June 2016

Southern Halo release new single Rewind and premiere Taste Of Country video

The cutting-edge Country trio Southern halo hits fast-forward on their career with the release of their new single, Rewind, and an exclusive video premiere today on Taste of Country.   Entering the MusicRow CountryBreakout™ Chart last week, the single is described by Music News Atlanta’s Rick Moore as “One of the feel-good Country singles of 2016 … (by) the trio of teenage sisters whose remarkable harmonies put them in the company of Lady Antebellum and Little Big Town.” Southern Halo made their CMA music festival performance debut earlier this month with a jam-packed schedule that included an impressive acoustic performance on the CMA’s music city stage.  The sisters co-hosted WTVF-TV’s two-hour-long Morning Show on Nashville’s historic Riverfront, taped TCN’s (The Country Network’s) Live at the Whiskey Bent Saloon and On The Couch, plus filmed an appearance for Young Country TV.  Additionally, the trio performed live for Heartland TV’s Coffee, Country & Cody, and signed autographs galore.  They capped off the week with a performance on the Radio Disney Country Stage. Designed to have a feminine ‘Mark Twain’ feel, the playful companion music video was shot on an island in the Mississippi River near. Filled with images of the sweet Southern life, the clip contrasts the demands of the girls’ professional lives with their natural desire to be normal teenage girls – and have fun.  Produced by Heather Mathews (WHEN COTTON BLOSSOMS, A STONE’S THROW) and co-directed by Heather and James Mathews (SPIDERMAN, SWORDFISH), this is their second outing with the band since the video for “Little White Dress.” Short-listed in Billboard.com’s insightful feature on trending all-female bands, Southern Halo has recently enjoyed media coverage on  Radio Disney Country, WREG-TV (Memphis), Parcbench, AXS.com and WTVF-TV.  Since landing in the National finals of the 2014 Texaco Country Showdown,these Mississippi Delta natives have worked hard honing their craft.  They’ve gone from regional to national acclaim and opened for Brantley Gilbert, Eric Paslay, Tyler Farr, Randy Houser, John Michael Montgomery, Parmalee, Old Dominion, Craig Campbell, Julie Roberts, American Young and B.B. King.  They visited radio stations around the country in support of their debut single, “Little White Dress,” and continue to perform shows regularly.  On July 12, Southern Halo will launch Townsquare Media’s KICK 97.9 FM “Say It With Pepsi” Concert Series in Quincy, Illinois.

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Norma Jean Martine announces release of new album ONLY IN MY MIND

Norma Jean Martine is set to release her blues inspired guitar-pop album, ONLY IN MY MIND on 9thSeptember 2016. Entirely self-penned, Martine wrote or co-wrote every track on ONLY IN MY MIND including three tracks with Joel Pott (Athlete) The album was produced by Danton Supple (Coldplay) with two tracks being produced by Ed Harcourt. Martine’s trademark husky vocals, which ooze sex appeal whilst blowing the roof off every venue she performs live in, feature on every song on the album.  Martine describes ONLY IN MY MIND as fundamentally an album about love, “Most of the songs on the album are love songs and the many different seasons of love. Love isn’t just one emotion… it’s a weird word we use to describe an array of feelings, and sometimes you don’t even know that feeling can exist until it happens to you.”  ‘ONLY IN MY MIND’s love-theme may well have been what attracted the producers of upcoming film ‘Kids In Love’ (starring Will Poulter & Cara Delevingue) to feature one of the album’s tracks ‘I Want You To Want Me’, in an emotionally charged scene during the film.  Another of the album co-write’s is ‘I’m Still Here’, which was written with the legendary Burt Bacharach,whom Martine recently performed ‘I’m Still Here’ with, at Bacharach’s London Palladium show.  It’s been a busy few months since Martine’s debut EP release ANIMALS at the end of 2015.  Alongside co-writing the title track for Ronan Keating’s Top 5 album ‘Time Of My Life’, she has co-written and featured on two tracks ‘We Ain’t Dead Yet’ and ‘Paint’ on Pablo Nouvelle’s current album ‘All I Need’, out on Armin Van Buuren’s label Armada Music. Martine’s most recent release ‘Freedom’ was her cover of George Michael’s classic 90’s track, which is currently the soundtrack to a multi-million pound Europe wide advertising campaign, reaching nearly 1million streams on Spotify.

