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Search Results for: Дизайн человека профиль Дизайн человека Расшифровка ❤ metahd.ru <<<

by Baby Robot Media

Glide Magazine debuts lead single from Ned Hill, “Lonely Heart of Mine,” off his forthcoming album By the Light of the Radio (out 10/2 on WhistlePig Records)

Roots rock/Americana stalwart, Ned Hill – raised on the sounds of FM Radio, American Bandstand and drug store jukeboxes in the small town of Horse Cave, KY – has kept his sights on Music City, where he’s planted his feet for over 20 years, performing regularly at East Nashville’s The Five Spot, and touring the south, midwest and New England. While frequently collaborating with one of Nashville’s most coveted auxiliary players, Michael Webb (John Prine, Sturgill Simpson, Chris Stapleton, Hank Williams Jr), it’s no wonder outlets like No Depression, Associated Press, Nashville Scene, Elmore Magazine and Americana Highways have been singing their praises.

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Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: Glide Magazine

by Baby Robot Media

Sarah Peacock Included In Alternate Root’s “Top 2020 Albums So Far” List With Lucinda Williams, Bob Dylan, And Jason Isbell

sarah peacock the alternate root americana roots rock singer songwriter

Time has been moving quickly, then slowly in a loop for much of 2020. The cycle of record releases has been affected, though it would take more than a plague to get artists to cease speaking their truths. Throughout 2020, music has kept flowing. We have gathered a list of (our version) the top albums for 2020. In order to grow, new blood needs to be pumping and many of the artists on the list have had either debut or breakthrough albums in 2020. The constant barrage of drama has brought a more Rock’n’Roll sense to both words and music. Messages in song has been a lot clearer, musicians like Lucinda Williams and Drive-By Truckers penning beliefs directly into the storyline. As in every year, we could have gone higher with the artists included, and we may have missed someone. Please feel free to give a shout and let us know, and we hope you enjoy the Top Albums So Far for 2020.

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Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: The Alternate Root

by Baby Robot Media

Floated Magazine’s premiere nails the versatility of HESS’s alt-pop single “I’ll Drive”

The rebirth of synthesizers in the last decade has given music an 80’s pop sheen that luckily left out the waves of drenching reverb, enhancing the ability of the singer to sound front and center in the music, without losing the general feel of the production for the decade.

It’s a nice combination of both modern alternative pop and a nod to the producers and performers that came before. HESS, I’ll Drive, is an excellent example of production at its acme, a lesson in mixing synth, a centered vocal, and a vibrato-soaked guitar. READ MORE… 

Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: Floated Magazine

by Baby Robot Media

Audiofemme shares the compelling story behind 8 Inch Betsy’s legacy-filled album

After queer Chicago punk band 8 Inch Betsy wrapped up a 30-day U.S. tour in 2010, many things appeared uncertain for the members. Their original drummer Stephanie Levi had left the band, and the transition from life on the road to everyday life left the remaining members Meghan Galbraith (guitar, vocals) and Eli Burke (bass) feeling downtrodden. Galbraith was up every night working as a bartender, then would wake up to “alone days of nothing after just coming off the high of tour and traveling all over the country,” as Burke puts it. This situation spawned the band’s latest album, The Mean Days, a meditation on life’s difficult experiences. READ MORE… 

Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: Audiofemme

Wayne Graham

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Launched in 2010 by brothers Kenny and Hayden Miles, Wayne Graham make articulate, wide-ranging Americana that nods to — and also reaches far beyond — the band’s southern roots. Raised in Central Appalachia, the siblings grew up amongst the rugged hills and soon-to-be-shuttered coal mines of Whitesburg, Kentucky. It was an area caught halfway between old-school tradition and a new way of life. From the start, Kenny and Hayden’s songs reflected that unique balance, mixing folk, rock & roll, and other sounds into sharply-written songs about family, faith, life, love, and all points in between. “It was all about using music to express what we couldn’t express otherwise,” says Kenny, the band’s guitar-playing frontman.

Named after the siblings’ larger-than-life grandfathers, Wayne Graham have transformed themselves from East Kentuckian heroes into something far more global over the course of six albums and one EP, earning acclaim as far away as Germany — whose branch of Rolling Stone praised the band’s “full-bodied, catchy songs with dry and poetic lyrics” — along the way. 

