April 2017

Sheryl Crow to play O2 Shepherd's Bush Empire on May 19th

As the April 21st release of her new album ‘Be Myself’ approaches, Sheryl Crow has announced details of her first UK show in almost three years when she plays London’s O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire on May 19th. For ‘Be Myself’, Crow worked once again with producer, musician, and songwriter Jeff Trott, a long-time collaborator throughout her career. Trott co-wrote many of Crow’sclassic hits including ‘If It Makes You Happy’ and ‘My Favorite Mistake’. ‘Be Myself’ reflects Crow’s commitment to looking at life without illusion and responding to what she finds with honesty and artistry. Over a raw, pared-down instrumental bed she sings with the conviction her fans have long celebrated, addressing the virtues of solitude in the wake of a broken relationship (‘Alone in the Dark’), humorously recounting her sense of disorientation in the social media maze (‘Be Myself’) and playfully extolling an occasional escape from its entanglement (‘Roller Skate’), and mourning the fissures that divide us from others (’Halfway There’). An American music icon, Crow has released eight studio albums, which have sold 35 million copies worldwide. In the UK, four of her studio albums and ‘The Very Best Of’ all reached the Top 10, and her success was further reflected with four Top 10 hits and a further twelve which entered the Top 40. In the States, seven of the albums charted in the Top 10 and five were certified for multi-platinum sales. In addition to such #1 hits as ‘All I Wanna Do’, ‘Soak Up the Sun’, and ‘The First Cut Is the Deepest’, Crow has notched 40 singles on the Billboard Hot 100, Adult Top 40, Adult Contemporary, Mainstream Top 40 and Hot Country Songscharts, with more #1 singles in the Triple A listings than any other female artist.

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Harry Pane releases new EP 'The Wild Winds' – out today

After selling out London’s The Bedford last week, singer/songwriter Harry Pane has released his brand new EP The Wild Winds today, which was funded by Island Records following his victory at Meet & Jam and PRS for Music’s “Road To The 100 Club” competition last year. Recorded with Dani Castelar (Paolo Nutini, REM, Snow Patrol) in Valencia, the EP is compiled of five original tracks that take the listener through an emotional journey of grief and finally acceptance. They comprise a love story with a difference and showcase Harry’s remarkable and diverse song-writing capabilities, infusing a mix of musical styles. It opens with the acoustic lead single ‘Fletcher Bay’ which following its release was added to numerous playlists on Spotify and has been championed at radio by BBC Introducing London, Northampton and Oxford, and showing how Harry’s appeal crosses musical boundaries. ‘Old Friend’ and ‘Into The Dark’ add an indie rock edge to the EP incorporating drums and electric guitar with Harry’s distinctive vocals, while ‘Real Souls’ leads with a toe-tapping folk style rhythm. The charming, atmospheric tones of the title-track ‘The Wild Winds’ closes what is a compelling, honest and beautifully crafted record from start to finish. Harry is also making his mark on the live scene, gigging relentlessly throughout 2016. Already this year he has played a string of shows across the country including his first UK headline tour which saw him sell out the London show at The Bedford last week. Harry has been chosen as BBC Introducing London’s featured artist tomorrow and will be playing BBC Oxford’s Uprising Showcase at the 02 Academy Oxford on May 19th. He has also announced a show at the Notting Hill Arts Club, London on May 7th alongside Martha Gunn as part of their Communion Music Club Night.

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David Childers reteams with producer Don Dixon for RUN SKELETON RUN, out May 5th

