April 2016

Jason Isbell

Review Date: January 19, 2016  Reviewed By: Carl Warren Location: Concorde 2 Brighton Riding high on the back of his latest album, Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit cruised along Brighton’s brisk seafront into the arms of tonight’s packed out, expectant audience. Isbell possesses a poet’s gift for a beautifully crafted turn of phrase. The latest album, SOMETHING MORE THAN FREE, is something of a masterpiece reaching the top of Billboard’s Country Album Chart. Tonight’s set consists mostly of songs from the current album and SOUTHEASTERN, Isbell’s critically acclaimed previous, fourth album. The expectant and rapturous audience is treated to a feast of both the powerful and the poignant. You can feel the truth pour out of these songs, interspersed with stories of the road and of family affairs… There’s one thing that’s really clear to me, no one dies with dignity. Highpoints include the Grammy nominated 24 Frames, Elephant and the title track of the new album, an ode to his beloved father. According to Isbell, Having no money, the song was the only gift he could give on Fathers Day. Far from being over sentimental, the song makes perfect sense. Listening to these songs is somehow like listening to ourselves. The live show is a completely different experience to the recorded work ranging from peeled back country licks sometimes reminiscent of early Gram Parsons   inspired Stones to spaced out blues. However, this is a master at work who must rank along side the greats, Dylan, Young and Springsteen. Expectation exceeded, the crowd of both young and old filed out into the cold night air aware of the privilege that the past two hours had provided.                                                  

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Tia Mcgraff

Sat May 7: The Kirkgate Theatre: Cockermouth (Lakes District) un May 8: Haile Village Hall, Haile, Orchard Brow (Lakes District) Mon May 9: Prince of Wales, Broughton (Lakes District) Thurs May 12: Old Low Light, Clifford’s Fort, Fish Quay, North Shields, Tyne & Wear, Sat May 14: with Cale Tyson, Cluny2, Newcastle Mon May 16: Grateful Fred Café Sessions, Cafe D’Art in Formby Village centre, Formby, Liverpool Thurs May 19: Cilcain Village Hall, Cilcain, Wales Fri May 20: Hopkins Hall, Hillesely, Gloucester Sat. May 21 and Sun. May 22: The Tin Shed Experience, Clifton Street, Laugharne, Carmarthenshire Wed May 25:  Robin 2, Birmingham Thurs May 26: The Marrs Bar, Worcester Fri May 27: Nether Edge Bowling Club, Sheffield Sat May 28: Joules Yard, Market Harborough Mon May 30: Highclere Castle, Highclere Park, Newbury, West Berkshire Fri June 3:  Bickington Village Hall, Bickington, Newton Abbot, Devon Sat June 4:  Health and Happiness Show, Bookmark Theatre, Bloxwich Library, Elmore Row, Bloxwich Sun June 5:  TwickFolk Patchworks @ The Cabbage Patch, 67 LondonRoad ,Twickenham

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Sarah McQuaid announces April-May 2016 UK tour

