Live the Love Beautiful is the latest album from the legendary Drivin N Cryin and the group’s first full-length album of new material since 2009’s working-class opera, Whatever Happened to the Great American Bubble Factory. Produced by acclaimed singer-songwriter Aaron Lee Tasjan, who had his own two-year stint with the band as touring guitarist circa 2013, the album captures a number of things, including the current all-cylinders lineup, which features co-founders Kevn Kinney and Tim Nielsen, longtime drummer Dave V. Johnson and Estonian-born guitarist Laur Joamets.
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Leslie Tom Releases Video for “Didn’t Think Twice” to Coincide with the 75th Anniversary of D-Day
Watch Leslie Tom’s video for “Didn’t Think Twice” here.
Country artist Leslie Tom has released her official video for “Didn’t Think Twice” today as a tribute to the 75th anniversary of D-Day. The video, which premiered at Wide Open Country, honors the sacrifices of the brave soldiers who landed on the shores of Normandy that fateful day.
All proceeds from the release of “Didn’t Think Twice” will benefit the Association of 3rd Armored Veterans. For more information, please visit: www.3ad.org
A note from Leslie about “Didn’t Think Twice”:
“When I began working on my third studio project and happened to watch a video on YouTube called ‘Just A Common Soldier’ I knew I had to write a song as a tribute to my grandfather and his service to our country during WWII.
Within a few days of D-Day, on June 6, 1944, Milton Smallwood Alexander, a 26- year-old Texan and my grandfather, landed on the shores of Normandy with a tank regiment of the Third Armored Division. As a tank driver, he was one of the brave Americans who liberated France, Belgium, and then Germany before returning home to resume a “normal life.” Like many of the Veterans of WWII, nightmares must have wrestled in his head of that horrific war, especially those of fighting in the Battle of the Bulge and watching his best friend die beside him as a deuce-and-a-half accidentally rolled over him, ultimately saving my grandfather’s life. For that generation of men, war was not discussed, though we can only surmise that the experiences they had were with the “Greatest Generation” for a lifetime.
The original version of “Didn’t Think Twice” was released as a duet with former Navy SEAL, Pete Scobell on Veterans Day 2016. A chance meeting with an Uber drive in south Florida in December 2017 led to me connecting with the Association of 3rd Armored Veterans and another grandchild of a 3AD WWII veteran, Lou Baczewski, who is a historian and documentarian. Lou wrote and produced the documentary feature film “Path to the Past” about his grandfather’s experience during WWII through France, Belgium and Germany.
After Lou and I talked, it was decided we would re-cut “Didn’t Think Twice” with new lyrics specific to the experiences of those that fought in WWII and new music by the River Rats Band out of St. Louis, who produced the original music score for the film. Using images of 3AD WWII fighters and my grandparents, Lou directed and produced the new video version of “Didn’t Think Twice” which is dedicated to the WWII veterans that served in the 3AD.”
Creative Loafing Interviews Kevn Kinney of Drivin N Cryin
In the song “I Used to Live Around Here,” Kevn Kinney sings, “I used to live around here / a long time ago / I used to play in this bar / before we had a stage.” It’s just one number from Drivin N Cryin’s ninth studio album, Live The Love Beautiful (out June 21 via Drivin N Cryin Records), a collection of inward ruminations and distant personal memories set to the tune of no-frills Southern rock ’n’ roll. It’s also the kind of thing Kinney might say during a lull in the conversation at pretty much any local music haunt. Therein lies the allure of Live The Love Beautiful’s sentimental journeys. Bass player Tim Nielsen, drummer Dave Johnson, and guitarist Laur Joamets have crafted a winding backdrop to Kinney’s personal narratives about everything from reconnecting with Drivin N Cryin’s first LP to looking within himself to find true happiness.
Joslyn & the Sweet Compression
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“Magical…gives everybody the joy.” – Billboard
“Poised to take off.” – Chevy Chaser
“A refreshing take on the neo-soul sound, unbound by modern cliches…tried and true.” – Glide Magazine
“Finds their groove on the traditional soul side of things with a splash of funk thrown in for good measure.” – SoulBounce
“Stellar…a marvel…an instant classic.” – SoulTracks
Joslyn & The Sweet Compression // Joslyn & The Sweet Compression
You can only displace matters of the heart for so long. Sooner or later, every tattered emotion comes bursting out ferocious stripes. Soul band Joslyn & The Sweet Compression let all their pain, love, and loss flutter to the beat of slow-burning guitar grooves and funkadelic, old-school melodies on their upcoming self-titled record. Even when left to her own devices for a cover tune, front-woman Joslyn Hampton bends the lyrics to her every whim, into a torrential vocal tornado.
Alongside a stellar band of musicians, including step-father and accomplished player Marty Charters, whose resume includes work with H-Bomb Ferguson and Junior Wells, Hampton conjures a mixture of Chaka Khan, Gladys Knight, and Whitney Houston. She cascades between R&B styles like a nightingale, silky smooth but possessing incomparable strength of spirit, vocal prowess, and storytelling. “We’ll get through these changing times,” she promises in wispy gusts on the closing number, a cover of Frankie Beverly & Maze’s “Changing Times.”
