in 14 years, Myna Bird — from which opening track “21” is premiering on Billboard today (Jan. 15).
“It was terrifying at first, actually, because it was a big change, and our band was doing really well,” Brasher, who released his previous solo set in 2006, tells Billboard, referencing the duo’s history opening for the likes of Kenny Chesney, Tim McGraw and others. “But I just had the pull to get out of the duo thing and start focusing on my own vision and what I wanted to write again. Even though it was scary, it felt like the right thing to do.”
Glide Magazine Premieres Jen Starsinic’s Graceful and Sublime New Single, ‘Foreign Thing’
From the dreamy, confessional indie-rock that fills her newest release, Bad Actor, to the bluegrass and old-time roots music that soundtracked her upbringing in small-town Pennsylvania, Jen Starsinic has spent much of her 20s in a whirl of evolution. She’s been a frontwoman, a side musician, a songwriter, and a top-tier instrumentalist. As her music has deepened and diversified, so has her understanding of her own emotional makeup — an understanding that’s been shaped not only by the onset of adulthood, but also by her time taking care of a sick parent, navigating the twists and turns of modern-day romance, making a new home in Nashville, and taking a hard look at her anxieties. Bad Actor shines a light on that period of personal and musical growth, reintroducing Starsinic as a songwriter whose folk roots have blossomed into something bigger, bolder, and far more amplified.
“I grew up playing fiddle in bluegrass bands,” she says. “In my heart, I’ll always be a folk writer, because what that means to me is a musician who writes truthfully about her own experience. But I also love weird pop music, indie-rock, and dream-pop. I’ve always wanted to be in rock bands. The opportunity had just never been presented before…so I made my own.”