Hard on the heels of a Netherlands and Germany tour that proved somewhat more adventurous than she’d have liked, Sarah McQuaid sets out across the UK to play 21 concerts in four weeks during the months of April and May 2016 – see details of dates below. “Apart from being rushed to hospital with a blindingly painful ear infection in the small hours of the morning and having to cancel that night’s gig, then two days later getting locked in the toilets shortly before I was due on stage – oh, and staying in a succession of some of the most dismal hotels we’ve ever experienced – apart from all that, it was a great tour,” the Madrid-born, Chicago-raised, Penzance-based singer/songwriter/guitarist chuckles. Not that the road is anything new to her. Recently featured in the Legends Of Rock exhibition by photographer Phil Nicholls alongside his iconic images of Amy Winehouse, Björk, The Prodigy and Courtney Love, to name a few, McQuaid has spent the past few years touring extensively on both sides of the Atlantic, earning critical accolades along the way. Of one of her USA concerts last autumn, The Huffington Post wrote: “Finding treasure feels great, and such is the case with musician Sarah McQuaid. … I’ve attended hundreds of concerts of all kinds, and her subtle mastery onstage launches her straight into my fave shows ever. One voice, one guitar, and the wondrous reminder of the magic of music. Sarah has the gift.” Her April-May outing will be her penultimate UK tour before she takes a twelve-month break from the road in 2017 to focus her energies on writing and recording a fifth solo album, as well as penning a sequel to The Irish DADGAD Guitar Book, the popular tutor she authored on the alternative guitar tuning she uses exclusively. “I’d like to do a follow-up book that focuses on song accompaniment and that demonstrates the versatility of DADGAD,” Sarah explains. “A lot of people think of it as a specifically ‘Celtic’ tuning, but I write all my songs in DADGAD, and it’s also great for all sorts of different genres, from blues to classical music to rock ’n’ roll. “And I’ve already started writing songs for the next album,” she continues. “I was really happy with the production on the last one – my cousin Adam Pierce co-produced it with Jeremy Backofen, and it was recorded in their studio in upstate New York – so I’m hoping to travel over there in 2017 to do the next one with the same team.” Released in 2015, Sarah’s fourth solo album Walking Into White was selected as Album of the Month by FolkWords, which went on to nominate it for both Best Album from a Female Artist and Album of the Year. Germany’s Folker hailed it as “Ein mutiges Album mit einem potenziellen Pophit” (“A courageous album that includes a potential pop hit”), while The Musician called it “A work that grows with each listen.” “The songs are acutely observed and literate, almost like journal notes set to music. They’re measured and tranquil but they’re never dull because there is always a sense of restlessness and unease behind the poetry…. And it’s all lovely,” wrote Ian Pickles in R2/Rock ’n’ Reel. Before she can get down to work on its successor, she’s got a busy spring, summer and autumn to get through, with the aforementioned four-week tour followed by summer festival appearances in Belgium, the Netherlands and the UK as well as a two-day DADGAD workshop at the Halsway Manor Acoustic Guitar Weekend in July. In September and October, she’ll be undertaking a seven-week coast-to-coast tour in the USA, then doing a month-long UK tour in November. “And after that, I’m looking forward to having a good long break from living out of a suitcase!” says Sarah. “I’ll still do local gigs, and I’ll also do festivals that only take me away from home for a couple of days at a time – there are a number of UK festivals that I haven’t been able to get to because I’m always away on tour in other countries when they’re happening, so it’ll be great to be actually available for those … If they’ll have me, that is!” Apr 14 Penzance: The Acorn Penzance Apr 15 Bodmin Folk Club Apr 16 Exeter: Twigg’s Gigs – Hope Hall Apr 17 Great Torrington: The Plough Arts Centre Apr 22 Walkington: Beverley Folk Club Apr 23 Chester: Tarvin Community Centre Apr 24 Hope Valley: Folk, Blues & Beyond Apr 28 Rothbury Roots Apr 29 Horsley (Newcastle): The Hearth Arts Centre Apr 30 Whorlton (Barnard Castle): The Little Theatre on the Green May 1 Benmore (Dunoon): Uig Hall May 2 Cullipool (Luing): Atlantic Islands Centre May 3 Acharacle: Resipole Studios May 4 Acharacle: Resipole Studios (DADGAD Guitar Workshop) May 6 Kenilworth: The Tree House Bookshop May 7 Warminster: Deverills Performing Arts May 10 Glasgow: Live At The Star May 11 Edinburgh House Concert May 12 Portree (Skye): Aros May 13 Stonehaven Folk Club May 14 Gartly: Tin Hut Sessions May 15 Ardross Community Hall

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Columbia/Legacy to Release The Highwaymen Live – American Outlaws, a new deluxe 3CD/1DVD box set on Friday, May 20