Joslyn & The Sweet Compression is a groove-hardy trip of soul music filtered through a vivacious, and sometimes lush, modern lens, a psychedelic soundscape that exemplifies truth in music’s ability to shake up the establishment. “Honey, Be” is a torched firestarter, one doused in a flammable horn section, a motif woven into the album’s stylistic urgency, and a dichotomy of confidence and egotism. “The narrator is either a real badass or a narcissist. We’re not sure which,” quips Charters, whose guiding hand is felt throughout the record, lyrically and musically.
Charters has a wealth of worldly experience under his belt, which further allows Hampton to take even bigger risks with her vocal tricks. Together, they are a force of nature, a balancing act trading off top-secret melodies and lyrics, and across 10 songs, pulsating and colorful, the two creative minds stitch together a truly remarkable storyboard. Recorded at Shangri La Studios, the album is taken to even more dizzying heights thanks to engineer Duane Lundy (Sturgill Simpson, Ringo Starr) and his rapt attention to detail.
It truly is Hampton’s angelic vocal chords that hold the entire album together, often climbing through the rafters or pulling you in for an intimate conversation. You could say it was a God-given gift she discovered very early on in her youth. Born and raised in Lexington, Kentucky, Hampton started singing in church and often turned to her family for musical insight. “My grandmother would take me to church, and one day, I decided I wanted to try to sing in the choir,” she remembers.
She was only four or five years old, but she just knew. She had her first major solo at 8 years old, and that set off a domino effect throughout the rest of her life. She sang in the choir in high school and even dabbled in orchestra. During her college tenure, she dove headfirst into classical music studies, which allowed her to expand her vocal touch points into an array of styles and aesthetics. When she dropped out of college, music fell out of her grasp, as well. “I was kind of lost,” she says. “I didn’t sing very often at all. It was very depressing.”
But a chance encounter with an aspiring producer ignited her passion anew. She did a bit of demo work in his studio and soon crossed paths with a cover band playing covers at weddings and clubs. Hampton performed with the band for a couple of years, but was eventually craving her own original music. “This new album is us trying to make something shake,” she says.
On the other end of the spectrum, Marty Charters matured musically in the funk-centric Cincinnati, Ohio area, and was influenced by veterans of The J.B.’s (James Brown’s band featuring Bootsy Collins), Parliament, Zapp, and legendary local outfit 400 Years Of What. Through the years, he has enjoyed a number of notable successes, including touring the world as part of Junior Wells’ band, and sharing stages with Van Morrison and Buddy Guy.
After his stint with Junior Wells, Charters drifted back to the local Cincinnati music scene. “I found myself on a very dead-end path,” he says. “I was playing with great musicians for money, but with no real goal or purpose. As I aged, I was wondering why I was even doing this anymore.”
It soon became vital for Charters to focus on an all-new project. Now aware of Hampton’s amazing talents, he proposed the idea of making a “funky soul record with real musicians playing real instruments, and a warm analog vibe,” he recalls. Hampton immediately agreed, and the pair set about writing songs. The band, which includes Rashawn Fleming (drums), Smith Donaldson (bass), and Steve Holloman (keys), blends in rich, smooth tones to complement the provocative lyrics and lung-scorching torch singing.
“I don’t see danger in my heart’s desire / And this time, I’m not running for cover,” confesses Hampton in a slinky number called “What Did You Think Was Gonna Happen?,” in which she dismantles a flirtatious suitor’s advances. “They think, ‘I’m going to shoot my shot but I know it won’t go through.’ But surprise, surprise, I’m interested,” she explains. Turning on a dime, the powerhouse is playfully giving of herself one second, then wailing through the pain of a loved one’s death the very next. “Somebody please help me see how I can survive,” she sings on the showstopping ballad.
Joslyn & The Sweet Compression do not mess around. They plant a flag right in the heart of soul music, staking their claim and offering up refreshing tidbits of insight, showmanship and grit. Songs like the electrifying “Love On The Double,” “Sunday Driver,” and “Long, Long, Long,” a cover of The Beatles’ classic, illustrate a breadth of remarkable musical beauty and ingenuity, often feeling wondrous and otherworldly. Joslyn Hampton possesses a timeless voice to rival any of the greats, and she’s ready to prove her worth right in this moment. And we better listen.
Americana UK Premieres Joanie & Matt’s “The One Above”
New York City based folk-duo Joanie & Matt are Joanie Leeds and Matthew Check, and they have a new album out on July 19th called ‘Sterling‘. On it Joanie & Matt have crafted songs for the marginalised, but have done this by working from their joint interpretations of what they describe as the “inherently misogynistic ancient texts from the Hebrew Bible“. Recrafting their Jewish heritage they have on ‘Sterling‘ created seven tracks that are provocative tales encompassing the #MeToo movement, the LGBTQ+ community and substance abuse; each chapter unfurling gritty honesty through a modern feminist lens.
Stereogum Premieres Angela Perley’s “Don’t Look Back Mary”
Angela Perley has been making tunes for over a decade now. In fact, our own Chris DeVille reviewed one of her shows way back in 2011. In the time since, she’s released played on bills alongside acts like the Flaming Lips, St. Vincent, and Randy Newman. Perley is gearing up for the release of her third full-length LP, 4:30, which is named for the time she goes to bed. Definitely a night owl.
“Don’t Look Back Mary” is gorgeous in composition, and swings with a slow, grooving snare bump. Sprinkled high hats, when combined with a sliding guitar riff, create this illusion of an expansive horizon. Vocally, it’s a slow croon, but a stepwise motion on the shimmery strings adds just the right amount of gravity to the lyrical content. Here Perley is with more details on the track: