It’s been a few years since BABY BABY shattered expectations and ear drums with their massive Semifamous record. But the downtime has clearly been good for the Atlanta legends. READ MORE…
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VENTS Magazine debuts new single and video “Make Me Sick,” from Nashville duo Flarelight, comparing it to “the more driving and melodic Queens of the Stone Age cuts, like if Josh Homme worshipped Robert Smith instead of Iggy Pop.”
Leading off with single “Make Me Sick,” the album recalls the more driving and melodic Queens of the Stone Age cuts, like if Josh Homme worshiped Robert Smith instead of Iggy Pop. The vital drums and pronounced riffs rebel against the melody, creating a tension that finally finds release in the sweltering chorus as Warren intones “You are the drug that makes me sick!”
Glide Magazine debuts the new single from Sonja Midtune, “Growing Up (For You),” calling it “woozy and lush… ’70s singer-songwriter nods while chilling next to the modern decorated folk of The Weather Station and Sharon Van Etten.”
Some artists have the gift of tune and Los Angeles singer-songwriter Sonja Midtune certainly has a way of varying the mood like a shapeshifting Aimee Mann. Midtune has moved from the acoustic, nostalgic, sad-girl tunes of her previous albums and has plugged in her electric guitar to bring us her new uplifting indie-electronic EP, Golden Girl (out Nov. 11).
Roughstock debuts new track from Lara Taubman, “The Other Side of the River,” calling it “emotive … [Taubman] discusses sobering subjects like mortality, mental health, spirituality, survival, and finding hope in the toughest places.”
There are many branches in the modern roots music tree and Laura Taubman finds herself firmly entrenched on one of those branches where her brand of “folk” or “singer/songwriter” or “Americana” discusses sobering subjects like mortality, mental health, spirituality, survival and finding hope in the toughest of places. It’s the branch of music from which greats like Joni Mitchell, Patsy Cline, Mahalia Jackson, Bettye LaVette and Tori Amos have sprang forth from and the branch is one of the strongest, most-honest sections of the roots music tree.
Lauren Scott-Phillips
“Immediately engaging. It’s rich and warm and the production allows Scott-Phillips’ clear voice and heartfelt words to be the focus. Her words really are disarmingly beautiful… reflecting happiness and contentment and genuine, deeply-held love.” – Americana UK
“The introspective single “Handsome Woman” [is] driven by Lauren’s beautiful vocal interpretation.” – Roadie Music
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Lauren Scott-Phillips – “Handsome Woman”
Lauren Scott-Phillips has finally become the person she’s always wanted to be. With her excellent new single, “Handsome Woman,” the Los Angeles-based singer-songwriter steps firmly into her next chapter, not only as an artist but as a gay woman, a wife, and a new mother. “When I started out as an artist, I didn’t really know what I wanted,” says Scott-Phillips. “But over the past few years, I feel like I’m really growing into myself, really turning into the woman I want to be. I’m the happiest I’ve ever been, and I wanted this song to kind of identify who I am at this moment.”
“Handsome Woman” finds Scott-Phillips penning a loving ode to her wife while subtly challenging the traditional language used to describe femininity, a lyrical focus whose inspiration she credits to her wife. “My wife is very feminine, and I’m pretty feminine too, but I have some masculine traits, and I really just didn’t know how I wanted to be described,” says Scott-Phillips. “I just want to normalize the idea that whoever you want to be, that’s who you should be.”
The new single opens with softly plucked acoustic guitar and Scott-Phillips’ beautifully expressive vocals, the stripped-down instrumentation allowing Scott-Phillips’ romantic lyricism to shine and riding on the strength of her songwriting abilities. The single was produced by Elliott Beenk (ELPENTHE), the third of four collaborations between the artist and producer, who were initially connected after both working with Grammy Award nominated producer Brian West (Nelly Furtado, Andy Grammer, Maroon 5). “When I brought the song over to Elliott, it was just special,” says Scott-Phillips. “We didn’t want to build too much on it, but just make it as pretty as we can with just a guitar and let the lyrics speak for themselves. I like working with producers who put their own flair on songs, and working with Elliott is great because he’s so good at that and I know it’ll always sound great.”
The accompanying visuals for “Handsome Woman” beautifully heighten the song’s lyrical intimacy. Directed by Aron Meinhardt, the video features footage of private moments between Scott-Phillips and her wife—at eight months pregnant—capturing the love and companionship of a new family that inspired Scott-Phillips to write the track. “I wanted the video to be really authentically LGBTQ-focused, because that’s just who I am,” says Scott-Phillips. “If you’re an artist and you’re writing about your life, I think it’s important to really broadcast who you are.”
After a decade in Los Angeles, working with high-profile producers, taking meetings with publishing companies, and generally playing the traditional music industry game, Scott-Phillips has carved out a lane where her contentment in her personal life and artistic life inform one another, removing the artistic barriers that come along with a need for external approval, and allowing for a greater expression of authenticity in her songwriting. “I’ve gotten to a point in my personal life where I feel so fulfilled, so when it comes to music it’s like, people are either going to like it or they’re not, and that’s fine,” says Scott-Phillips. “When I started out, like a lot of people, I was trying to be strategic and work with people because I thought it would help me work with other people. Now I don’t really care if any of that happens. I just want to write songs, work with people I like, and when I go to bed at night be able to think, ‘That was a great day, I love my life.’”
