Americana band Pond Diver is here to remind you of the truth. With a new song called “Look Around,” premiering today on American Songwriter, lead singer Daniel Lewey beacons you through the sands of time.
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Wide Open Country on Neon Moon’s sweetly nostalgic new single Darlin’: “a classic sound … timeless.”
Los Angeles-based husband and wife country duo Neon Moon (Noelle and Josh Bohannon) find a classic sound on “Darlin’,” a song about longing to recapture the flame on a new relationship. The steel-laden love song sounds timeless—and for good reason. READ MORE
American Songwriter features the music video to Sarah Peacock’s “Burn the Witch”
Burning someone at the stake is no longer a literal act of punishment. In modern times, it is a metaphor of harsh, perhaps cruel, online harassment. Americana powerhouse Sarah Peacock assembles her song “Burn the Witch,” paired with a crackling, soul-burning new video, premiering today on American Songwriter, through a historical context and a remarkable lineup of musicians. READ MORE…
Nathan Kalish
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Nathan Kalish // Songs for Nobody (April 10th)
Nathan Kalish has spent the past decade averaging 200 shows a year at bars and honky-tonks across the country. It’s from this experience he cultivated his new collection of story songs for his 10th album, the self-produced Songs for Nobody. His sound has been described as a “unique brew of Americana, rockabilly and outlaw country.” Through his cutting and intimate lyrics, he transports listeners from the passenger seat of his touring van to behind a magnifying glass aimed at the darker side of American culture. It’s not only his experiences that he shares, but the experiences of the people that he has met along the way.
The music he’s released has landed him on stages with Lucinda Williams, Molly Tuttle, and Lucero. He’s earned accolades from Rolling Stone Country, Saving Country Music and dozens of alt-weeklies. Kalish has lived the life of a curious wanderer, taking his music from town to town, creating a catalog of songs that act as colorful snapshots, like polaroids in a photo album. His music has been compared to American icons like Merle Haggard, John Prine, Gram Parsons, and the Sun Records’ rockabilly roster, circa 1956.
Because of his father’s work as an evangelical missionary, Kalish and his family never stayed in one place for very long. Kalish describes his youth growing up in Europe as constantly changing, while his parents moved the family often. They lived in meager conditions by western standards, but it instilled in him an inclination to get by on very little comfort. After living in Austria and Prague for several years, the Kalish’s returned to the U.S. During middle school in Chicago, Kalish played in local punk and hardcore bands while learning to play guitar, bass, and drums. After he started Nathan Kalish and the Wildfire he hit the road for a few years, honing his craft while enduring a grueling and extensive schedule of shows across the U.S. and Europe.
“I have never fit in anywhere, moving around as a kid I sometimes went to 3 schools in one year,” Kalish admits. “As an adult, I kept it going with my touring lifestyle because it’s what I am used to. I like to think that I write as an outsider looking in. A traveler that is always watching the people and cultures I’m around. I write a lot about my loneliness but also about the folks I meet in the bars I play. I have a bit of self-loathing because I’m a constant world traveler, but I also feel like its overshadowed by my interest in the honest human experience. I like to balance and intertwine the two perspectives in my songs.”
Kalish left his band in 2010 and found himself at a personal crossroads. He spent some time drumming, playing bass and also guitar for the Stonesy Bloodshot Records band the Deadstring Brothers, and then ended up forming, The Lastcallers, and returned to intensive touring. After two records and many, many gigs together, Kalish needed a change and opted to go solo.
“Even though I’m older, I’m still a poor idealist by choice. I’ve just replaced traditional religion with punk rock, spirituality and the search for “truthiness.” I’ve always been more concerned with a good story than a good ending. I have no 401k, no health insurance, no degrees and no offspring at age 36. When I see musicians in the press called troubadours, I chuckle to myself. I’ve slept on floors, couches, and in vans for 12ish years doing 200+ shows a year with and without a band. I’ve recently been going to random bars on my days off to play and I usually make a few hundred bucks, just from knowing how to interact with the audience. I know exactly how to survive on the road and I learned it from being on the road.”
It was taking a break from touring close to 200 shows a year that enabled him to create his 2018 record I Want to Believe. Produced by David Beeman (Pokey LaFarge) at Native Sound in St. Louis, the album showcased Kalish’s unique and wide-eyed perspective, set alongside engaging honky-tonk ready instrumentation. Rolling Stone called it the “heartland rock and alt-country soundtrack to looking for UFOs in Roswell, New Mexico.”
