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Pop Matters

by Baby Robot Media

Pop Matters Premieres: Charlie Overbey’s “Slip Away”

Charlie Overbey
Charlie Overbey

Growing up listening to the likes of Johnny Cash and Tom Petty, Charlie Overbeybrings grassy rock ‘n’ roll to the table that’s reminiscent of the music of his inspirations. Lynwood might not be the first place one might expect to raise an alt-country career from the earth, but Overbey’s career has grown out of rocking the Southern California circuit with his outlaw grit. Blossoming from there, the Americana artist has garnered fans across the country who are looking forward to the release of his forthcoming album, Broken Arrow, on 20 April.

Performing with Miranda Lee Richards, “Slip Away” is the latest single from off of the incoming LP. It’s a poignant, dark-laced number in which Overbey bears his whole heart, dedicating his emotional duet to a departed friend. The song’s gentle sway lets listeners slip into its powerful performance easy as Overbey and Richards’ emotive delivery gains steam as the arrangement runs its course. Richards’ warm whiskey vocals pair perfectly with Overbey’s grit, taking the piece to stirring new heights.

Overbey tells PopMatters, ‘”Slip Away’ was written directly following the loss of someone in my deep inner circle that was ruled to be an accident but to me seemed a suicide. I tend to like to leave things to the imagination and incorporate, especially in dark times elements of hope. I did not feel the need to mention suicide—nobody needs to be thinking about or even reminded that this is an option.”

“I do think that in times of despair, people tend to find warmth in darkness, which is a trick of the mind as referred to in my favorite line in the song: “And then you gimme’ that look / yeah you gimme that look, like you’re never comin’ back again / like you’ve crawled down into a deep dark hole / and it’s warm like the house of a friend.”

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Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: Pop Matters

by Baby Robot Media

Pop Matters Premieres Kellen of Troy’s “Just A Couple More”

Kellen of Troy
Kellen of Troy

Nashville-based folk-rocker Kellen Wenrich (Kellen of Troy) is taking a stand alongside the millions rallying around the world during the March For Our Lives. His newest video is a simple construct, featuring white text over a black backdrop, echoing Wenrich’s words one scathing truth after the other on “Just a Couple More”. It’s an evaluation of the times, shining a spotlight on politicians who would rather funnel donations from the NRA and like-minded organizations than campaign for real justice and peace in the light of the United States’ mass shooting epidemic.

Kellen of Troy says, “I wrote ‘Just a Couple More’ in the aftershock of the horrific shooting in Parkland, Florida. My friend Gavin Paddock posed a challenge-to-all-songwriters to write something a-la CSNY’s ‘Ohio’, dealing with gun control (or lack thereof) and the culture surrounding mass shootings in America. I took up the charge, writing and sending him a demo within 72 hours. He called me about 30 minutes later asking how he could help make the song a reality.”

Any and all proceeds from “Just a Couple More” will be donated to the March For Our Lives movement.

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Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: Pop Matters

by Baby Robot Media

Great Peacock’s “Miss You Honey” Captures Lopsided Love in a Song (premiere)

Great Peacock
Great Peacock

Andrew Nelson, Blount Floyd, Nick Recio, and Frank Keith IV are Great Peacock. Together, the Nashville quartet has been working to challenge perceptions of Americana since it’s hit the mainstream, blurring the lines between rock and folk further along the way. Compared to that overarching mission—which has seen them sharing the stage with the likes of Cage the Elephant and Margo Price—what they had set out to accomplish with “Miss You Honey” almost seems too simple. This Valentine’s Day, Great Peacock is giving those who are alone a shoulder to cry on, reminding their audience that they can relate to being brokenhearted on the most commercially romantic holiday of the year.

Their notion of empathy is conveyed to listeners in a sweet three minutes and 31 seconds with a message that anyone who’s felt all sides of love can relate to. It’s gorgeously produced, as well, with beautiful, windswept instrumentation decorating an arrangement that’s sold by the sincerity with which frontman Nelson is able to evoke emotion.

Great Peacock’s new album Gran Pavo Real is out 30 March via Ropeadope Records.

What is “Miss You Honey” about?

The title says it all! And repeats over and over again in the chorus. The song is simply about missing someone you’re still in love with. It’s a mix of reminiscing, longing, and regret.

Who or what were some influences when it came to writing “Miss You Honey”?

