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Kacey Musgraves, Willie Nelson, Kris Kristofferson, Alison Krauss & Brad Paisley record Johnny Cash album

Willie Nelson, Kacey Musgraves, Alison Krauss, Kris Kristofferson and Brad Paisley are amongst a list of top-notch country music celebrities to record songs curated from Johnny Cash’s poetry, lyrics and letters, reports Nash Country Daily. The 16-song album, Johnny Cash: Forever Words, captures the “monstrous amassment” of sources which John Carter Cash spoke of following the death of his father. Producers John Carter Cash and Steve Berkowitz invited the star-studded cast of musicians to create original music to accompany the newly discovered writings two years ago. Other artists involved include Union Station, T. Bone Burnett, Rosanne Cash, John Mellencamp, Jewel, Elvis Costello, Carlene Carter, Daily and Vincent, I’m With Her, Robert Glasper, Ro James, Anu Sun, The Jayhawks and Jamey Johnson. John Carter Cash selected the artists. The album will be released on April 6. Highlights include “Forever/I Still Miss Someone,” featuring Kris Kristofferson reciting the last poem ever written by Johnny alongside guitar played by Willie Nelson. Another is the letter Johnny wrote to his wife, captured in song by Ruston Kelly and Kacey Musgraves in “To June This Morning”.

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Country music singer Daryle Singletary dies

Country singer Daryle Singletary, who described his musical career as “a dream” has died, aged 46. Singletary actively toured throughout the United States, playing his first show of 2018 last Friday. The singer made the top 40 of the Hot Country Songs charts five times, reaching number two with “I Let Her Lie” and “Amen Kind of Love”, and number four with “Too Much Fun.” “We’ve been very fortunate to stay on the road, year in, year out,” Singlteary told the Grand Ole Opry. “I continue to work and continue to build a fan base. There are still people out there who want to hear traditional country music. I’ve been fortunate to be able to always keep it real and not have to compromise. I can’t ask for nothin’ better, I don’t guess.” “I believe all of it is still a dream. I have been very fortunate to do [country music] for a living. It is a dream in itself.” A Georgia native, Singletary died unexpectedly on Monday morning.