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Israel Nash

Review Date: February 15, 2016 Reviewed By: Carl Warren Location: The Garage London The music of Israel Nash is often compared to that of Neil Young, it has a similar huge range but is of it’s time and is his own. Nash arrives in London having toured in the past weeks throughout the capitals of Europe and Scandinavia. The stage seems to be a second home shared by an extremely honed and tuned in band pinned down by the sparkling pedal steel of Eric Swanson. This is a band in the truest sense. There are rich textures and Crazy Horse type workouts, which bring the current album Silver Season to life. There is lots to like, moments that bring to mind Crosby, Stills and Nash and the wonderful Jonathan Wilson but, Nash makes it all his own. His words are mostly restricted to song over which the music press have continually showered his cosmic soul with the highest praise. Tonight’s set list is woven around Silver Season and it’s predecessor, Rain Plains. The band is on fire and extremely loud, the crowd are totally enthralled and immersed in these overwhelming soundscapes. I don’t live like the others. I see twice as many colours.  Cosmic Americana is alive and well in North London – a just deserve for venturing out on a real cold winter night.

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Rock The Holler to bring 19 Top Country Independent Performances to Tullahoma

Natalie Logan, Kaleb Hensley, The Mikele Buck Band, Flyte Three, Braeden Berry, Jeff Smithart and Old South Redemption to perform along with the other highly anticipated acts of the year. Rock The Holler is coming to The South Jackson Civic Center for the first year the weekend of July 29-31. Along with headliners Kaleb Hensley, Natalie Logan  and The Mikele Buck Band. The 2016 Full Lineup is listed at www.rocktheholler.com. No need for tickets; the event has a $5.00 parking fee (which covers everyone in the vehicle) “We’re looking forward to giving music fans the most memorable weekend of their summer.” Rock The Holler has a great marketplace featuring 20+ vendors, food vendors, as well as the Carnival Midway. The Carnival is the newest addition to the festival presented by Showtime USA, LLC. located in Florida. On Friday and Saturday nights starting at 9pm DJ Vegas with Vegas Entertainment will be hosting the neighborhood block party. There is music to be heard every hour of the festival! Select Rock The Holler performances will be broadcast-ed live online via Facebook with on-air dates July 29-31. This year, fans can support the lifesaving work of The Wounded Warriors Project through a variety of on-site donation opportunities and a contribution made from the $5.00 parking fee. Rock The Holler is a premier music experience set among the Southern Historic District of Tullahoma, featuring renowned headliners and emerging artists. Guests witness unforgettable performances and discover the engaging attractions nestled around every turn that make Rock The Holler a can’t-miss summer tradition for country music fans. For additional information contact Rock The Holler- rocktheholler@gmail.com -www.rocktheholler.com

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Red Sky July announce first headline show at Bush Hall