Columbia/Legacy has announced the upcoming release of The Highwaymen Live – American Outlaws, a deluxe new 3CD/1DVD (or 3CD/1 Blu-ray) box set of concert performances–including a previously unreleased complete concert on CD and DVD (or Blu-ray)–from country music’s legendary first “supergroup,” on Friday, May 20. The Highwaymen Live – American Outlaws includes: a) two audio discs recorded live at Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, New York, March 14, 1990; b) an audio disc with tracks recorded live at various Farm Aid Festivals and c) a previously unreleased full-length concert film recorded live at Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, New York, March 14, 1990 and transferred from the original film reels especially for this collection. As an added bonus, The Highwaymen Live – American Outlaws debuts a previously unreleased recording of “One Too Many Mornings,” an alternate take of a Bob Dylan song which appeared on Heroes, a 1986 collaboration album by Johnny Cash and Waylon Jennings. The track’s new incarnation on The Highwaymen Live – American Outlaws includes vocals recorded by Willie Nelson and Kris Kristofferson in 2014, produced by longtime Willie Nelson colleague and band member Mickey Raphael and remixed by Tony Castle. The Highwaymen Live – American Outlaws compilation is produced by Mickey Raphael from original recordings produced by Chips Moman. The box set includes a booklet featuring revelatory new liner notes penned by noted music scholar and journalist Mikal Gilmore. Columbia/Legacy will also release a new single disc compilation, The Very Best of The Highwaymen. The Highwaymen – Johnny Cash, Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings and Kris Kristofferson – were country music’s first bonafide “supergroup,” an epic quartet of blockbuster star power comprised of the four prime forces of America’s outlaw country music revolution. An essential musical and cultural influence, the Highwaymen were active for the decade spanning 1985 to 1995, recorded three major label albums, charted hit singles (including their Number 1 debut, “Highwayman,” which won the Best Country Song Grammy Award in 1986) and performed a variety of shows achieving mythic status for those lucky enough to have been there. “There’s the four of us standing there, grouped around microphones. The Highwaymen. John, Kris, Willie, and me. I don’t think there are any other four people like us,” wrote Waylon Jennings in Waylon: An Autobiography. “John says that we came together because we all have a life commitment to the music. We know the same songs, but we sing them from different perspectives. We can blend the early country of the Carter Family with Texas swing, southern gospel, and rockabilly, and each of us feels comfortable singing real slices of life. There’s not one of us who hasn’t come face to face with his own mortality, and many’s the time we’ve gone through our struggles and survivals together….That’s our friendship, unlocking any door that stands between us, and it keeps four very different individuals together.” AUDIO DISC 1 1. Mystery Train 2. Highwayman 3. Mammas Don’t Let Your Babies Grow Up To Be Cowboys 4. Good Hearted Woman 5. Trouble Man 6. Amanda 7. There Ain’t No Good Chain Gang 8. Ring Of Fire 9. Folsom Prison Blues 10. Blue Eyes Crying In The Rain 11. Sunday Morning Coming Down 12. Help Me Make It Through The Night 13. The Best Of All Possible Worlds 14. Loving Her Was Easier (Than Anything I’ll Ever Do Again) 15. City Of New Orleans 16. Always On My Mind 17. Me And Bobby McGee AUDIO DISC 2 1. Silver Stallion 2. The Last Cowboy Song 3. Two Stories Wide 4. Living Legend 5. The Pilgrim: Chapter 33 6. They Killed Him 7. I Still Miss Someone 8. Ragged Old Flag 9. (Ghost) Riders In The Sky 10. Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way 11. Night Life 12. The King Is Gone (So Are You) 13. Desperados Waiting For A Train 14. Big River 15. A Boy Named Sue 16. Why Me 17. Luckenbach, Texas 18. On The Road Again Audio Discs 1 & 2 recorded live at Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, New York, March 14, 1990 AUDIO DISC 3 1. Mystery Train 2. Highwayman 3. The King Is Gone (So Are You) 4. I’ve Always Been Crazy 5. The Best Of All Possible Worlds 6. City Of New Orleans 7. Folsom Prison Blues 8. Intro/Highwayman 9. Shipwrecked In The Eighties 10. Desperados Waiting For A Train 11. One Too Many Mornings (Previously Unreleased) Tracks 1-6 recorded live at Farm Aid V, Texas Stadium, Irving, Texas, March 14, 1992 Tracks 7-10 recorded live at Farm Aid VI, Cyclone Stadium, Ames, Iowa, April 24, 1993 Track 11 from the album Heroes by Johnny Cash and Waylon Jennings, 1986; original recording produced by Chips Moman; 2014 vocals by Willie Nelson and Kris Kristofferson: produced by Mickey Raphael; remixed by Tony Castle CONCERT FILM DISC 4 Recorded live at Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, New York, March 14, 1990 Running time: approx. 2 hours 39 minutes

