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Susan Cattaneo

photo by Jon Cohan

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With her powerful voice, captivating melodies, and finely-crafted lyrics, Susan Cattaneo is one of Boston’s most respected singer/songwriters. A compelling performer and vivid storyteller, Susan’s music blends folk, rock, and blues with a hint of country. Call it New England Americana.

Following up on the success of her chart-topping double album, The Hammer & The Heart, Susan Cattaneo is releasing All is Quiet in April of 2022. Susan is known for her lyric and melodic craft, and for this project, she brought her mastery to a quieter place. Embracing simplicity and vulnerability, the nine songs on All is Quiet speak to the personal nature of loss, relationships, and hope for the future. All is Quiet was recorded remotely during 2020 and features the beautiful guitar work of national talents, Kevin Barry and Duke Levine, and was co-produced with Lorne Entress.

Critics, audiences, and fellow artists have instantly connected with the personal nature of Susan’s songs. Susan is a three-time Kerrville New Folk Finalist (2020, 2018, 2015) and a three-time nominee for Best Americana Artist at the Boston Music Awards (2020, 2019, 2018). Susan won the 2018 CT folk Festival and has been a finalist or winner at some of the country’s most prestigious songwriting and music contests including the Falcon Ridge Folk Festival, Philadelphia Songwriters Project, the Wildflower Festival, the Independent Music Awards, the International Acoustic Music Awards, 5 Unsigned Only, the USA Songwriting Competition, the Mountain Stage New Song Contest and the Mid-Atlantic Song Contest.

Her last album The Hammer and The Heart charted #1 on the Billboard Heatseekers chart and yielded a #1 song on folk radio and a top 10 album of 2017. Susan is also an in-demand educator and collaborator. As a Songwriting Professor at the Berklee College of Music for the past 20 years, Susan has helped students work on over 15,000 songs in all musical genres and styles and mentored over 2,000 artists.

She has opened for or shared the stage with Bill Kirchen, Mark Erelli, Ellis Paul, Jon Cleary, David Wilcox, Mark Erelli, Rose Cousins, The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Livingston Taylor, Melissa Ferrick, Paula Cole, Huey Lewis and The News, Amy Grant, Travis Tritt, and The Pousette-Dart Band

In the New England area, Susan has won over audiences at venues such as Club Passim, the Shalin Liu Center, the Me & Thee Coffeehouse, The Iron Horse Music Hall, Tupelo Music Hall, the Calvin Theater, the South Shore Music Circus, and the River Club Music Hall.

She is also one half of the indie-folk duo called Honest Mechanik with Paul Hansen of The Grownup Noise. The duo launched their first album in July of 2020 and was nominated for Folk Act of The Year at the 2021 Boston Music Awards.

Hamish Anderson

photo credit Emma Gillett

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Named one of Total Guitar's: Top 10 Best New Guitarists in 2018 two years after being named one of Yahoo! Music’s “Top Ten Best New Artist,” Australia’s roots-rock artist, Hamish Anderson follows his uplifting 2021 release Morning Light, with Everything Starts Again, available February 4, 2022.  

Hamish Anderson debuted in 2016 with the full-length album Trouble -- produced by Grammy-winner Jim Scott (the title track, Trouble, still appears on Spotify’s Official Blues & Roots Rock Playlist from April 2016). He supported the album with 11 performances at SXSW (2017); opened for BB King, Vintage Trouble, Drive-By Truckers, Jared & The Mill, Low Cut Connie; and toured the US while appearing at US festivals such as BottleRock, Firefly, Echo Park Rising, Mountain Jam, High Sierra, Big Blues Bender, Summerfest, Telluride Blues & Brews Festival and Canada’s RBC Bluesfest Ottawa. He was a Taco Bell “Feed the Beat” artist and was featured on KCRW’s Morning Becomes Eclectic with his single, “U”, which was profiled also on NPR Music’s Heavy Rotation along with the entire album, Trouble

In January 2018, NPR profiled Hamish’s album -- a year after it was released --on “Here & Now”/DJ Sessions via Anne Litt from KCRW. That summer, he released "No Good” the first single from his sophomore album Out of My Head (which still appears on Nu-Blue Spotify Official Playlist), did a 3-week festival tour in Europe, performed at BottleRock Napa, and toured the East Coast. He ended 2018 by opening for Doyle Bramhall II at a sold-out show in LA. His single, “Breaking Down”, was released in November 2018 on All Things Go where they stated: "the young artist clearly knows the path from nostalgia to the future.” 

While “Breaking Down” and “No Good” are superb examples of rollicking rock, they are just one of many genres that Hamish dips his toes into on Out Of My Head. Americana, soul, pop, roots, blues, rock; that’s a lot of ground to cover, but Hamish does it with a natural ease that’s far beyond his years. The mellow (“What You Do To Me,” “Damaged Goods”) and the upbeat (“No Good,” “You Give Me Something”) tracks on this record sit comfortably next to each other; all buoyed by a knack for clever, hook-driven songwriting and a clear, burning passion that drives the music from the first strum to the last. 

