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Search Results for: Психолог онлайн Катар Бруней Услуги психолога Психолог Германия skype:amt777

Neon Moon

Website * Facebook * Instagram * Twitter * Spotify * Youtube

Press Contact: Steve LaBate – stevelabate@babyrobotmedia.com

“Charmingly vintage. … Noelle and Josh Bohannon know how to write a song.” – Americana UK

“A classic sound … timeless.” – Wide Open Country 

“A melting pot of modern-vintage twang.” – No Depression

“Delightful. What the honky tonks used to be like on those late summer nights. This vocalist could hang with Tanya Tucker and Reba McIntyre.” – Ear to the Ground

“A dose of twang.” – PopMatters

“This is some stone cold country right here.” – Country Music Life

“If the Dixie Chicks ever get around to recording a new album, any of the songs on Neon Moon’s EP would suit them.” – Highway Queens


BIOGRAPHY

Back on their 2017 debut EP, 6:53, Neon Moon delivered a set of tunes steeped in the Americana of the moment—songs that fit snugly on playlists between Margo, Nikki, Sturgill & Stapleton. But as much as they were down with the zeitgeist, the Nashville-bred husband-and-wife duo’s hearts have always walked the line between downhome country gold and the more polished sounds of the Music Row establishment. Their group, after all, is named after a Brooks & Dunn hit.m

Balancing these passions, Neon Moon’s Noelle and Josh Bohannon hit East Nashville studio Forty-One Fifteen last year to cut a trio of new singles with producer/bassist Taylor Bray, front-of-house engineer for chart-topping road dogs Dan + Shay. Also appearing on the sessions were  Lucy Dacus / boygenius producer Collin Pastore on pedal steel, guitarist Jesse Isley (Will Hoge, Tanya Tucker), keyboardist Mike Hicks (Rascal Flatts), Michael Kight (The Voice) on backing vocals, and drummer Chris Benelli (Ruthie Collins) who also manned the kit on Neon Moon’s 6:53. For the Bohannons, there was no grand plan or deadline, just a desire to take their time and do the songs justice.

“The further in we got, the more we started expanding on our initial ideas,” Josh says. “We’d go off looking for just the right utility player to come in and put this very specific touch on a section of a track, but it was worth the wait to get things just right. The growth we experienced by allowing ourselves the time to explore—it was a very positive thing.”

To understand just how refreshing the relaxed pace of these sessions was for Neon Moon, it’s important to consider their roots. When they first hit the scene in 2015, they made quite an entrance with their 52 Songs Project, an exercise where for the duration of a year, they wrote a new song every week. “It was an important step for us,” Noelle says. “We proved to ourselves that we could do it, and ever since then we know that, if we sit down and make ourselves, we can write a song no matter what. Of course, it’s been nice to slow down and have a little more focus.”

When Neon Moon wrote and recorded the first of their three new singles, “Darlin’,” they’d been listening to a whole lot of Willie’s Roadhouse on SiriusXM, and challenged themselves to try tapping into the essence of iconic country songs like “Crazy.” “We wanted to create something that could fit in with material from that era,” Noelle says. “I’ve always been obsessed with the scene in Breakfast at Tiffany’s where Audrey Hepburn plays ‘Moon River’ sitting on the fire escape. When we were in the studio, I played it for Taylor and the band—we were trying to capture that kind of feeling, sweet and nostalgic. The idea I had in the back of my mind was that someone had gone off to war and stopped writing or stopped getting letters along the way, but then they finally made it home and it was like, ‘I miss you. I’m sorry I lost touch’—just really hoping to recapture what it felt like at the beginning of the relationship.”

Noelle Bohannon’s quivering vocals on the track are packed with genuine longing. It’s heartache you can believe. The way she delivers the stark, unadorned poetry of the lyrics is arresting, her melodies brushed atop the canvas of a pensive nylon-string guitar that reads almost like a ukulele in some ‘60s exotica tune, complemented by subtle echoes of pedal steel that radiate down like sunshine through late-morning clouds. It’s fitting that the video for “Darlin’” was shot through gauzy filters in the subtropical paradises of Playa del Carmen and Cozumel.

Flipping to the opposite side of Neon Moon’s countrified coin is “Smoking Gun,” a CMT-ready minor-key stomp with pop sensibility for days—a love ‘em and leave ‘em anthem as catchy as it is persistent. It’s a fresh take on a familiar theme—fear of commitment—but in Neon Moon’s twist it’s the woman protagonist, voiced by Noelle, who has a perpetual aversion to getting too close. “As soon as she feels like it’s the real thing, that this could be a great, lasting relationship, that’s the moment she gets scared and runs, and you’re left holding a smoking gun.”

The third and final single from Neon Moon’s Forty-One Fifteen sessions, the timeless “Dive Bar Romance,” bridges the sonic gap between “Darlin’” and “Smoking Gun,” Pastore’s steel guitar drifting like smoke from a tavern ashtray before Nick Haynes’ blessedly drunken mariachi horns stumble through the door. This is tropi-Americana, fresh-squeezed, with plenty of pulp and a shot of vodka to ease the hangover’s edge. As with “Darlin’,” the video for “Dive Bar Romance” was also shot in Mexico, only this time by Atlanta-based production team Coyote Kills (Wille Nelson, Shovels and Rope, Margo Price). In gorgeously saturated hues, it depicts falling in love both with a bar, and in a bar.

“Dive Bar Romance” was inspired in large part by the Bohannons’ days spent hanging at legendary East Nashville hole-in-the-wall Dino’s, which—despite the above screwdriver metaphor—does not carry orange juice or any other mixers… or vodka for that matter. Just cold beer, whiskey and tequila. Neat. “Dino’s was our home away from home in Nashville,” Josh says. “When you walk in, you get this joyous feeling. Being there so often, we met and became friends with a lot of good people. It always felt warm, and we built the song around that vibe.”