Singer-songwriter David Childers is the proverbial study in contradictions. A resident of Mount Holly, North Carolina, he’s a former high-school football player with the aw-shucks demeanor of a good ol’ Southern boy. But he’s also a well-read poet and painter who cites Chaucer and Kerouac as influences, fell in love with folk as a teen, listens to jazz and opera, and fed his family by practicing law before turning in his license to concentrate on his creative passions.  The legal profession’s loss is certainly the music world’s gain. Childers’ new album, Run Skeleton Run, releasing May 5, 2017 on Ramseur Records, is filled with the kinds of songs that have made him a favorite of fans and fellow artists including neighbors the Avett Brothers. Scott Avett contributes to four tracks, and Avetts bassist Bob Crawford co-executive-produced the effort with label head Dolph Ramseur. (Crawford and Childers, both history buffs, have recorded and performed together in the Overmountain Men).  In fact, it was Crawford who kickstarted this album, Childers’ sixth solo effort, by suggesting he reunite with Don Dixon (R.E.M., the Smithereens), who’d produced Crawford’s favorite Childers album, (done with his band the Modern Don Juans). Crawford also suggested tracking at Mitch Easter’s Fidelitorium Recordings.  “I’ve made records in my living room and been perfectly happy with it. But I think ol’ Bob wanted to give it one more shot,” Childers says. “It’s kind of like the Wild Bunch at the end of the movie, on their last train robbery.” Not that he’s suggesting this is his “last train robbery.” Not with songs as rich as these. Sounding like literature and playing like little movies — several are under three minutes long — they’re populated by sailors, hermits, lovers and killers, facing off against fate, skeletons, good, evil, or simply the trials of everyday existence. Lust, virtue, guilt, innocence; alienation, desperation, sorrow, gratitude … he examines these conditions with such precision — combined with music that draws on folk, rock, rockabilly, country and Cajun influences — he doesn’t need lengthy exposition.  “You look at a song like ‘Pancho and Lefty’; it tells a story in four stanzas,” Childers notes. “An amazing story. That’s the way I approach songwriting. You don’t have to say so damned much. ‘The train went down, oh lord oh lord.’ That line is from “Belmont Ford,” a mandolin-laden disaster song about the Great Flood of 1916. It’s based on a poem by Mary Struble Deery, a Chicago friend. The twang- and bluegrass-infused “Collar and Bell” (featuring drums/percussion by his son, Robert, and fiddle by Geoffrey White) had a similar origin; its lyrics are derived from ones written by Shannon Mayes, an Ohio school principal. Another Ohioan, Mark Freeman, shares credit for “Hermit,” a mid-tempo rocker of sorts with Dixon singing harmony, that Freeman started and Childers finished.  “I’m always looking for ideas,” he says. “I’ve never been able to get any serious writers to co-write with me. Here are these folks, just regular people, and they got something to say, and they’re sending me stuff, and I’m going ‘Well, if they’re gonna send it to me, I’m gonna try and do something with it.’” Childers has always regarded his place in the musical pantheon as that of an outsider, though not deservedly so. As those involved with this album indicate, he’s well-regarded among tastemakers. Evidence includes playing the syndicated World Café and Mountain Stage radio shows (he’s done the latter twice), as well as Merlefest’s mainstage. He’s also toured in Europe, and hopes to again. But he credits the support of Crawford and Ramseur with helping him sustain his musical career — which began in college, though he didn’t start recording until the ’90s. Childers’ father had given him a banjo when he was 14, but he still had his “jock mentality” back then and didn’t do much with it. That changed when he picked up a guitar at 18. “My girlfriend had left me for one of my best friends and I was all shook up and needed an outlet besides drinking and fighting. As soon as I learned my first chords on a guitar, I knew I had a friend who would never betray me,” he recalls. He formed his first band, the acoustic trio Steeltree, in 1973, and released his first album, Godzilla! He Done Broke Out!, as David Childers & the Mount Holly Hellcats, in 1995. His first solo album, Time Machine, came in 1998. He spent several years playing rock, folk and honky-tonk with the David Childers Band, then the Modern Don Juans, whose fans included the Avett boys. He calls his current band the Serpents, but says he’s given up trying to label each incarnation.  His last album, 2014’s Serpents of Reformation, delved into religion; this time, several songs address aging and the perspective of a man in review mode — a perspective he sums up on the final track, “Goodbye to Growing Old,” written with Theresa Halfacre. It approaches the subject with a mix of acceptance and defiance. “I used to be afraid of growing old, but now I wouldn’t trade where I am for all the lean fury of my youth,” Childers insists, saying he’s happier now than he’s ever been. Especially now that he can concentrate on making music and painting; he and Robert did the album cover, a fine example of his primitive/outsider style.

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Carter Sampson Releases 'Queen Of Oklahoma' Compilation CD Ahead Of April/May Dates

Oklahoma’s Carter Sampson returns to the UK in April and May for a short run of dates that include two shows at the much-loved Kilkenny Roots Festival. She will be releasing ‘Queen Of Oklahoma’ a fourteen track compilation drawing on tracks taken from her previous three albums. The album is released on 21st April. Sampson’s latest album ‘Wilder Side’ has been picking up wonderful reviews in the press and picking up plays on National radio. Bob Harris at Radio 2 described the album as ‘impeccable’,  while she has picked up plays on BBC Ulster, BBC London, BBC Scotland, Resonance FM and all the major roots shows. She will be touring alongside BJ Baartmans. APRIL 29th – Kilkenny Roots Festival 30th – Kilkenny Roots Festival MAY May 1st – Voodoo Rooms, Edinburgh May 3rd – The Admiral, Glasgow May 5th – The Hut, Corby May 6th – Little Rabbit Barn, Chelmsford (House Concert) May 10th – The Musician, Leicester May 11th – Union @The Con Club, Lewes May 12th – The Forge, Anvil Arts Centre, Basingstoke May 13th – Hoodoos, Croydon

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