He opened for Gary Clark Jr. in April 2019 in his home country of Australia and then returned to the US to appear at Beale Street Music Festival in Memphis, TN in May and release his new album. He rounded out 2019 with appearances at Mont Tremblant Music Fest in Quebec, Canada, and a headline tour of Europe. 

Hamish returned to Australia in early 2020 to open for George Thorogood & The Destroyers on his sold out tour. Then, while the world pivoted from March on, he stayed busy supporting Out of My Head as it was awarded the Independent Music Award for Best Album - Blues with its fifth radio single, “The Fall” at AAA Non Comm (#60) and Americana (#41). He and his album were also featured in Guitar Player Magazine in the August 2020 Issue which resulted in a cover mention for Hamish.  

In 2021, during lockdown in Australia, he returned with a new single, Morning Light -- a first for Hamish in many ways including his first time co-producing (with David Davis, Miguel, Lauren Ruth Ward), first time recording remotely and first time releasing a revealing and upbeat song style in a pandemic! 

He looks to start 2022 off right with “Everything Starts Again” available February 4th, 2022. 

Heather Bond

Photo Credit: Meg Sagi

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Nashville artist Heather Bond makes radiant, cinematic indie-pop laced with elements of disco and R&B. Her lyrics reflect on everything from love, seduction, and heartbreak to social media, nostalgia, and politics, with an easy, modern intelligence enhanced by crystal-clear vocals and crisp harmonies. Her sound is both elegant and eclectic, evoking the breezy clarity of piano-pop artists like Norah Jones and Regina Spektor mixed with the jazzy, experimental range of Fiona Apple. 

Now poised to release her sophomore solo album, The Mess We Created, Bond presents a diverse and distinctively groovy new collection, written in close collaboration with renowned bassist and producer Viktor Krauss (Lyle Lovett, Bill Frisell, James Taylor, Robert Plant, Alison Krauss). “We didn’t have a plan for our sound; we just wanted to create interesting music,” says Bond. The duo’s first collaborative single “The Mirage” (track 2 on The Mess We Created) became one of the year’s top 100 most played songs on Nashville’s Lightning 100 radio, inspiring Bond and Krauss to continue working together on what would ultimately become the full-length album.

Collaborating expanded Bond’s creative process: An experienced songwriter and pianist, she began writing dynamic melodies to unique bass lines crafted by Krauss, and together the pair took advantage of Krauss’s extensive collection of vintage musical equipment. The resulting sound is enjoyably tricky and difficult to categorize: completely modern while hinting at an earlier musical era. No software synths or reproduced samples were used. “Heather has a classic voice,” says Krauss. “As a producer, I felt it was important to make music that could be appreciated for decades—not just for right now."

Born in Texas and raised in Louisville, KY, Bond spent the summer after college waitressing, saving money, recording demos, and preparing to move to Nashville. “There was never a plan B! A career in music was always my future,” she says. She earned a name for herself performing live, often sold-out shows at local venues, including Nashville’s iconic Bluebird Cafe. Soon after, she signed with Modern Works Music Publishing and Whizbang Music Licensing, which led to a list of international television placements, including Jane the Virgin, Charmed, and Sesame Street, as well as numerous high-profile cuts, including “This Time” featuring Joss Stone. Bond quickly became a sought-after songwriter, cowriting with artists and producers in Nashville, Los Angeles., and New York. She also appeared on television, playing piano on several episodes of ABC’s hit series Nashville. In addition to her solo work, Bond is a singer, songwriter, and keytar player for retro electropop “supergroup” The Daybreaks with whom she continues to release new music.

Bond released her debut solo album So Long in 2015, produced by GRAMMY-nominated artist Matthew Odmark (Jars of Clay), and in 2019 was selected by GRAMMY-winning producer Larry Klein (Joni MitchellHerbie HancockShawn ColvinMadeleine Peyroux, Tracy Chapman) as the only American woman artist included in Beyond Music Volume One: Same Sky. The 13-track, cross-cultural compilation featured artists from all over the world and received critical acclaim, including a nod to Bond in Forbes: “Bond, a composer of heartfelt ballads and singer-songwriter tunes one could easily imagine at home on the radio, really establishes herself as the Sara Bareilles of the group.” 

Bond’s second solo album The Mess We Created is a refreshing, well-crafted, and unique collection featuring first-rate musicians. The songs reveal a maturity gained from years of experience in the music industry. With Krauss as the primarily instrumentalist, along with L.A. drummer Matt Chamberlain (Lorde, Tori Amos) and Jano Rix of The Wood Brothers, the album is vibrant, idiosyncratic, and rooted in rhythm. Each song showcases Bond’s effortlessly agile vocal delivery, shifting from the smooth purity of Sade (in “Resist”) to the cheeky sweetness of Kylie Minogue (in “Ich Weiss Nicht”) to the delicate depth of Parisian singer Keren Ann (in “Fountain of Youth” and “Fate”). The album closes in an energetic punch with the spritely, beat-driven single “Feel It.” Bond is eager to perform these new songs and connect with audiences across the world again soon. The Mess We Created is set for release on February 25, 2022.