Kalish’s new LP Songs for Nobody was recorded at Nashville’s Trace Horse Studio and provides an auditory evolution of that engaging, mysterious psych-folk sound. Finding inspiration from acts like Darrell Scott and Daniel Roman, Kalish brings a gritty moodiness to his expertly-blended traditional country elements. By recruiting incredible locally-based talent that includes acclaimed guitarist Laur Joamets (Sturgill Simpson, Drivin N Cryin) and pedal steel aficionado Adam Kurtz (Great Peacock, American Aquarium, Joshua Ray Walker), Kalish tapped into the magic of Nashville’s tightly-knit creative community to bring his vision to life. The result of this collaboration is an LP filled with heart-wrenchingly honest and reflective songs that leave a lasting mark on anyone who listens.
An examination of America’s culture of greed, “No Hope” acts as an anthem for the people who give their all without receiving their fair due in return. “Give me your tired, give me your poor,” Kalish proclaims. “Give me your huddled masses yearning for more, and we’ll put ‘em to work for crumbs on our factory floor, then show them the door.”
“Pam & Tim” continues that spotlight on the challenges small-town Americans face, delivering a gut-punch of honesty that few songwriters can deliver with such vigor and authenticity.
“Delta Woman” was born from a chance visit to a friend’s apartment in Stockholm, where he got to explore their vast collection of Elvis Presley and Johnny Cash memorabilia. Among the items were handwritten unfinished lyrics from Cash, which Kalish found himself drawn to. He took the title and a verse and chorus of what Cash had started and wrote the music and completed the lyrics in his own style while paying homage to the Cash songs he has played every night in honky-tonks for the past decade, creating a connection that reaches beyond time and place.
The haunting yet comedic title track, “Songs for Nobody,” shows the mental and emotional strain life on the road can bring. From the tedium of long hauls across the country to the stale smell of gas stop cuisine, the moments that precede and follow nightly sets in strange cities provide their own unique set of challenges and stressors. Note by note, Kalish examines what the cost of those fleeting moments on stage can bring.
Even with its unexpected curves and bumps, Nathan Kalish’s committed relationship with the road is one that still has many more miles to go. With a busy 2020 planned, Songs for Nobody will mark an important chapter in Kalish’s creative journey, which is only just beginning.
Jeff Crosby
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Jeff Crosby // “Laramie” (Nov 15)
Born and raised in a sleepy mountain town in Northern Idaho, singer-songwriter Jeff Crosby creates critically acclaimed music that has landed him in the sometimes indefinable genres of folk, rock, and Americana. Writing about the rare beauty found in his travels and the unconventional stories of the people and places he has encountered along the way, he has that rare gift of sounding like he does not belong to any specific era. It’s this timelessness that has allowed him to spend the last decade sharing the stage with an array of performers including Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real, Charley Crockett, Wide Spread Panic, American Aquarium, Nikki Lane and many more.
His songs present almost as pages ripped out of an intimately personal diary, capturing what it means to have loved, lost and kept on the move. There seems to be no shortage of inspiration as Crosby is one of the last few “troubadours” that truly lives the life he sings about. His music has been favorably compared to great singer-songwriters from Dylan to Van Zandt to Earle.
After dropping out of school at 17 to pursue touring full-time with a band on the west coast, he’s made his living by permanently staying on the road – night after night, show after show, from load-in until the last drink is poured.
Crosby’s new single “Laramie” (which features Ken Coomer on drums (Wilco/Uncle Tupelo/Todd Snider) is an insightful story and an honest, open expression of where Crosby has gone wrong while reminiscing on an old, fond memory. Bittersweet lyrics, world-weary vocal tones, and organic, timeless instrumentation make the song feel like a classic ready to add itself to the canon. The song was produced, engineered, and mixed by Geoff Piller at Electric Thunder Studios in Nashville, TN (Truth and Salvage Co., Tyler Bryant and The Shakedown) and mastered by Brian Lucey at Magic Garden Mastering in Los Angeles, CA (The Black Keys, Lucinda William’s, Ryan Bingham, The Shins, Ray Lamontagne).
For 5 years, home for Crosby was a little shoebox apartment off Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles. Giving up coffee to pay rent and running around with “The Homeless and the Dreamers” (the title of a song he wrote paying homage to that time) he found a way to thrive despite the hardships and make poignant music while doing so. Through a chance encounter in the city, he met and befriended a music editor for the critically-acclaimed television show Sons of Anarchy and ended up with two songs featured on the program.
Now based in Nashville, Jeff continues to tour and share his stories with the ever-growing audience that he has collected for over a decade, offering up a sort of mirror so that it might better see itself. New single “Laramie” is just a taste of what’s to come, including a new LP scheduled for release in 2020. Stay tuned for more.
Wide Open Country premieres new single from Andrew Weiss and Friends
Americana band Andrew Weiss and Friends navigate an unbalanced relationship on the jangly “This Might Hurt a Little” from their forthcoming album The Golden Age of Love & Chemistry (out March 27).
Weiss says the song came about while listening to The Beatles’ covers of Carl Perkins songs. The upbeat song finds freedom in letting go of a one-sided love story.