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courtney marie andrews

Interview: Courtney Marie Andrews – Somewhere Down The Road

With Ryan Adams calling her “a phenomenal songwriter”, Courtney Marie Andrews has quietly become one of the most talked-about talents of 2017. We meet the ex-punk who’s risen to acclaimed country troubadour. Raised in Phoenix, 27-year-old singer-songwriter troubadour Courtney Marie Andrews is currently one of the fastest rising stars of the diverse Americana scene, though she won’t be pinned down to a precise genre or even location. “I’m sort of moving around. I don’t live anywhere in particular. And because the next few years are going to be so busy, I’ve taken a liking to just renting Airbnbs. Then I don’t have to worry about paying rent when I’m not there. And all my possessions are in a storage unit.” Andrews is similarly pragmatic about her influences across the musical spectrum. She didn’t know much about fellow Arizonans like Glen Campbell and Linda Ronstadt when she was young, but says they’re now huge influences. “Growing up in Phoenix, if you were alternative then you were a punk. I loved Bikini Kill, and wanted to be a feminist punk rocker like Kathleen Hanna. I loved female-fronted bands like The Distillers, and I thought Brody Dalle was incredible. I was also into the classics, like The Clash and Ramones. But Bikini Kill was the pinnacle as far as what I wanted to do.” So what was the name of her feminist punk rock band? Andrews laughs: “Massacre In A Mini Skirt!” Spooling back a few years, Andrews grew up around creative people, with her uncle doing canvas work (as in her song Paintings From Michael), and her mother always getting into new arts and crafts, making jewellery, but also painting dolls, and miniature scenes on spoons. “I always remember as a kid we’d work on stuff together and she’d make this very fine jewellery, and what I made looked like garbage. I don’t quite have the gift! Music resonated with me more.” Rebel Girl Andrews describes herself as an unexpected child who had lots of alone time, and was raised primarily by her mother. “And what I was drawn most to was musicals. When she put those on I fell in love with singing. It’s so weird, because I had cousins that lived with us, and none of them became musicians, but I wanted to perform since I was a baby, three years old.” It’s no surprise to hear that her favourite singalong musical was Annie. “I wanted to be her, and Tomorrow was the first song I sang in front of an audience. I think it was because I was an only child, I always had this feeling of loneliness. I identified with Annie, and Matilda too, because she was strange, and I always felt like I was a little weird.” She got into songwriting because of her work ethic, plus a lightbulb moment. During one feminist punk band rehearsal, all three girls decided they must write their own material, “and the only person who came back with some songs was me!” She suddenly realised that she adored all the separate elements of being a songwriter. “I loved writing poetry and short stories, and wanted to be an author when I was a kid. Then I also loved travelling, and singing. And when I found out that all three of those became songwriting, I was very pleased that I’d found my path.” Honest Life So if it hadn’t been for Massacre In A Mini Skirt, Andrews wouldn’t have discovered her craft. “And the more I started songwriting – by the time I was 15 – the internet was coming around and I could post my stuff on these strange new dial-up forums, and people would comment on them. There was this forum called Acid Planet and someone said, I really love your folky sound.” Andrews laughs conspiratorially. “It sounds really silly, but at the time I thought, isn’t folk for old people? Isn’t it just old traditional music? Then they listed some people that I should try listening to and I was pleasantly surprised. I thought it was more poetic than punk. “Of course, there’s some people that bridge that, and can be poetic, like Patti Smith, but besides that you can find more poetry in folk and country. So once I discovered that, aged 15, I knew what I wanted to do.” Meanwhile she deliberately honed her guitar skills. “If I was performing solo I didn’t want it to be me just strumming a G chord for the whole set.” So she developed her guitar-picking to enhance her live performances, which came from hearing underground indie bands like Iron and Wine and Sun Kil Moon. “I thought it was so cool that you could make a solo guitar sound like two guitars. So I sat at home and tried to replicate that as best as I could.” She pressed on as a solo artist and didn’t play in bands for about four years, “then I fell into backup singing, really randomly, three times.” First it was for Jimmy Eat World, one of the few bands who’d made it out of Phoenix, and then for Damien Jurado, after she’d opened a tour for him. Now she has her own band: “They’re the reason I moved to Seattle. They’re very close to my heart. They’ve been my road band whenever I need one, for five years now.” A handful of albums down the line, Andrews has made her breakthrough record, the self-produced Honest Life. “They are very personal songs, because I needed to write them for myself. It’s definitely not a record that I was considering others in! That sounds very selfish, but it was an imprint of myself because I was going through a very painful breakup while I was on tour. And songs are what I turn to.” Even the artwork is an uncompromising close-up. “What’s so funny about the cover photo is that I didn’t have any budget, so I just had my friend take pictures of me

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Carrie Underwood Suffer fall Outside home

Carrie Underwood shares family workout pics

Carrie Underwood shared with the world images of she and her family undertaking a workout session over the weekend. Led by celebrity trainer Erin Oprea, the country music singer was joined by husband, Mike Fisher, and their two-year-old son Isaiah for squats and pushups. “My boys make workouts fun (and a bit less productive, but that’s ok),” commented the 34-year-old on Instagram, tagging her trainer as well as her own line of fitness apparel, Calia by Carrie Underwood.   The “Blown Away” singer has been mostly out of the limelight since suffering a fall back in December which resulted in the star suffering a broken wrist and enduring multiple stitches to her face. In January Underwood wrote, “Last check up on the old wrist this morning!!” captioning a photo of her X-ray. “Thanks, Dr. Wurth and my PT angel, Renee, a.k.a. ‘Bulldog’ for fixing me up!!! I’m good to go!”   Husband Fisher recently announced he would be coming out of retirement to play hockey for the Nashville Predators. “Carrie asked me every day what I was going to do, and she was excited for me to come back,” said the sportsman during a press conference. “I had the blessing of the family, so felt good about that.”