            

 

Eleanor Buckland

Photo Credit: Laura Partain

Photo Credit: Laura Partain

KEEP UP WITH ELEANOR BUCKLAND

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Since 2014, Eleanor Buckland has been one-third of Lula Wiles, the Boston-based folk-rock trio that has become an acoustic music scene favorite with their three critically hailed albums. For much of this time, however, Buckland was also working on another musical project – her own album. You Don’t Have To Know (due on October 29) spotlights a different side of Buckland’s musical interests as it sets her deeply personal songs against inventive indie rock arrangements.

Buckland didn’t know she was headed to making a solo album when she started writing the songs found on You Don’t Have To Know. Initially, she was thrilled simply having the freedom to get creative and write for herself. Although she thought about recording the tunes, the idea arose from a suggestion by Adam Iredale-Gray, a friend of Buckland’s (and her Lula Wiles bandmates Mali Obomsawin and Isa Burke) at Berklee College of Music and producer of the trio’s self-titled first album. While recording that album, Buckland and Iredale-Gray noticed, as she explains it, “a magical spark of synchronicity in our creative processes.”

In February 2017, Buckland met up with Iredale-Gray in Toronto, a home base for the Juno- nominated producer/multi-instrumentalist. She brought along the three songs she had finished: “Don’t Look Down,” “Just Love,” and “How Fast, How Far.” When this session began, they weren’t sure whether they were making an EP or an album or if it would be a band or duo project. It was Iredale-Gray, Buckland recalls, who could hear that they clearly were making her solo album. “I think she really found her own voice in a new setting,” Iredale-Gray explains.

The first song they recorded, “Don’t Look Down,” wound up being the album’s first track too. Reflecting the dark time Buckland was experiencing when she wrote it while also holding glimmers of hope, the song was her clear choice to lead off You Don’t Have To Know. “We built the rest of the album upon this musical foundation,” she reveals. “I think of that song as both a question and the thesis statement for the record.”

Serving too as the first single off of You Don’t Have To Know, “Don’t Look Down” comes out digitally on July 23. It will be followed each month by another song, leading up to the album’s October 29 debut. The restlessly paced “Static” arrives August 20, with the alluring pop jam “I’m Not Saying” being released September 10 and the introspective folk ballad “October” coming out, appropriately enough, on October 1.

On You Don’t Have To Know, Buckland takes listeners on an emotional journey as her songs address love complicated and love lost, explore struggles with depression and insecurity, and grapple with feelings of uncertainty and helplessness. Or as Buckland succinctly describes the album: “It’s about me trying to figure out who I am and who I was at that time.”

She delves into the darkness and noise of anxiety on “Static,” and examines unhealthy sides of relationships on tracks like “I’m Not Saying” and “Call Me Up.” In the exquisitely composed “Wishing Is Useless,” she considers the dilemma: “how do you love somebody who is experiencing intense grief while your intimate relationship is falling apart at the same time?” In “Resignation,” Buckland suggests the beauty of solitude as a remedy for heartbreak while “Just Love” offers a defense of love even when it’s doomed from the start.

You Don’t Have To Know concludes with the title track because, as Buckland reveals, “it was immediately clear to me that this song was the resounding affirmation of the album.” This song delivers her response to the various daunting life questions - how do I do this? what do I want? how can I figure this out? – that she contemplated throughout the album. Her answer to these complicated questions is a simple one: “you don’t have to know.” Buckland has found that embracing the “unknown” and realizing that you don’t need to figure it all out yet are ideas that can be quite empowering and provide a welcome sense of hopefulness. “You may lose yourself at times in the chaos of living, but I also believe you can find your way again,” she explains. It’s an approach she has discovered to be helpful in navigating through challenging situations that would have freaked out her 22-year-old self.

This emotionally powerful song cycle reflects the struggles Buckland went through in her early 20s. “What I love to do in songs,” she states, “is to get to the root and the heart of the feeling and the experience – to get to something real.” The songs, however, also hold a universality through the vulnerability and intimacy expressed in her songwriting. “I feel really strongly that as a songwriter, getting intimate and being specific to your own experience is an avenue to connect with someone else,” she shares. For example, the use of locations - whether it’s the Vancouver Ferry ride in “Don’t Look Down” or walking the Danube River in “Call Me Up” or a phone call from Ontario in “Wishing Is Useless” - help to forge this type of connection between her and her listeners.