Wayne Graham’s latest album, the self-produced 1% Juice, is another collection of explorative, earthy rock songs that blur the borders between multiple genres. After releasing an album of B-sides, Songs Only a Mother Could Love, in 2019, the brothers reconvened in their parents’ East Kentucky basement, where they’d recorded most of their past work — as well as projects by Senora May, Laid Back Country Picker, Sean Whiting, and others — in their own Fat Baby Studios. Their last album of new material,  Joy!, had been Wayne Graham’s most successful album to date, released on both sides of the Atlantic and supported not only by an American tour, but a string of shows across Europe, too. Kenny and Hayden decided to keep that transatlantic spirit alive with 1% Juice, reaching out to German collaborators like Ludwig Bauer to add horns, strings, and other sonic touches to the songs. At its core, though, 1% Juice is a family affair — a diverse album created by two brothers who’ve developed distinct approaches to songwriting, as well as unique outlooks on modern life. 

“Hayden and I think about similar things in very different ways,” says Kenny, who shares the album’s songwriting credits with his drummer brother. “Our minds go side-by-side for a while, then veer off in opposite directions. This record is a little bit of a push-and-pull — or a vibration back and forth — between two different outlooks that ultimately lead to the same place.”

The results range from Kenny’s “Tapestry of Time” — a mellow meditation on the passing years, shot through with drums that evoke a ticking clock and a swampy, soulful outro — to Hayden’s “Some Days,” a lush, countrified album-closer inspired by the Byrds’ twangy jangle and the Bible’s exchanges between Jesus and Saint Peter. Between those two bookends, the guys personify a lonely public phone on the Wilco-worthy “Pay Phone,” get funky with the challengingly complex “Never Die,” and turn the album’s title track into a groove-driven instrumental. No two songs are the same — and for Wayne Graham, that’s the whole point. 

“The songs sound different,” says Kenny, “but they all point in the same direction.” And while Wayne Graham usually play shows as a full-bodied four-piece band, 1% Juice shines a light on the instrumental and creative abilities of the band’s two co-founders, who layer these songs with colorful streaks of guitar, percussion, keyboard, vocal harmonies, brass, and whatever else the canvas demands.

“When you’re recording, you’re making a painting,” Kenny adds. “You add layers until you’re really taken by the image you see — or the thing you hear.”

Wayne Graham’s early releases may have focused on the sounds and stories of modern-day Appalachia, but the band has expanded, evolved, and electrified since then, with 1% Juice showcasing the full range not only of their influences, but their abilities, too. This is an album that’s every bit as diverse as the countless communities and cultures that lay between the band’s Kentucky home and the German headquarters of their European label. With 1% Juice, Wayne Graham proudly operate at 100%.


 

Spencer Burton

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Spencer Burton has always been strongly connected to the natural world. An Ontario boy raised across the great expanse of Canada, Spencer carries with him an insatiable wanderlust and deep respect for nature.

After years of living mostly in the city between long touring stints, Spencer was feeling drained and uninspired. The constant hum of the city promoted a lifestyle that was entwined with work and networking, an energy that could easily push oneself into the ground. Coupled with the transient existence of a touring musician, Spencer felt the need to plant roots. 

That pull led him to flee the city for a quieter existence in the country. In a small town,  life moves a lot slower. The rural life soothed his soul, let him bask in subdued silence and fade out into the mist. Interacting with people became a choice, and the open road became one that he traveled alone. This simpler reality led him even closer to the earth and to the powerful freedom solitude brings. 

Coyote, Spencer’s fifth studio album, is an ode to that power, but also a representation of the excitement and fear of solitude, and of art. Recorded in the comfort of friends on true analog equipment down in Nashville, the album is full of dualities, necessary stops and questions on the long journey of self-discovery that is life. “Every song I’ve ever written is a place to keep a memory,” says Spencer. 

His musical trajectory has been multifaceted, from his punk rock roots as part of Attack in Black to the darker country-inspired sound of his two first solo albums under the name Grey Kingdom. In 2012, Spencer dropped Grey Kingdom in favour of his own name, moving towards a more natural country folk sensibility. 

Spencer’s move to Niagara coincided with his becoming a father, a shift that has permanently shaped his life and his music. His most recent album, The Mountain Man, is a children’s album created with his family in mind. “Making art feels pretty selfish, in a way. Having kids makes you forget about yourself, makes you care about them above anything else. It’s this insane sense of perspective–these little sources of the most intense love and happiness, but also worry and fear.”

Coyote is self-reflective, a journey of finding oneself again through a soul-healing connection to nature and within the confines of being a parent. “I’m continually challenging myself to put out the best record I’ve ever made.”

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