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Jason Aldean releases three emotionally charged music videos

Two-time and reigning ACM “Entertainer Of The Year” Jason Aldean creates an unconventional three-part music video for his new single “You Make It Easy,” off his forthcoming eighth studio album REARVIEW TOWN, out April 13th. Directed by longtime collaborator Shaun Silva and filmed outside of Nashville, the suspenseful storyline unravels over the track’s raw lyrics… With each cliff-hanging ending, the music videos follow a couple’s deep-rooted love in the face of unpredictable circumstances. Fans can watch the series now on YouTube. “The first time I heard this song, I was riding around in my truck,” said Aldean. “I immediately needed to cut it and always felt like it could be the first single. I told Shaun that I wanted the videos to capture the love story that this song tells, and I think one of the things he’s really good at is taking our ideas and running with them in a cool way.” Before its unique release, Aldean hosted a few dozen fans at The YouTube Space New York for an intimate screening of the “You Make It Easy” three-part music video. Additionally, fans enjoyed a stripped down performance of the track before a Q&A with Aldean and Silva on the making of the series. The new single from Jason Aldean yearns with the well-worn sounds of hometown heroes Otis Redding and the Allman Brothers Band, as it kicks off REARVIEW TOWN’s fiercely confident songs that catapult between traditional country grooves, stadium-sized rock riffs and rap-style boom-thwacks. Certain to add fire to a career that’s already witnessed 19 chart-topping hits, Aldean is returning to his roots for his new single and album, as REARVIEW TOWN is full of vignettes of life laid over electrifying rock n’ roll and country sounds. Aldean will launch his HIGH NOON NEON TOUR tour on May 10 2018.

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#MeToo: Sexual abuse leads Vince Gill to speak out for victims

A personal song about victims of sexual abuse was shared by Vince Gill at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville during this week’s Country Radio Seminar.   The country music star and 21-time Grammy Award winner was sexually abused while he was in 7th grade, but has not spoken about the incident until now. “I had a gym teacher that acted inappropriately towards me and was trying to do things that I didn’t know what the hell was going on. I was just fortunate that I got up and I ran. I just jumped up and I ran,”  Gill told the audience. “I don’t know why. I don’t think I ever told anybody my whole life. What’s been going on has given me a little bit of courage to speak up too.”   Gill showed further solidarity with other sexual abuse victims when he joined the #MeToo movement on.   ‘Forever Changed’ speaks about sexual assault with the lyrics, ““You put your hands where they don’t belong / And now her innocence is dead and gone/She feels dirty, she feels ashamed / Because of you she’s forever changed.”   Addressing the Ryman Auditorium, Gill said, “We’re living in a time right now when finally people are having the courage to speak out about being abused.”   On Tuesday, Gill played an acoustic version of the song.

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'We got fired!': Dierks Bentley and Luke Bryan not hosting ACM awards

An interview earlier this week with Dierks Bentley revealed that both Bentley and Luke Bryan were given the boot from the Academy of Country Music Awards. Speaking to Country Radio Seminar in Nashville, Bentley said, “That’s over… We got fired. Is that not common knowledge?”  The comment was made offhandedly while images from Bentley and Bryan’s time hosting the event flashed up on-screen. Bentley replaced Bryan’s former co-host, Blake Shelton, whom Bryan had hosted the show with since 2013. The ACM has since confirmed that Bryan and Bentley will not be returning to the award show, while Bentley’s manager has also confirmed the news. This year’s ACMs will be hosted at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas on April 15.  Information on who is hosting will not be revealed for another 2-3 weeks. 