Buckland says her creative chemistry with Iredale-Gray served to shape You Don’t Have To Know. While she brought the songs and the words are hers, the writing process was collaborative for most songs on the record and “his ideas that would sort of nourish and water the seeds of my ideas.” She praises his “don’t be afraid to try anything” attitude as being a key to creating an album that she describes as “a lot more fearless musically than what I originally thought I could make. He challenged me so much and I really moved forward as an artist working with him.” Iredale-Gray speaks highly about her growth both as a writer and a singer. “It was awesome seeing her find her calling in songwriting...I think having the time to really think about how she wanted to deliver each song vocally was an amazing chance to hone her vocal chops.”

Throughout You Don’t Have To Know, Iredale-Gray’s inventive, expressive guitar work (“all the funkier, crazier chords,” as Buckland described them) provides vibrant sonic textures to her songs. His arresting, teetering guitar lines in “Wishing Is Useless,” for instance, underscores the emotionally unsettled lyrics, while his ominous, shimmery playing on “Resignation” mirrors the troubled relationship in the song’s lyrics.

He also assembled a stellar group of players to back Buckland at the three separate Toronto recording sessions that took place in 2017-18. Featuring keyboardist Màiri Chaimbeul, guitarist Sam Gleason (both of whom Buckland knew) and a Toronto-based rhythm section (drummer Justin Ruppel and bassist Charles James), this supporting quartet brought a cohesiveness to the album’s sound. In particular, Chaimbeul delivered major contributions, with her interplay with Iredale-Gray’s guitar work on “Static” and “How Fast, How Far” being notable examples.

Born and raised in Maine, Buckland comes from a family full of musicians. Her grandmother, Betty Buckland, was prominent in the New England bluegrass scene, while her father, Andy Buckland, played electric guitar in Boston area bands. It’s not surprising then that someone who grew up playing bluegrass fiddle music as well as a healthy dose of Michelle Branch and Sheryl Crow would wind up with varied musical tastes – something Buckland clearly demonstrates on her solo debut.

You Don’t Have To Know, however, didn’t happen because Buckland simply wanted to rock out. “I think a lot of the album has to do with feeling empowered,” she states. “It was thrilling to discover my singular voice as an artist in a way I never had before. And in the process of writing these songs about figuring myself out, I wound up knowing myself a lot better.”

Matt Mays

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When the world went into lockdown earlier this year Matt Mays took the opportunity to challenge himself as a songwriter, musician and producer. Dog City was written from the perspective of a rescue dog and recorded in a make- shift studio in Mays’ garage. Going one step further, he asked fans to choose a release date during one of his Mantle Music online concerts. May 17th was selected at random, and, in the wee hours of the morning, Mays uploaded Dog City to Bandcamp. In August, Sonic Records released the mastered version of the album to digital music services worldwide and the vinyl LP arrived in September 2020. 

As it turns out, Dog City is a triumph, showcasing Mays’ versatility as both a songwriter and performer (he even contributed tenor sax to “Talking to the Sky”) and reflecting his wide range of musical influences. Mays described the songs as “about pure freedom, love, contentment, companionship and all the stuff in between. I wrote every note and lyric over the last 6 weeks in confinement in my cold garage and a few other empty spaces. Except for the Stooges cover :-)” 

While the album was produced in isolation, that doesn’t mean Mays was entirely without his buds. Long-time collaborators Tim Jim Baker (drums, percussion, programming), and Serge Samson (bass) contributed their parts from their home studios. More recent band mates Asa Brosius (pedal steel) and Melissa Payne (vocals) also sent parts via the wires. Leah Fay sang back-ups on “Talking to the Sky” while her July Talk bandmate Peter Dreimanis added his distinct voice to “Number Canine.” Kate Dyke added her vocals to “New Tricks” the day before Mays was to upload the finished album (because he wrote the song earlier that day). 

Since departing seminal alt-country collective The Guthries in 2002, Matt Mays has alternated between solo projects (his self-titled debut, the film soundtrack ...When the Angels Make Contact) and band projects (the eponymous Matt Mays & El Torpedo record and 2008’s Terminal Romance). Following the dissolution of Matt Mays & El Torpedo in 2009, Mays released Coyote in 2012 to much acclaim, including a JUNO Award win for Rock Album of the Year. 

In 2017 Mays released Once Upon a Hell of a Time... to be followed a year later by the album’s ‘woody’ companion Twice Upon a Hell of a Time.... 2019 saw the release of the “Let There Be Love” single and the Howl at The Night Tour which successfully brought together both the intimate and electric sides of the Matt Mays concert experience for the first time. As the pandemic shut down touring in early 2020, Mays set up a studio in his garage and produced Dog City, an inspiring album written from the perspective of a rescue dog. 

Lizzie Weber

Credit: Stephen Mitchell Gilbert

Credit: Stephen Mitchell Gilbert

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Born and raised in St. Louis and now based in the Pacific Northwest, Lizzie Weber began her journey as a songwriter living in Studio City, California, where she moved at twenty years old to pursue a career in acting. Two years after her move to Los Angeles, she found herself back in St. Louis writing, recording and producing her self-titled debut album as she pursued a degree in Journalism from Washington University.  