With their latest album ‘The Truth and the Lie’ reaching number 3 in the UK Country chart, Red Sky July will follow a string of festival appearances – including Cornbury & Somerset Rocks with Jools Holland – with a headline show at London’s Bush Hall on September 19th. Shelly Poole, one third of Red Sky July tells us: “We are super excited to announce our first headline show at Bush Hall in September. We’ve played there many times in and with different bands, last time supporting the fabulous Amy Helm. The sound is perfect for our kind of music and we plan to put on a one off show suited for the venue. Hope to see you there for a fabulous evening!” Earlier in 2016 Red Sky July performed at Britain’s C2C Festival at London’s O2 Arena and received praise for their classic songwriting, musicianship and harmonies from country and non-country critics alike. Country Music People gave their recent album 5/5 saying “The Truth and The Lie has everything to commend it, really good singing and harmonies, excellent lyrics, strong melodies and superb production”.   Red Sky July are Ally McErlaine (Texas), Shelly Poole (Alisha’s Attic) and Charity Hair (The Alice Band). The band formed in 2009 and released their self-titled debut album in 2011. 2014’s ‘Shadowbirds’ followed. The band have been playlisted on BBC Radio 2, and have supported artists such as Steve Earle, Sheryl Crow, 10CC, Tom Jones and Jools Holland. Festivals they have performed at include T in the Park, Isle of Wight and Glastonbury. The band’s achievements were recognised at the Scottish Music Awards where they were presented with a prestigious Tartan Clef award by Nordoff-Robbins Music Therapy. Tickets on General Sale from: Live Nation Friday, 1st July – 9am.

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Kelly Prescott releases new single BATTLE ROAD and announces her new EP HILLBILLY JEWELS

Country singer-songwriter Kelly Prescott has released her brand new single ‘Battle Road’ to stream on Soundcloud, along with an accompanying music video. In her own words: “Battle Road is a very honest glimpse into most normal relationships. I think a lot of people can relate to this one. Love isn’t always easy.” Battle Road is the first single to be released from her forthcoming EP Hillbilly Jewels, out this summer. Kelly Prescott hails from two musically renowned family lines, spanning three generations from Northern Ontario, Nova Scotia and the Ottawa Valley. She has naturally inherited the foundation to follow her musical heart, drawing inspiration from her great Canadian roots. Imbued with experiences gleaned from growing up in an award-winning studio, she has hit the ground running in pursuit of her own musical expression. When Kelly sings about love you feel every up and down. She sings pain like she never knew anything but hurt; she belts out blues like she was born in the Mississippi Valley, instead of the banks of Mississippi Lake up north in Ontario. Kelly Prescott is a from-the-cradle country singer, influenced by the likes of Emmylou Harris, Roger Miller and Ryan Adams. When her voice is blended with steel guitars and fiddles, country music lovers from way-back-when will hear a kindred soul. When she spins the dial forward a few decades, it’s clear she’s part of a new generation of artists who are making new sounds and big waves. With this new EP, Hillbilly Jewels, Kelly takes the next step in her craft, with songs that speak to a new generation of lovers of country music; plenty of energy, deep passion, powerful vocals, and honest storytelling about real life today.

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Fender makes Andrew Leahey first artist to receive new deluxe Nashville telecaster

For 70 years, Fender has inspired countless musicians to pick up its electric guitars, from Stratocaster players like Mark Knopfler to Telecaster pickers like Laur Joamets. This week, Fender’s Nashville-based A&R team hand-picked American rock & roll songwriter and guitar player Andrew Leahey, frontman of Andrew Leahey & the Homestead to receive the first in a new line of deluxe Nashville telecaster guitars. “The first guitar I ever bought was a Fender Squire Strat,” Andrew remembers. “I was 10 years old, and I mowed my neighbor’s lawn for an entire summer to save up enough money. Years later, it’s an honor to be working with some of the guys behind this company. They’re true music fans, willing to invest in some of the newer faces in Nashville’s music scene. To say that I’m honored to be the first to receive one of these new guitars is an understatement.” Andrew recovered from a risky brain surgery in 2014 and responded to his new lease on life by writing and recording an 11-track album, ‘Skyline In Central Time,’ due out August 5th on Thirty Tigers. Ken Coomer, Wilco’s drummer and co-founder, produced the project.  

