October 2017

Shania Twain Announces 2018 UK & Ireland Tour!

Six arena dates – tickets on sale – new album ‘NOW’ out now! Five-time GRAMMY Award-winner and the reigning Queen of Country Pop, multiplatinum and multi-award winning Shania Twain announces SIX unmissable UK & Ireland arena dates for autumn 2018 – the first time Shania has toured here in 13 years! Shania will be playing all her best loved hits, including “Any Man of Mine,” “That Don’t Impress Me Much,” “You’re Still the One,” and “Man! I Feel Like A Woman!”, as well as new songs from forthcoming album ‘NOW’. Shania is a five-time GRAMMY Award-winner and the reigning Queen of Country Pop. With 90 million albums sold worldwide, Shania remains the top-selling female country artist of all time. Shania’s albums include her Platinum-selling 1993 debut, Shania Twain; the GRAMMY Award-winning, Double Diamond-selling 1995 release, The Woman in Me; Come On Over, the best-selling studio album in Soundscan history by a female artist in any genre and the best-selling country album of all time with over 40 million units sold worldwide; and UP!, Shania’s third consecutive Diamond-selling album release. Shania plays the following shows: September 2018 Fri 21st Glasgow The SSE Hydro Sat 22nd Manchester Arena Mon 24th Birmingham Arena Weds 26th Dublin 3Arena Sat 29th Belfast The SSE Arena October 2018 Tues 2nd London The O2 For tickets, head to https://www.livenation.co.uk/artist/shania-twain-tickets

Shania Twain Announces 2018 UK & Ireland Tour! Read More »

Photo: Taken by Micaela Barberis

Meet…The Orange Circus Band

Gold ‘n’ Rum: The Orange Circus Band As The Orange Circus Band builds its reputation on the continent, Maverick caught up with lead vocalist Flash Hearth to talk about new video Gold ‘n’ Rum and the UK bluegrass scene that is rapidly gathering pace… What was it like filming your new video, Gold ‘n’ Rum? It was pretty chaotic ‘cos we filmed it in parts over about three weeks across northern Italy. Jessie, the Welsh singer in the band, was already there and we came along to do some gigs there, too. You can pick up quite a lot of support spots like that and meet new people. Usually when we get one gig we build off of that. Who is the person that you have known longest out of your band members? My uncle, actually, who was originally in the band and also my grandmother, Granny Alice. She sadly passed away last year at 92, but she was very much a part of the band and would come to gigs with us. From Virginia, she had lived through the Great Depression and had a few stories to tell. She was very rock’n’roll. It wasn’t exactly planned but it all fitted together and it was part of the whole thing – blue grass music is a kind of community based thing. So there has always been a family feel to the band… Definitely. The bass player, Dusty, I have known since I was 10 years old and is practically family – and the fiddle player, we’ve been playing together for five years. Your friends become your family, too.   Tell me more about your roots in Virginia… I would go out there and hear a lot of the music, then about seven years ago I was out there for a long period of time and was really immersing myself in the blue grass music. I joined a few bands out there. I joined a blues band, with a guy called Hunter Wolf doing pretty well now in America. I learnt as much as I could and as many songs as I could. I went to some all-night blue grass parties and it is very infectious. I spent evenings out playing music. It is wonderful. They have a really good community vibe for the whole blue grass scene and you can pick up a lot of tunes…I just love that whole kind of vibe. When I came back to England I just really wanted to keep it going over here. There’s not so much of it in England. I think England has a kind of Country-type scene but it is mainly underground, whereas obviously in America it is much more prevalent. So where do you hope yourself and the band will be a couple of years from now? One of the big reasons I started the band was to travel. I love the thought, the feeling of travelling –  not necessarily travelling on tour so much, but offering something to people…more adventure… I was watching your video, Carmen Town, and I really liked it. I thought it was very funny. Whose idea was it? That was mine. I always thought it would be fun to have loads of paint chucked at you and then I thought, well, you know, the best thing to do is make a video out of it! Which song is your favourite when it comes to performing at gigs? That’s another good question. I like them all. It’s either got to be The Saturday song or Gold ‘n’ Rum. I mean those are really fun songs. I think I have the simpler job in a way because I am mainly playing rhythm chords and singing. I think maybe Jessie might have the most complicated job because she plays a kick drum and the banjo and some of the banjo picking that she does is pretty complicated – and also singing. So at the moment you’re busy building a reputation for the band… Have you faced any obstacles recently? I guess the challenge is that we are still quite a quirky band so maybe people don’t quite get us. We like to be really fun. I think a lot of bands are quite serious so maybe that surprises people – we’re used to the hustle of it. We’ve been hustling since day one. We started out busking and getting our own gigs and gorilla gigs, doing loads of gorilla gigs at parties. People would have us round, we’d come in with a small sound system and do pretty raucous grass roots and pretty fast paced sets, which is pretty chaotic. We’ve kept that going. I think we do all the hard work so that we can play. That is the pay off. theorangecircus.com Header photo credit: Micaela Barberis