Lizzie’s roots in St. Louis provided her a grounded foundation where she developed strong values and sense of self - a self-awareness that enables her to write emotionally-charged music from a very vulnerable, personal place.

Following the success of her 2014 full-length debut, Lizzie appeared on the cover of the Riverfront Times as one of ‘six artists to watch in 2015.’ From there, Lizzie composed the music for the title track(“Vida Cafeinada”) of the documentary feature film Caffeinated. The song is sung in English and Spanish, and features lyrics written by her father, John Schranck. On their first father-daughter collaboration, they set out to write a song that would stand as a reflection of the agricultural and social underpinnings of that wonderful daily tradition.

In the fall of 2015, Lizzie produced and self-released her rendition of Nirvana’s “Heart-Shaped Box.” It was around that time that she met Grammy-award winning producer Sheldon Gomberg (Ben Harper, Ryan Adams, Rickie Lee Jones) and began work her song “Love Again” which was the product of another familial collaboration, this time with her elder brother, John Schranck Jr., who is responsible for the song’s lush, orchestral arrangements. The two began sending Sheldon iphone demos in November of 2015 with the intention of recording the song at his Carriage House Studios (LA) in January of 2016, a pit stop on her way to her new home in the Pacific Northwest.

After spending the last two years both in Seattle and on the island of Fidalgo, Lizzie traveled to Iceland in March of 2018 to collaborate with Academy Award-winning artist Marketa Irglova (The Swell Season/Once). Together, they produced and recorded two songs - "River" and "Free Floating” - released in November and described by Glide Magazine as "a quiet folk song with angelic harmonies and lush instrumentation that swells into a dramatic, beautiful soundscape.

Lizzie is proud to be releasing her latest single “How Does It Feel,” the title track off from her new three-song EP due out in January of 2021. An anthem of gratitude, “How Does It Feel” explores the meaning behind feeling ‘safe’ and finding strength in yourself with the support of loved ones. All three songs were written in isolation amid the early days of the shutdown due to the pandemic; accordingly, this theme is explored throughout all three songs and focuses on what can truly unite us all: empathy, and love. 

Elle Belle

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“Yeah, I think they’ll drop the bomb. I guess my one regret is that I’m over it.” 

Post Everything is about reckonings. The emotional fatigue of the last few years had filled my heart with a deep misanthropic nihilism. Through personal, political, and cultural grieving, these songs rake through the ashes of an era and ask - where do we go from here? Post Everything is a journey through this nihilistic wasteland, and that if we dig deep enough, we can still find droplets of hope. 

Elle Belle is the alter-ego of award winning composer/songwriter Christopher Pappas. His debut album WAKO GUMBO, a sprawling 20 song double LP, was released in 2016 to critical acclaim followed by his sophomore album No Signal that received 4 stars from All Music who called him “a swaggering experimental pop maverick with a penchant for spacy electro-organic psychedelia and an overflowing bag of big ideas.”  

“Thinly cloaked as his views may be, Pappas offers a fresh take on the nation's social climate while also expanding his sonic territory.” - Timothy Monger for All Music   

Pappas grew up in rural New Hampshire where he started the band The Everyday Visuals. After relocating to Boston the band began to amass a cult-like following of fellow musicians and fans who were attracted to Pappas’ penchant for vocal harmonies and catchy left-of-center songwriting.  He moved to Los Angeles in 2010 where he met Pierre de Reeder, bassist for the venerable L.A. band Rilo Kiley. Pappas released a solo record under the name Miracle Parade on Pierre’s newly founded label Little Record Company. While recording the second record he suffered a creative breakdown, leading him to abandon the record and create Elle Belle. 

Mixed with a variety of genres; psych-rock, prog, electronic, Elle Belle continues Pappas’ knack for rich, intricate songwriting. He has written music for NASA, composing the soundtracks for the Juno and Rosetta mission official docu-series. He also composed an award winning musical (“Pope! An Epic Musical”) with the Wall Street Journal praising it, proclaiming “[Pope!] is proof that the musical [genre] isn’t dead!” He is also a prolific writer, churning out 2 T.V. pilots and a new full length horror feature that are currently in pre-production. His dense and eclectic catalogue is why many consider Pappas as one of America’s most prolific and captivating under-the-radar artists.  

 

TWRP

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The sound of the future as imagined in the 1980s. The nostalgic theme song to your favourite childhood cartoon that may have never existed. The hopefulness of someone from the future describing the utopia of tomorrow. Like a paradox of time travel, TWRP is all of these things and yet none of them.

This optimistic fascination with the future, grounded in the nostalgia of the past, is what has shaped TWRP. They are the product of many eclectic styles and eras, crafted into something simultaneously playful, heartfelt, and tongue-in-cheek, all delivered with self-aware bombast and an uncommon musical precision. Old funk, modern electronic, and classic rock converge in their science fiction universe, as if Earth, Wind & Fire, Justice, and Yes provided the sound track to a Dune movie that was actually good.