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Lonesome shack release new studio album THE SWITCHER

“The Switcher is a record that can hold equal audible weight in 1965 as 2065. Rock-n-roll forever and ever, Amen.” – No Depression Veteran rockers Lonesome Shack are known for their no-frills, dirty blues rock. Their upcoming album, The Switcher, promises to be an ambitious step forward. The band challenged themselves to create a collection that packed the same pulverizing punch as their live show. The result is some of their finest work yet.” – Pure volume Lonesome Shack started in the early 2000’s when songwriter Ben Todd developed his musical voice in the isolation of rural New Mexico. After moving to Seattle in 2007, Todd teamed up with drummer Kristian Garrard and they found an instant chemistry. As a duo they released Bound To Die (2008) and Slidin Boa (2010) and brought their primitive boogie to every corner of the USA. In 2011, Lonesome Shack were joined by bassist Luke Bergman and the trio released the live album City Man (2012), which was recorded in one night at their favorite neighbourhood bar, Cafe Racer. With More Primitive (2014), Lonesome Shack continued to hone their skills as an elemental rock group: stripped down, raw, expressive and danceable. Lonesome Shack’s latest album The Switcher is their most ambitious and complete work yet. The Switcher’s 14 songs add dimension to the band’s vision. The album is by turns dirty and raucous or slow and expansive, with resonant lyrics and inventive songwriting. The record was recorded with Johnny Goss, who also manned the board for More Primitive, and an effort was made to make the music sound just as it does at a live show. The album took over a year to complete, pieced together from three different periods of recording sessions. The sounds and feels are varied, but the message is clear – everything is held together by the groove. Lonesome Shack’s The Switcher is out now on Double Vinyl LPs, CD and digital formats.

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Chase Rice releases rallying anthem EVERYBODY WE KNOW DOES

Chase Rice has built his country music career one fan at a time, honing his vigorous live show by playing everywhere from dive bars and fields to amphitheaters and sheds, listening to peoples’ stories and tapping into the common pulse that brings them together night after night: Music. With four headlining tours, opening runs for stadium superstar Kenny Chesney and  entertainer Dierks Bentley, a chart-topping album and two Top 5 radio hits now under his belt, Rice has ridden the highs and lows right alongside his fans and supporters and harnessed that collective energy in recording music for his forthcoming album.  With his new single “Everybody we know does” available at digital retailers and arriving at country radio on the 28th June, Rice delivers an authentic anthem that reflects the values and lifestyle he shares with his core supporters while also nodding to their diversity. “These last few years have been a whirlwind, being out on the road building our live show and working on new music for the next record. I’ve lived a lot and had some incredible experiences and opportunities, but I’ve also been spending some time out at my farm, just unplugging for a bit and reflecting on what music means to me and what it means to all of the people who have shown up and supported me over the years,” said Rice. “That’s why this song, ‘Everybody we know does’ is really special to me. We went in and recorded it with some of Nashville’s top studio musicians, so it’s our sound and our lives reflected in this song. It’s who we are, and that’s ultimately what brings us all together.” “Everybody we know does” was written by Jeremy Bussey and Travis Denning and is available at all digital retail partners now at http://smarturl.it/everybodyweknowdoes

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Bluegrass music patriarch Ralph Stanley dies at 89