It’s a time in their lives Neon Moon can appreciate fully now from the remove of their new home base in Los Angeles. “I think it’s been good for us to get away,” Noelle says, “just to get some perspective. We do miss Nashville, but we’re having a great time in L.A.”

“It’s been a good move,” Josh agrees. “The distance has allowed us to see what we’re doing more clearly and understand what we could do better. Right now, we’re four months in, and I feel like we made the right decision. You don’t immediately think of L.A. being a big country-music town, but it really is. When we tell people we moved from Nashville to L.A., they think we’re doing it backwards, but now that we’re starting to play here and get acquainted with the scene, it makes perfect sense. Even Dwight Yoakam had a hard go of it in Nashville the first time through, and he moved out to L.A. opening for punk bands before he ever made it as a country singer. The country & western and Americana scene here is great. Everybody we’ve met is within one degree of each other. Everybody knows everybody—they all play together and hang together. We really like that kind of community and we’re excited to be a part of it.”


by Baby Robot Media

Vents Magazine talks with Neon Moon about their new single “Smoking Gun,” the Nashville & L.A. music communities, and how their dog Bowser inadvertently influenced the sound of the new single

Josh and Noelle Bohannon, of Nashville wife & husband duo Neon Moon, raised the eyebrows of Americana fans back in 2017 with their debut EP 6:53. Now, having relocated 2,000 miles west to Los Angeles, they’re back with new single “Smoking Gun,” a song that satisfyingly indulges the more polished, countrified side of Neon Moon’s sound. READ MORE…

Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: Vents Magazine

by Baby Robot Media

Glide Magazine debuts Church Girls’ new video for “Could’ve Been,” calling it a “riveting exhibition of rock.”

Church Girls—Philly’s emerging indie-punk outfit—delivers urgent catharsis on The Haunt (out NOW on Anchor Eighty Four Records) providing “a glimmer of hope amidst nihilism,” says bandleader Mariel Beaumont. The record tackles themes of addiction and despondency in a poetic will to move forward towards healing and developing healthier habits. The group has been busy since their last, critically acclaimed EP, Cycles. The band is currently on their longest U.S. tour yet, in support of their sophomore LP, The Haunt (out now via Anchor Eighty Four), produced by Scott Solter (Spoon, St. Vincent, The Mountain Goats).

READ MORE

Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: Glide Magazine

by Baby Robot Media

The Big Takeover debuts politically charged lead single + video from Margaret Chavez, “The Croupiers Unite I.C.E.”

Austin, TX-based freak-folk/ space rock outfit Margaret Chavez is the psychedelia-steeped project of founder Marcus Striplin.

Margaret Chavez’s upcoming socio-politically relevant, folk-rock opus, Into An Atmosphere, will arrive on July 31st via We Know Better Records. The LP was mastered by Greg Calbi (Bowie, Springsteen, Bon Iver) and also worked on by Striplin’s longtime recording partner Stuart Sikes (Cat Power, Loretta Lynn, The White Stripes, Phosphorescent), as well as Paul Williams and Don Cento.

READ MORE

Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: Big Takeover Magazine, The Big Takeover

by Baby Robot Media

The Deli Magazine NYC debuts Couvo’s “sweetly sorrowful” new single, “Still Hanging On”

It’s an unfortunate truth that, with the passing of time, we tend to lose touch with those that matter most to us, a fact that’s become abundantly clear to Bushwick-based indie pop artist Couvo as of late. His new single “Still Hanging On” is an ode to old acquaintances and relationships that come with the changes inherent to life, a shoutout to erstwhile friends in his hometown of Manchester, Connecticut, channeled through bright, downtempo indie pop reminiscent of the Morning Benders and pre-Powerman Kinks.

READ MORE

Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: The Deli Magazine, The Deli NYC

March 9, 2020 by Baby Robot Media

Listen: State of the Art Spotify playlist for 3/9/20

State of the Art Spotify playlist weekly baby robot media brm indie hip hop electro pop punk rap metal folk

Listen to this week’s State of the Art Spotify playlist featuring:

Epic Levels – Liches be Trippin’
The Professionals, Madlib, Oh No – Buggin
Lindy Vision – Abandonment
TORRES – Dressing America (Merge)
Hollow Fortyfives – Nowhere (Baby Robot Records)
Wolf Parade – Under Glass (Sub Pop Records)
Chandeen – Light
Bee Appleseed – Celebrate Your Body (Baby Robot Records)
SWMRS, FIDLAR – PEOPLE
Pedaljets – Loved a Stone
Goliathan – Aberration
Sepultura – Last Time
Kate Vargas, CakeDrop – Original
Har Mar Superstar – Don’t You Go Forgetting About Me Now
Sadler Vaden – Golden Child
Built To Spill – Bloody Rainbow
Vita and the Woolf – Operator
Wilma Archer, MF Doom – Last Sniff
Starbenders – Getting Harder
The Psychedelics Furs – Don’t Believe
Elaquent, A l l i e – One Week (Mello Music)
Knxwledge – Do You (Stones Throw)
Lauren Ruth Ward – Water Sign
Good Grief Gang – Blood in Britain
Valipala – Lovesick
Barnacle – Jarry Pool
Field Music – Do You Read Me?
ALEXNADRA SAVIOR – Crying All the Time
LANE 8, Arctic Lake – Road
WIKI, Lil Ugly Mane, Denzel Curry – Grim
Dreaming Of Ghosts – Lunarum
WAAX – Labrador

Or check out the YouTube Playlist:

Filed Under: Playlists Tagged With: Spotify

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