From humble beginnings on Canada’s east coast, to multiple transplants leading to years living inToronto and Los Angeles, the broadly-defined synth-rock quartet has been quietly and steadily gaining a devoted and sizable cult following over the past 13 years. In recent years TWRP has experienced a golden era, growing rapidly from ongoing work with collaborators such as ColonelChris Hadfield and Andrew Huang, as well as from major commercial successes as the band behind Billboard-topping comedy music stars Ninja Sex Party and Star bomb. With the power of an internet-gained fandom at their backs, TWRP has toured the US and Canada extensively for years, performed on Late Night with Conan O’Brien in 2018, and in 2019 broadened their reach internationally with tours in the UK, Europe, Australia and New Zealand.

TWRP’s new album, Over The Top, is just that - another entry in their discography that delivers an exaggerated rendering of their wide-ranging influences, while not taking itself too seriously.Rich vintage synthesizers, shred guitar, and driving disco rhythms all find their place in the music- and despite an air of levity and irony in it’s delivery, real themes of change, perseverance, and gratitude permeate the album. With an attitude of playfulness and honesty in the music, OverThe Top seems to say that now more than ever it’s important to find the humour and enjoyment through life’s challenges

Falcon

Photo By: Ashley Mae Wright

Photo By: Ashley Mae Wright

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As Falcon, Amanda Lindsey Cook is crafting a poetic pop sound, influenced by her classical roots, informed by her life experiences, and enlightened by imaginative melodies. The reason for “Falcon”? She wanted a new canvas for for a new endeavor. The name is borrowed and expanded on from a family name, “Falk”. “It just felt right”, she pauses, “to name this artistic endeavor after my original surname. Like a sort of integration, perhaps. We have so much to learn from our ancestors, our family lines. I have barely scratched the surface....but I wanted to be intentional in my own quirky way, about embodying the stories that have shaped and informed me.”

But why call herself “Falcon” when she already has a career under her current name? The idea came about in a conversation with her long time friend/collaborator/producer, Jason Ingram.  

“We were having a conversation about the different kinds of music I want to make, and how I don’t want to be confined to one genre, sound, or theme. I have to explore. I have to be able to write about everything - it’s a path of clarity for me...a way of interpreting and understanding my experiences. He suggested that “I go Falcon” on this next album, and that was that. It felt like being handed an ancient key to a room in my own house I hadn’t explored yet.”

Amanda believes that a great piece of music holds space for what she refers to as a bright sadness. “We can’t truly be open to joy without being open to sorrow as well. Our lives are filled with the vulnerability of both delight and disappointment. It feels important to have a soundtrack for all kinds of experiences, songs for every proverbial day of the week.”

“Music is a language insistent and committed to finding the golden thread that can make unlikely friends out of all of us,” says Cook. “I hope that all the different projects I make, under any name, would create little worlds of safety, expression, and belonging.” In Spring of 2020 Amanda joined the Sony family. Her first album as Falcon releases later this fall (2020). She currently resides in Los Angeles, California.

Air Traffic Controller

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Air Traffic Controller have created a place all their own in the indie pop world. After serving in the US Navy as an actual air traffic controller, singer/songwriter Dave Munro built a legacy with "ATC" for crafting heartfelt, luscious and genuine indie-folk-pop songs that are timeless and classic. The band took their time writing and demoing their fifth album, and the fans have not left their side, still streaming over 150 thousand songs per week on Spotify.

When 2020 started, the band featuring Adam Salameh, Adrian Aiello, Joe Campbell, Steve Scott and Seth Kasper alongside Dave, were right in the middle of recording album number five. Well, this is a year for the books, and ATC had to post-pone their studio sessions to be safe.  

"Sometimes" is their new single, written in 2019, and mostly tracked before Covid hit everyone's calendars. The band was able to collaborate remotely to bring this new "classic" ATC anthem to its soaring finale and eventual debut on Tuesday August 25th. On this new single we hear the band collaborating in the studio, highlighting guitar licks, and self-producing alongside Boston producer/engineer Dan Cardinal (Darlingside, Henry Jamison, Josh Ritter, Ballroom Theives). If you have loved any ATC song in their past, you will love "Sometimes" just as much, if not more. It's a wave of a song that pulls you in from the intro and takes you on a beautiful ride. 

Air Traffic Controller have achieved a lot in their past. NPR Hot 100 List, Billboard Hot 100 Fest, Guardian UK Band of the Day, Alt Nation support, Independent Music Awards, many film, TV, video game, promo placements, airplay all over the world. "Sometimes," is a new start, and a solid bar for what's to come. 

From lead-singer Dave Munro on the song: “Sometimes” is about a real relationship. There was so much I wanted to say when it ended, but it was already over and probably for the best. I wanted to tell that person how much I cared, how I was affected, but I remained silent. I made excuses to myself, I was so busy, it was never a good time. Sometimes we bottle our emotions in order to move forward. This song was my way of removing the cap.