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Christina Martin Album

Christina Martin announces her new album "Impossible to hold"

Multi award-winning musician Christina Martin has a talent for synthesizing Americana and Pop/Rock sounds into sleek and engaging music with standout messages. On Impossible To Hold, her sixth studio album, Christina continues her significant evolution as one of Canada’s top exporting artists, with a matchless quality that has further developed lyrically, emotionally and sonically since her 2016 award winning album It’ll Be Alright. Christina explains “There was little concern for following any style or trend in writing and recording these new songs.  My commitment was to honour the direction the songs were leading me in. There were dark moments in the process, but I showed up each day to work, and hoped it would all come together.”   A free-flowing sonic exploration is immediately evident. The albums opening title track, ‘Impossible To Hold’, boasts big vocals and gorgeous Duesenberg guitar riffs, courtesy of producer Dale Murray, that are quickly swapped by the refreshing classic-pop collaboration  ‘Always Reminding’ – one of the album’s standout moments. Christina’s storytelling ability continues to shine over these 10-songs, with formerly released single, ‘Lungs Are Burning’, written as a response to the rising Fentanyl drug crisis in Canada and her own personal loss related to addiction and mental illness, and ‘Where The Dark Meets The Light’ drawing inspiration from “the challenges and triumphs of dedicating your life to the artistic journey.” Other highlights include the album’s soulful yet delicate ‘Winter’, an impassioned ‘Deep Dark Red’, and the roaring Rock-infused ‘Foreign’.   Impossible To Hold feels ready-made for arena stage, but equally fitting in the dimly-lit atmospheric listening venues Christina regularly plays. She says “I was inspired to become a performer by watching iconic performers like Tom Petty, Stevie Nicks and Tina Turner live, and music videos of The Pretenders, David Bowie, Annie Lennox. When I write, I can envision the music in larger venues, though I know that performing smaller venues is an important part of my journey and connecting with audiences.” Combining superb taste, passionate singing and thoughtful lyrics, “Impossible To Hold” is where music and poetry meet.   Christina began writing and recording her own music while slogging it out on the Austin, Texas bar scene. Her work has been compared to the likes of Annie Lennox, Chrissie Hynde, Stevie Nicks, Tom Petty and Bruce Springsteen. She has been relentlessly recording and touring in Canada, the UK and Europe, building connections online and in the old-fashioned way, at venues big and small, singing songs about loss, love and perseverance. Her songs have been featured in films, on television, and she’s performed at some of the world’s top music festivals such as; Rolling Stone Weekender Festival, Belfast Nashville Songwriters Festival, International Folk Alliance, Reeperbahn Festival and Canadian Music Week.   Impossible To Hold will be released on March 23 via Come Under Records.   For more information, head to www.christinamartin.net. Listen on Spotify: http://bit.ly/XtinaMartinSpotify