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Record Store Day 2016

Record Store Day 2016 is tomorrow and 25,000 music fans are expected to hit their local record store! Over 250 labels are set to release limited edition records for the 9th annual Record Store Day. Among this year’s releases, labels are choosing to put new music at the forefront of their offerings, with new material from artists such as Foals and Bastille all joining the list. 4 out of 5 releases come from independent labels; making it one of our most eclectic and interesting Record Store Day lists to date. Rupert Morrison, of The Drift Record Shop in Totnes, said ‘Record Store Day is about embracing all of the music that finds its way into independent record shops. The 2016 collection is another fine example of the amazing independent music makers and recording companies who so brilliantly support us independent shops on record store day and all year-round.” Major label acts also add weight to the Record Store Day list and among the releases this year which might appeal to a younger generation of vinyl fans are acts such as James Bay, Florence and the Machine and Hozier. Record Store Day Record Store Day was conceived nine years ago in the USA and is coordinated by the Entertainment Retailers Association in the UK. The day brings together hundreds of the UK’s independent record shops to celebrate their unique culture on the third Saturday in April. Exclusive vinyl is made available on the day and shops often have live music and in-store events to celebrate. This year BBC Music is partnering with Record Store Day UK as the event gears up for its ninth annual celebration of independent record shops and the vinyl format. Special programming will take place across the BBC’s radio networks, and in particular on BBC Radio 6 Music. It is expected that more than 25,000 music fans will be going along to their local record shops from the early hours on Saturday 16 April. Go to http://recordstoreday.co.uk/participating-stores/ to find your local participating record store. Go to  http://recordstoreday.co.uk to read more about Record Store Day 2016.

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Loretta Lynn

Dolly. Tammy. Willie. Hank. Waylon. Merle. Country superstars instantly recognisable just from their first name. Here’s another one: Loretta. The only female artist to chart in six decades, The Coal Miner’s Daughter, Loretta Lynn is still going strong as a pioneering and formidable singer, songwriter and performer, turning 84 years old on April 14. ‘Loretta Lynn: Still a Mountain Girl’, a documentary about her life and career, was screened on BBC 4 in March, after premiering on national US TV. A Broadway musical based on her memoir, ‘Coal Miner’s Daughter’, is also on its way. In 1980, Sissy Spacek starred in the Oscar winning film treatment of Loretta’s auto-biography. Loretta published a second memoir, ‘Still Woman Enough’, in 2002. A listen to her sparkling brand new record, FULL CIRCLE, messes with your head somewhat; hearing that distinctive voice and a tone more like a woman of less than half her age, from a woman born when Herbert Hoover was US president, and George V. was on the throne here. FULL CIRCLE takes listeners on a journey through Loretta’s musical story, from the Appalachian folk songs and gospel music she learned as a child, to new interpretations of her classic hits and country standards, to songs newly-written for the project. Everything It Takes, is a sweet duet with Elvis Costello, and Lay Me Down, a tune written by her son-in-law, a blissful duet with her old friend Willie Nelson. I caught up with Loretta on the phone at her Hurricane Mills home in Tennessee, a 1,600 acre ranch she and her husband bought many years ago, part of which is now a major tourist attraction with museums, a live music venue and major events regularly staged there. But the space and splendour of her beautiful home is a far cry from her childhood. Born Loretta Webb, named after film star Loretta Young, the second of eight children and the daughter of a coal miner, she was raised in poverty in remote Appalachian Kentucky hamlet, Butcher Hollow, Van Lear, in a one room mountain cabin with her parents and seven brothers and sisters. The family had little, but they always had music and all of them sang. Her part Cherokee mother used to stand Loretta on her Singer sewing machine and make paper dresses for her, while teaching her how to sing. One of those songs, In The Pines, is one of the highlights of the new album. Loretta married Oliver ‘Dolittle’ Lynn when she was 15 years old – many sources wrongly state she married at 13, but a check of official records confirms she was two years older – and it was he who bought her first guitar, a $17 Harmony in 1953. It was Oliver who urged her to get up on stage and perform after hearing her sing around the house. She admits that she never wanted to be a singer, cried with nerves when she first went on stage, but after three years of teaching herself the guitar, she decided on a game plan to focus on singing for just two years to buy the couple a house, and then retire! Theirs was a turbulent marriage, fuelled by his heavy drinking as an alcoholic, his violence and constant womanising. It is on record that he left her once while she was giving birth. As Loretta reveals, they often came to blows, with her giving back as good as she got! Pouring a hot pan of corn over his head in one incident. She used their behind-closed-doors life stories in the songs she wrote, with regular topics centred around boozing and philandering men, and rival mistresses. Her hit song Fist City, was a perfect and forthright example of Ms Lynn warning off the many persistent females she encountered. But Loretta and Oliver, who she called ‘Doo’, stayed together for 48 years, had six children and she was devastated when he died in 1998, unable to continue working for a while, stricken with grief. Until her comeback with the album STILL COUNTRY in 2000. That preceded the surprise double Grammy-winning smash hit album VAN LEAR ROSE, produced by Jack White. She formed her own band, Loretta and the Trailblazers, featuring her brother Jay Lee on guitar, in 1956. Loretta signed her first recording contract in 1960, for her first record HONKY TONK GIRL. She arrived in Nashville 55 years ago, became a big part of the Nashville country scene and charted her first of 16 number one hits in 1967. To read the full interview, purchase the May 2016 issue here