 

Justin Trawick and The Common Good

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The isolating effects of a global pandemic can be haunting. For singer-songwriter and bandleader, Justin Trawick, writing “Back of the Line” was born out of necessity and self- preservation.  The world was collectively feeling the sensation of individually being marooned on 8 billion tiny islands, and for Trawick, the feeling was all too real. 

“The planet had suddenly been put on pause.  All of our plans for the future were replaced with a big question mark.  As an artist, I’ve always found inspiration to write in the littlest of things, but the coronavirus quarantine created a vacuum of creativity that I’d never felt before. It wasn’t until the third month of the pandemic when I sat down and wrote “Back of the Line,” a song about the feeling of being lost, being alone, being afraid, and being hopeful.  I honestly think it’s one of the first times I’ve ever really written a song for me.  I needed it.”

That’s not to say Trawick wasn’t doing any work in those first three months.  On March 12th, 2020, Trawick voluntarily canceled his scheduled public show in DC for that evening, something that venues still weren’t doing themselves yet.  Instead, he and his girlfriend, Lauren LeMunyan, posted on social media that they would be performing on Facebook Live later that evening at 8pm.  

“I was sitting on my couch at 11am on March 12th, 2020 wondering what I was going to do.  I had just canceled my show, but I still wanted to play.  I’ve been performing since I was 13 years old, I really didn’t want to stop now.  I suddenly remembered how two years earlier I had been scheduled for a show at Rockwood Music Hall in New York City, but that it got canceled due to a blizzard.  Instead of not playing, Lauren and I performed on Facebook Live from her apartment in DC.  People loved it.  They tipped us more than I was going to make in NYC that evening.”

That night their first Facebook Live show went better than expected.  With almost five thousand views on their inaugural performance, family, friends, and fans joined to support “The Justin and Lauren Show,” requesting songs and tipping via a sign that LeMunyan had drawn by hand.  The performance first got the attention of Reuters, who filmed their second show in their apartment on March 15th, followed by The Washington Post, CNN (who also filmed them in their apartment), Al Jazeera, and Washingtonian Magazine.  Trawick’s Facebook page climbed from 7k “likes” to over 12k in only a few months, and almost 200 people joined his Patreon club.  

“We created something that I had never experienced before in the 12 years I’d been playing music professionally.  Suddenly we had a TV variety type show similar to “Live with Kelly and Ryan,” where Lauren and I would sing, tell jokes, do skits, and talk about our lives to hundreds of people twice a week.  We amassed a fanbase of superfans and cultivated a community of people that showed up not only for us, but also to chat with each other as they had all become friends in the process of watching our weekly shows.  These were the people that I performed “Back of the Line” to live for the first time, and who encouraged me to record it for a single.”

Most recently, Trawick has been bringing back the live concert experience in a unique way.  Utilizing his fanbase and the power of social media, Trawick and LeMunyan have been organizing secret backyard socially distant performances of “The Justin and Lauren Show” in backyards donated by friends and fans.  These shows have been limited to only 25 people per show, with social distancing and safety being the highest priority.  

“We have literally gone to every single yard and measured them by hand with a tape measure.  Lauren then creates a grid on a digital map that she uses to design a seating chart where essentially every ticket buyer is buying a ticket to a 10 x 10 foot square in someone else’s backyard.  It’s a lot of work, but when people come up to us afterward thanking us for bringing live music back into their lives safely, it’s all worth it for us.

Trawick and LeMunyan have currently sold out over 9 of their secret backyard shows in Arlington VA, Richmond VA, and Philadelphia, PA.  For more information on these secret backyard shows go to www.aneveningwithus.com. 

ABOUT JUSTIN TRAWICK :

Justin Trawick has been performing in the Washington DC area and along the East Coast since 2006, citing musical influences like Bob Schneider, Greensky Bluegrass, The Tallest Man on Earth, G. Love, Old Crow Medicine Show, and David Gray.  In February of 2014, Trawick won “Song of the Year” at the Washington Area Music Awards for his solo recording of “All the Places That I’ve Been” which can be downloaded on iTunes as a single along with his five other solo records and EPs.  In June of 2015, Trawick released his first single, “Goodbye,” under the band name “Justin Trawick and the Common Good,” written about the search for direction and belonging in a world that always feels one step ahead of you.  In January of 2017, “Justin Trawick and The Common Good” released their first album, “The Riverwash EP,” which features Norah Jones’ guitarist Adam Levy.  Trawick and the band have performed for the Kingman Island Bluegrass Festival, Appaloosa Roots Music Festival, Floyd Yoga Jam, TedxEast in NYC at the City Winery, and TedxPennsylvaniaAvenue in DC at the Newseum.

Additionally, Trawick has opened for over 30 national acts, including Suzanne Vega, Wyclef Jean, Brett Dennen, Blues Traveler, Enter The Haggis, Bob Schneider, and Edwin McCain, and shared bills with Dr. Dogg and The Avett Brothers.  As the founder of the nationally touring show “The 9 Songwriter Series” and co-founder of “The Circus Life Podcast” with guests such as Kevin Eubanks, Chris Thomas King, Ernie Halter, Yarn, and Snuffy Walden, Trawick has built a brand that extends far beyond his home base in DC. For more information, please visit http://justintrawick.com.

