Search Results for: Легенды Смертельной битвы Месть Скорпиона смотреть онлайн smotretonlaynfilmyiserialy.ru
Atwood Magazine weighs in on the new Kurt Deemer LP, World Upside Down, calling it “impressively uplifting”…
It may feel like the world is falling to pieces. It’s felt a lot like that for a full year now. But let’s not forget that many of us have felt that way previously– including not terribly long ago when Donald Trump was first elected to office and liberal counties across the country freaked out in manners comparable to those of the terrestrials in War of the Worlds.
Kurt Deemer, a Baltimore native and experienced rock performer, remembers that period well. In fact, he was able to channel his specific reaction to that event, as well as to other unsettling occurrences in modern history, into a new batch of tunes that he’s collectively titled World Upside Down and whose thematic content reflects just that.
Americana Highways says Jon LaDeau & Mayteana Morales’ special duo performance video of new single “Time Capsules” will “send chills up and down your spine”
Americana Highways has premiered the new duo performance video of Jon Ladeau & Mayteana Morales’ “Time Capsules,” the title track from LaDeau’s forthcoming EP due out on April 2.
On the EP, “Time Capsules” was engineered by Justin Kimmel and Sam Merrick; mixed by Jesse Lauter and mastered by Alan Silverman. The song features Mayteana Morales on lead vocals (ex-Pimps of Joytime); Jon LaDeau on guitar and backing vocals; Justin Kimmel (Antibalas, Toubab Krewe) on bass; Sam Merrick (Charles Bradley, Sharon Jones) on drums; and Justin LaDeau on piano.
In the video, you’ll hear Mayteana Morales on vocals and Jon LaDeau on guitar and vocals. This pretty song of struggle and regrets will send chills up and down your spine.
Americana UK shares Katie Jo’s train-travel-inspired music video for her train-beat-driven new single “How Soon”
PopMatters reviews Stretch Panic’s new LP Glitter & Gore
Stretch Panic’s Glitter & Gore is a delightful romp through all manner of spooky subjects. Vampires, witches, and zombies get their time in the spotlight, and it’s set to upbeat, catchy rock. READ MORE…
VENTS Magazine debuts the latest track from Parker Smith, “Holy Water,” calling it “Asbury Park-indebted blues-rock.”
Unlike most of his peers in the Americana community, Smith manages to defy being pigeonholed by inflecting his music with touches of blue-eyed soul (“Fray”), Asbury Park-indebted blues-rock (“Holy Water”), and even Gordon Lightfoot (“Arrowroot”). Though Underground might technically fall under the umbrella of a “quarantine album,” these songs differentiate themselves from Smith’s oeuvre in their raw, confessional nature and their hummability: these are songs not easily shaken from memory.