Ralph Stanley, a patriarch of Appalachian music who with his brother Carter helped expand and popularize the genre that became known as bluegrass, died Thursday from difficulties with skin cancer. He was 89. Stanley was born and raised in southwest Virginia, a land of coal mines and deep forests where he and his brother formed the Stanley Brothers and their Clinch Mountain Boys in 1946. Their father would sing them old traditional songs like “Man of Constant Sorrow,” while their mother, a banjo player, taught them the old-time clawhammer style, in which the player’s fingers strike downward at the strings in a rhythmic style. Heavily influenced by Grand Ole Opry star Bill Monroe, the brothers fused Monroe’s rapid rhythms with the mountain folk songs from groups such as the Carter Family, who hailed from this same rocky corner of Virginia. The Stanleys created a distinctive three-part harmony that combined the lead vocal of Carter with Ralph’s tenor and an even higher part sung by bandmate Pee Wee Lambert. Carter’s romantic songwriting professed a deep passion for the rural landscape, but also reflected on lonesomeness and personal losses. Songs like “The Lonesome River,” uses the imagery of the water to evoke the loss of a lover, and “White Dove,” describes the mourning and suffering after the death of a mother and father. In 1951, they popularized “Man of Constant Sorrow,” which was also later recorded by Bob Dylan in the ’60s. The brothers were swept into the burgeoning folk movement and they toured the country playing folk and bluegrass festivals during the ’60s, including the Newport Folk Festival in 1959 and 1964. But when Carter died of liver disease in 1966, Ralph wasn’t sure he could continue. His brother had been the main songwriter, lead singer and front man, and Ralph, by his own account, was withdrawn and shy, although he had overcome some of his early reticence. “Within weeks of his passing, I got phone calls and letters and telegrams and they all said don’t quit. They said, ‘We’ve always been behind you and Carter, but now we’ll be behind you even more because we know you’ll need us,’” Stanley told The Associated Press in 2006. After Carter’s death, Ralph drew even deeper from his Appalachian roots, adopting the a cappella singing style of the Primitive Baptist church where he was raised. He reformed the Clinch Mountain Boys band to include Ray Cline, vocalist Larry Sparks and Melvin Goins. He would change the lineup of the band over the years, later including Jack Cooke, and mentored younger artists like Keith Whitley and Ricky Skaggs, who also performed with him. Dylan and Grateful Dead’s Jerry Garcia praised his work and, in the case of Dylan, joined him for a remake of the Stanley Brothers’ “Lonesome River” in 1997. He was given an honorary doctorate of music from Lincoln Memorial University in Harrogate, Tennessee, in 1976, and he was often introduced as “Dr. Ralph Stanley.” He performed at the inaugurations of U.S. Presidents Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton, was given a “Living Legends” medal from the Library of Congress and a National Medal of Arts presented by the National Endowment for the Arts and President George W. Bush. He became a member of the Grand Ole Opry in 2000. But at age 73, he was introduced to a new generation of fans in 2000 due to his chilling a cappella dirge “O Death” from the hit Coen Brothers’ “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” movie soundtrack. The album was a runaway hit, topping the Billboard 200 chart, as well as the country albums and soundtrack charts, and sold millions of copies. He won a Grammy for best male country vocal performance in 2002 — beating out Tim McGraw, Ryan Adams, Willie Nelson, Johnny Cash and Lyle Lovett — and was the focus of a successful tour and documentary inspired by the soundtrack. The soundtrack, produced by T Bone Burnett, also won a Grammy for album of the year. The following year he and Jim Lauderdale would win a Grammy for best bluegrass album for “Lost in the Lonesome Pines.” He said in an interview with The Associated Press in 2002 that younger people were coming to see his shows and hear his “old time music,” and was enjoying the belated recognition. “I wish it had come 25 years sooner,” he said. “I am still enjoying it, but I would have had longer to enjoy it.” Despite health problems, he continued to record and tour into his 80s, often performing with his son Ralph Stanley II on guitar and his grandson Nathan on mandolin. Stanley was born in Big Spraddle, Virginia and lived in Sandy Ridge outside of Coeburn, Virginia. His mother was Lucy Jane Smith Stanley and his father was Lee Stanley. He is survived by his wife Jimmie Stanley – they were to celebrate their 48th wedding anniversary on July 2nd. He is also survived by his children: Lisa Stanley Marshall, Tonya Armes Stanley and Ralph Stanley II; His grandchildren: Nathan Stanley, Amber Meade Stanley, Evan Stout, Ashley Marshall, Alexis Marshall, Taylor Stanley, and Ralph Stanley III; and great grandchild Mckenzie Stanley. Memorial service details are pending and will be announced shortly.

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