Glenn Thomas

Photo credit: Deven Bussey

Photo credit: Deven Bussey

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Glenn Thomas writes songs that cut straight to his truths. By putting his life and the human condition under the microscope, Glenn’s songs articulately observe the big questions with small details. Raised in a small New England town, Glenn writes with careful attention to his understanding of himself and the seasonality of life.

Glenn’s songs have been praised by press and songwriting veterans alike, and has led him to perform across the country with national acts such as Langhorne Slim, The Barr Brothers, Blitzen Trapper, Eve6, Watsky, Rubblebucket, and many others. With the alternative-rock outfit he fronts, Wild Sun, his music has been featured in Rolling Stone, Billboard, Spin, and Entertainment Weekly, as well as a cover of Elliott Smith’s “Easy Way Out” on the nationally acclaimed “Say Yes! A Tribute to Elliott Smith” album featuring J. Mascis, Julien Baker, and Amanda Palmer.

Glenn is currently living in Nashville and finishing his debut solo album with producer Jordan Lehning. It is set to be released in early 2020.

Natalie Schlabs

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Nashville-based singer/songwriter Natalie Schlabs writes songs that explore the complicated emotions and perspective-shifting moments that make up family relationships. Her music often blends sublime vocal harmonies with lyrics about the secret desires and difficulties of living life among loved ones.

Her first full-length album, Midnight With No Stars, was celebrated for its willingness to explore the personal. New Slang praised the album for revealing “a rugged truthfulness we often save for conversations with ourselves.” There’s a richness and clarity to Schlabs’ voice reminiscent of artists like Norah Jones and Jill Andrews, making her a popular choice for harmonizing background vocals and a frequent collaborator with other musicians on tour and in the studio. Her stunning duet with Irish-born artist Ben Glover, “Fall Apart,” features vocals that “ring and resound like a fork tapping crystal” and was chosen as a Song of the Week on The Bluegrass Situation. Schlabs’ introduction to Nashville music came through collaboration, singing background vocals for fellow Texan Ryan Culwell, and performing with Katie Herzig at Paste Studio NYC in 2018. “I think there’s something cool about the act of stepping into someone else’s sound and blending with it,” she explains. “It’s a challenge, and a kind of freedom, too.”

Like many other Nashville musicians, the West Texas native grew up singing in church, but unlike others the majority of her early musical experience s took place at home with family. Her three brothers were musicians—one a pianist, one a guitarist and drummer, and one guitarist and songwriter—her mom sang, and her grandfather, a guitarist and vocalist who performed classics, often invited the family to sing with him. “It was very normal for all of us to be together in a room, playing instruments and singing together,” she recalls. “My love for music comes from my family, and my love for family is often the substance of my songwriting.”

Breaking a bit from her country roots, Schlabs’ new album Don’t Look Too Close, set for release on Oct 9, 2020, steps into indie territory with a compelling mix of instrumentation laced with solo vocals that bloom into easy, delicate harmonies. Co - produced by Juan Solorzano and Zachary Dyke , with Caleb Hickman on saxophone and her husband Joshua Rogers on bass, the album swells and ebbs with elegant, absorbing shapes. The songs are moody, candid, and tender , each featuring Schlabs’ characteristically sleek vocals front-and-center, backed by charming instrumental moments that add form and depth to the melodies. “Juan’s got a great ear,” she says. “He created really original textures with layered guitar. That’s a big part of the sound of the record.”

Recorded the year of her 30th birthday and largely written while pregnant with her first child, the album naturally focuses on tension s between past and present. “I was thinking about how to raise a child, how to pass down values,” she reveals. “There’s a dismantling of what I thought I knew. What do I value in my life and where did those things come from? What do I want to share with my children and what do I want to spare them from?” The tracks on Don’t Look Too Close traverse the spectrum of feelings that tend to coincide with love, from bittersweet consideration of “the wilderness caused by depression or illness” in “See What I See,” to the haunting gentleness of “Ophelia,” written for a friend who lost her daughter. The title song “Don’t Look Too Close” addresses the everyday aches and pains people tend to hide from loved ones. “There were entire rooms of things my parents went through that I had no idea about,” she says. “And my kid will have no idea about a lot of things I experience.” The song reflects on love’s blindness, how “sometimes the ones you love will never know how much you love them.”

The album as a whole represents a place, a time, and a pocket of feelings that are as distinctly human as they are beautiful. “Growing up surrounded by family in the flatlands, there’s not a whole lot going on outside of the people,” she continues. “The climate is extreme, and isolation binds you to the people around you. Everyone’s in each other’s business, and you learn that love can go in many directions. Sometimes it’s about solidarity and sacrifice, sometimes it’s obsessive or painful. This record is about navigating those feelings within our closest relationships .”