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Americana Awards

UK Americana Awards closes on a high

The third annual UK Americana Awards took place at London’s Hackney Empire on Thursday 1st February, rounding off two days of activities at this year’s AmericanaFest UK, including an evening of artist showcases in venues around Hackney on Wednesday 31st January and daytime conferences.   In a glorious night celebrating the thriving UK and international Americana music scene, an audience of guests, AMA-UK delegates, members of the music industry and the public were treated to performances from Lifetime Achievement Award recipient Robert Plant and the Sensational Space Shifters, a stripped-down, unamplified performance from the front of the stage by Mumford & Sons, winners of The Trailblazer Award, plus a unique, surprise collaboration between Robert Plant and the Sensational Space Shifters and Mumford & Sons.   Also taking to the stage were International Artist of the Year 2018 Courtney Marie-Andrews and fellow nominees Imelda May and Angaleena Presley and UK Artist of the Year 2018 Emily Barker as well as UK Album of the Year winner Robert Vincent, Bob Harris Emerging Artist Award recipients The Wandering Hearts and Award nominees Aaron Lee Tasjan and Worry Dolls.   The evening was capped by an all artist finale of “Wild Flowers” in tribute to Tom Petty.   To mark the second anniversary of the launch of the Official Americana Albums Chart, Martin Talbot, CEO of the Official Charts Company was joined by Wolverhampton Wanderers and England footballing legend Steve Bull to present Robert Plant with the award for Best Selling UK Americana Album of 2017 for his album Carry Fire.   Host Bob Harris OBE presented Robert Plant with the AMA-UK’s Lifetime Achievement Award in recognition of his outstanding contribution to the genre and introduced a congratulatory video message from Rich Hall. Billy Bragg and Executive Director of the US Americana Music Association Jed Hilly presented the Trailblazer Award to Mumford & Sons. Danny George Wilson and BBC Radio Ulster’s Ralph McLean presented Come Down & Meet The Folks with the new Grassroots Award and London’s The Wandering Hearts received the prestigious Bob Harris Emerging Artist Award.   The star-studded event saw seven AMA-UK membership-voted Awards presented by Sir Patrick Stewart and Sunny Ozell, Simon Mayo, Frank Turner, Mary Gauthier, Chris Difford, Sam Baker and Stevie Freeman and Jesse Buckley.   Winners of the seven membership-voted Awards were as follows: UK Album of The Year presented by Simon Mayo I’ll Make The Most Of My Sins by Robert Vincent (produced by Robert Vincent, Michael Gay and Etienne Girard) International Album of the Year presented by Sir Patrick Stewart & Sunny Ozell The Nashville Sound by Jason Isbell & The 400 Unit (produced by Dave Cobb) UK Artist of the Year presented by Frank Turner Emily Barker International Artist of the Year presented by Mary Gauthier Courtney Marie Andrews UK Song of the Year presented by Chris Difford Home by Yola Carter (written by Yola Carter) International Song of the Year presented by Sam Baker & Stevie Freeman Tenderheart by Sam Outlaw (written by Sam Outlaw) UK Instrumentalist of the Year presented by Jesse Buckley Thomas Collison Recipients of Awards from the AMA-UK Board:   Lifetime Achievement Award presented by Bob Harris Selected by the board members, their highest honour is awarded to a UK artist, duo or group in recognition of their outstanding contribution to the Americana genre over the span of their career and life in music.   Recipient 2018: Robert Plant The Trailblazer Award presented by Billy Bragg & Jed Hilly Selected by the AMA-UK board and celebrating a UK artist, duo or group that has taken an exceptional path, inspiring others to follow in their footsteps in developing the Americana genre.   Recipient 2018 – Mumford & Sons   Bob Harris Emerging Artist Award Selected by Bob Harris OBE, this special award celebrates the breakthrough artist, duo or group that has particularly impressed the legendary music broadcaster throughout the year.   Recipient 2018: The Wandering Hearts   The Grassroots Award presented by Danny George Wilson & Ralph McLean A newly-established award selected by the board members, this special award celebrates the sometimes un-sung heroes of the UK Americana scene. It is presented to people working in the industry (in a capacity other than as artists) who have made outstanding efforts to support Americana music from the grassroots up.   Recipient 2018 – Come Down & Meet The Folks   The Best-Selling Americana Album of 2017 presented by Martin Talbot and Steve Bull The AMA-UK works with the Official Charts Company to create the UK Americana Chart. This Award is given to the best-selling Americana Album of the year, by a UK Artist.   Recipient 2018 – Robert Plant for Carry Fire  

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Marty Stuart speaks out about plans for Congress of Country Music in Mississippi

Marty Stuart has announced plans to construct an entire complex dedicated to country music.   At a news conference held on Wednesday, the country music star formally announced the coming of the Congress of Country Music, consisting of a convert venue, museum and educational centre.   The site will incorporate the historic Ellis Theatre and will house more than 20,000 country music artifacts from Stuart’s own personal collection.   The Marty Stuart Center will also reside within the complex.   The complex has been under discussion for years but finally seems to be entering into fruition.

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