Meet…The Orange Circus Band Read More »

Canadian roots/swing duo Over The Moon live and breathe real cowboy country.

Living on a ranch in the foothills of Alberta’s Rocky Mountains, it’s inevitable there will be a strong sense of place – and the rhythms of the land – when you start to make music. When the couple released their debut album “Moondancer”, the resonances were there for all to hear, reflecting the pulse of life in a territory that is both dirt-hard rugged and stunningly beautiful. It’s a wild ride that takes in styles from 40’s western swing and Appalachian old-time, to cowboy blues. Simple and sweet, all of the material has a common thread that speaks of the Canadian west and on its UK release, reviews were glowing, AmericanRootsUK saying it was “exceptional,” and Country Music People adding “there’s so much to enjoy here.” The Editor of Maverick magazine told readers: “You will love this!” Suzanne Levesque and Craig Bignell met in very romantic circumstances. He had been the in-demand drummer and percussionist hired for studio work when her then band were recording their latest CD. Something clicked between them and they have been together ever since. A few days after meeting, the singer/actor Tom Jackson was entertaining a close circle of friends at a dinner party in his Calgary home, with many better-known names from Alberta’s music community present. Late that night, they formed a classic in-the-round circle and took it in turns to play songs for the company. Unused to be playing guitar in public although comfortable doing so when no one else was listening, Craig accepted the challenge while feeling slightly apprehensive. Suzanne picked up on his nervousness and from the shadows, appeared double bass in hand like a Cavalry charge to support him. He later confessed that the confidence boost had delivered such a rush of warmth that he thought his heart was going to burst. That was how it all got started, they’ve been singing together so naturally ever since, and now they are married.

Canadian roots/swing duo Over The Moon live and breathe real cowboy country. Read More »

50 killed and scores wounded in Route 91 festival shooting

At least 50 people have been killed and hundreds more injured after a shooting on the popular Las Vegas strip.  The incident took place outside the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino during the popular Route 91 country festival, where thousands of country music lovers had flocked to see popular musicians such as Brothers Osborne, Big & Rich, Kane Brown and Brett Young during the three day long event. Cole Watson told Al Jazeera news: “At first it sounded like someone was setting off a whole lot of fire crackers…everybody started running…The scene was insane – it was absolute chaos.” The gunman – an inhabitant of Nevada – is said to have opened fire on the celebrating music lovers from the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay hotel, prompting crowds to duck for cover and run for shelter before security arrived promptly. Two on-duty police officers were also shot, with one still in a critical condition. Watchdog group Gun Violence Archive has documented 273 mass shootings in the US so far this year, including 11,621 gun-related deaths and 23,433 firearm-related injuries during that period. The shooter has been reported dead after a shootout with police in a hotel room, though the possibility of an accomplice is still being explored. A statement from Las Vegas police confirms that a precise number of victims can not yet be concluded.

50 killed and scores wounded in Route 91 festival shooting Read More »

Scroll to Top