I can’t think of anything that influenced this song other than the act of getting it out.And, the person it’s about. The words came out in minutes. It was no labor in writing.Some songs just come out on their own. All we did is write them down…

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Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: Pop Matters

by Baby Robot Media

Sir Canyon Heads For the West Coast on “Ventura Skies” (premiere)

Sir Canyon
Sir Canyon

Better known as Sir Canyon, Los Angeles artist Noah Lamberth offers his alternative take on country music with more of a psychedelic twist than most. Accentuated by radiant pedal steel, shimmering vocal reverb, and a steady, dreamy vibe from beginning to end, the Americana presented in “Ventura Skies” could rightly be labeled as a sort of “cosmic country”. It’s all about kicking back and realizing one’s dream to move out to California shores for a life of relaxation, and Lamberth’s way of delivering the song sells it with the seemingly effortless confidence that one would come to expect of a songwriter of his caliber.

Landing on the “Sir Canyon” moniker purely because it “sounded cool”, Lamberth captures the ethereal California lifestyle depicted in “Ventura Skies” to a tee. It wasn’t always clear skies for Lamberth, who only settled on developing this unusual yet homey style of re-working roots music following a romantic breakup and the loss of his father to cancer. With “Ventura Skies” and its incoming album of the same name (2 March), Lamberth is setting out to renew himself and start fresh with a new and exciting musical pathway that’s past his years of joining a band and sharing stages with the likes of Willie Nelson, Brad Paisley, and Katy Perry. With Sir Canyon, Lamberth owns something that’s all his own.

What is “Ventura Skies” about?
The song is more about an idea rather than talking about a place. It’s about moving forward, heading West and starting over again. I used to live above Ventura Blvd and a lot of life happened in that house, mostly good memories but life evolves and we move on. We used to have the best sunsets up there and the skies always looked so amazing as you looked West to the ocean over Ventura Blvd and Ventura the city was about an hour away…

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Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: Pop Matters

by Baby Robot Media

Kellen of Troy Issues a “Posthumous Release (In Lieu of Flowers)” (premiere)

Kellen of Troy
Kellen of Troy

Kellen Wenrich was five-years-old when he first picked up the violin as his instrument of choice. Since those early formative moments, he’s found international acclaim as an integral part of Apache Relay. Though that band has since dissolved, Wenrich’s musical journey continues with a project of his own, Kellen of Troy. His debut full-length, Posthumous Release, is coming out on 16 February. Prior, however, his newest, vibrant folk-rock is first finding a home at PopMatters in the form of the album’s titular single.

“Posthumous Release (In Lieu of any Flowers) is about somebody that I used to know,” Wenrich tells PopMatters. “Life happens and people grow apart; specifics beyond that aren’t really important to me anymore. I’m sure whatever you discern about the tune is somewhat accurate to what the song’s about.”

“Jimmie Haskell was a huge influence on the strings and horns chart I wrote for this tune. In case you don’t know who that is, Jimmie was a prolific composer and arranger who, most notably to me, did some if not all of the arrangements on ‘Bridge Over Troubled Water’. He also worked with Elvis, the Everly Brothers, and countless others.The chamber music instruments you hear on this song are admittedly my best attempt at copping his style; obviously, my charts fall far short of his, but I hope the influence is apparent.”

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Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: Pop Matters

by Baby Robot Media

Ross Cooper – “Lady of the Highway” (audio) (premiere)

Ross Cooper
Ross Cooper

Behind every great country artist is a song about hitting the road. Johnny Cash has “I’ve Been Everywhere”, Merle Haggard has “White Line Fever”, and, of course, Willie Nelson has “On the Road Again” under his hat. In a sense, Nashville’s Ross Cooper is following tradition with “Lady of the Highway”. Meanwhile, the cowboy-turned-music artist is carving his path forward on the Americana circuit.

Sonically, Cooper doesn’t ramble like Cash’s road anthem, nor does he really intend to soar like Willie Nelson. He doesn’t quite trudge through the swamps either. “Lady of the Highway” is a brisk, but mellow and an emotional, but comforting tune with a heart all its own. Cooper shows his storyteller’s chops off on the track here beside his ability to front a band. It’s no wonder why many are pegging him as one of the top dogs in Nashville to look out for these days.

It doesn’t hurt that the song was produced brilliantly by Nashville icon Eric Masse (Miranda Lambert, Rayland Baxter), either. Additionally, it’s a co-write with Jordan Lehning and Andrew Combs, both of whom have been known for prolific contributions to the Americana circle themselves throughout the years. The premiere of “Lady of the Highway” predates the release of Cooper’s upcoming album, I Rode the Wild Horses, coming 9 March 2018.

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Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: Pop Matters

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