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Cyndi Lauper

Actress, singer, songwriter and musical icon, Cyndi Lauper, has reached over 50 million global record sales thanks to her much-loved and critically acclaimed writing and performances. Her career has spanned 30 years, she has been inducted into both the Hollywood and Songwriters Hall of Fame, creating Hey Now (Girls Just Wanna Have Fun), True Colours, All Through The Night, Time After Time and Change Of Heart, to name just a few of her smash hits. Cyndi can be credited as a musical revolutionary, bringing punk elements of style and attitude into the mainstream, thanks to her signature fashion, vocals and liberal lyrics. Cyndi Lauper was the first woman to have four top five hits from a debut album, the first woman to win the composing category solo during the 2013 Tony Awards and one of a select list women to have won competitive Grammy, Emmy and Tony awards. Most reccently, she has wowed with her unique, cross-genre albums. Lauper has also become a powerful LGBT advocate (she is both a gay and feminist icon) campaigning for equality through charities and Gay Pride events around the world. She co-founded the True Colors Tour for Human Rights throughout the United States and Canada in 2007. In 2010, Lauper’s True Colors Fund launched the Give a Damn campaign, to help get straight people more involved in LGBT rights. Cyndi Lauper is a woman who, after years of gaining respect and admiration in the music industry and now 62 years old, can pretty much do what she wants – and what she’s chosen to do now is a country album! DETOUR, released on May 6, is an 11-track cover album, featuring some of country music’s very best artists and session players. It’s also her first solo album in six years. I spoke with Cyndi Lauper to find out why, and it seemed that her motives and outlook on the album were just as charming and colourful as her New York accent and bright pink hair… We managed to fit in time to speak in between Cyndi’s busy schedule promoting this album; she tells me it’s important to her to “meet all the people that are gonna be selling the record. These are the people who will be rolling their sleeves up with you, so it’s good that you meet everybody and say ‘thank you’, for the work we’re about to embark on.” It’s refreshing to hear that the singer still appreciates each and every process of a new album – but before we talk more about her role and vision in its creation, I can’t wait and I have to ask – why a country album and why now? “Well, because I could,” she responds with bright bluntness that shapes the rest of our interview. “And because I wanted to work with Seymour Stein.” It was a career-long ambition to work with Seymour Stein. “I always wanted to work with him,” she tells me. “He was the one who signed the Talking Heads, signed the Ramones. You gotta understand what that was in New York, at that time. It was like oh my god, he had everybody!” Stein is a top dog in the music industry: Vice President of Warner Bros and Records and a co-founder of Sire Records. Sire Records was a central part of the 80’s new wave movement; Stein signed ground-breaking artists under the label such as the Ramones, Talking Heads, The Pretenders, Madonna, Depeche Mode, The Cure and The Undertones. Perhaps surprisingly, DETOUR is Cyndi’s first release with Stein. Equally surprising, the two of them planned to create a “kind of Americana [album, from] the time period of country when [it] walked hand-in-hand with R&B,” says Cyndi. “I felt like that was a perfect complement to the MEMPHIS BLUES record that I did – which [covered music from] around the same time period.” Lauper has spent this most recent stage in her career looking to the past for inspiration. 2010’s MEMPHIS BLUES became Billboard’s most successful blues album of the year, remaining at number one on the Billboard Blues Albums chart for 14 consecutive weeks and featuring the late blues legend, B.B. King. Prior to that, in 2003, Cyndi put together a successful collection of jazz standards, AT LAST. To read more, purchase that May 2016 issue of Maverick here

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