Prinz Grizzley
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“If the term foot-stompin’ ever applied to a modern songsmith- it would have to be tagged upon that of Prinz Grizzley. With a throwback juke joint sound that is bluesy AF and a swampy cajun kick in the ass, Prinz Grizzley reverberates with a soulful edge reminiscent of an Alligator Records label act.” – Glide Magazine
“Stompin’ bluesy swamp-rock.” – Americana UK
“Driven by electrifying riffs, Prinz Grizzley utilizes his high-octane twang on “Payback Day (I’ll give no warning).” – Americana Music Association
“’Payback Day (I’ll Give No Warning),’ a vintage blues-rock banger with honkytonk, roadhouse bar fight vibes, keeps up the momentum as the narrator drinks and plots his revenge.” – Grateful Web
Prinz Grizzley
“I Keep On Searching” (out Oct. 6)
“Payback Day (I’ll Give No Warning)” (out Nov. 3)
“Proud Mary” (out Jan. 12)
From his Austrian Alps forest home, Americana songsmith Prinz Grizzley is releasing a series of singles leading into 2023. These songs of finding hope, revenge and eventually serenity will make you look for your own secluded mountain town to settle down in, get drinks with friends and maybe even start a family.
Chris Comper doesn’t overthink it when it comes to changing up genres in the music he releases via his alter ego Prinz Grizzley. “It’s all about the songs,” the Austrian musician explains. “I like writing songs. It’s just which dress you put on them. If it works on acoustic guitar, it’s a good song, and if it doesn’t work on acoustic guitar, it’s a shit song. And then when you go into production, if there’s a synthesizer or pedal steel, if the song asks for it, give it to him.”
It’s an ethos that’s served Comper well throughout his career, which included indie-rock success with his band Golden Reef and a brief foray into synth-pop. As Prinz Grizzley, he veered into the Americana lane with two critically-acclaimed albums that lead to playing festivals around the world, recording with Erin Rae, and sharing bills with folks like Yola, Tyler Childers, Molly Tuttle, Charley Crockett and many more.
His new original singles, “I Keep On Searching” and “Payback Day (I’ll Give No Warning),” barrel ahead with bluesy abandon. Coupled with a doleful take on the CCR classic “Proud Mary,” the songs represent another new direction taken by Comper, albeit with the same authenticity in place.
“The most honest music I’ve made,” Comper says to sum up what separates his Prinz Grizzley output from past records. “I’m not interested in ‘What’s the single?’ I don’t care. It’s just that’s my record, do with it what you want. I’m glad it’s turned out this way.”
For the new singles, Comper did a bit of archaeology, digging through past recordings he had made as far as eight years back and stumbling upon a pair of firecracker tracks he had completed with bassist Claude Meier and drummer Andy Wettstein. “I Keep On Searching” kicks off with a siren-like riff and doesn’t stop to take a breath, as Comper wails and whoops over a four-on-the-floor beat. “You keep looking for something, and when you’ve got it, it’s not quite as you imagined it,” Comper says. “Maybe you’re playing with the idea of giving up looking for happiness, contentment or what feels like unreachable dreams, because it might be easier to just leave it.”
“Payback Day (I’ll Give No Warning),” a vintage blues-rock banger with honkytonk, roadhouse bar fight vibes, keeps up the momentum as the narrator drinks and plots his revenge. As was the case with “I Keep On Searching,” Comper only had to do a few touch-ups to what was already on tape to ready the track for release. He’s learned the hard way about dismissing unfinished material. “I used to just write tons of songs and I never finished them,” he says about his days with Golden Reef. “When you give it a second look, sometimes it’s a great song.”
As much as “Proud Mary” has been covered, Prinz Grizzley’s version, featuring his lovely banjo work, coaxes wistful beauty out of it anew. It captures what Comper hears in the protagonist’s plight: “Having hope and having no hope at the same time.”
Comper, a longtime Creedence fan, found inspiration for his take in a YouTube video of John Fogerty playing a solo concert while at odds with his former band. “I thought he looked really cool, like ‘I don’t give a fuck, I have enough hit singles, just leave me be,’ Comper explains. “My version is like John Fogerty at 40 when he had a lot of lawsuits against him and was depressed. Maybe if he would have played the song then, that’s how I think it might have sounded.”
Comper cites Sturgill Simpson as an influence, particularly in his willingness to keep changing things up, even at the risk of defying audience expectations. “What shall I change to make it interesting to me again?” is how he approached the new singles. “With these releases, it’s a bit to show another side of me.”
Comper will be back in the studio shortly to complete the follow-up to his first two Prinz Grizzley albums, 2018’s Come On In and 2020’s To My Green Mountains Home. In fact, he says that the new record will complete his trilogy.
“A trilogy,” Comper laughs. “It’s out of fashion now, but when I started it, it was just fucking in fashion.”