Music Genre

Alas de Liona – Pages (Video)

Categories: Pop, The Latest, Video|Tags: , , , , |

“Very sensual and thoroughly thought-out composition, with excellent harmony and deep leading vocal performer. Very beautiful, emotional and sometimes discreet work.”

“Детально продуманная композиция, очень чувственная, с отличной гармонией и глубоким лидирующим вокалом исполнительницы. Работа эмоциональная, местами сдержанная и очень красивая.”

-Nagamag.com

Pages is song 4 from Radio Astronomy EP which Alas describes as a bittersweet, ‘leaving on a jet plane’ type song, lyrics are pretty straightforward romantic, with a kind of corny, lite-philosophical moment.

www.alasdeliona.com

Alas de Liona hails from a small town in the Mojave Desert and her final year at UC Santa Barbara saw her head to Edinburgh in Autumn 2019, to complete the course there.

Having originally studied religious history and folklore at college, she had an instant affinity with the city’s striking architecture and artistic lineage.

During her stay, her main passion for songwriting and performing saw her starting to make a name for herself performing in Edinburgh pubs before the pandemic closed all venues.

Her haunting vocals, often compared to the likes of Joni Mitchell and Phoebe Bridgers, are woven through lyrically complex, rich imaginal soundscapes.

Finally, free from the rigour of academia, Alas is now fulfilling her musical aspirations, recording Radio Astronomy EP in December 2020 with producer Rod Jones (Idlewild) at Post Electric Studios, Leith, Edinburgh.

Cascade is the third track released from her Radio Astronomy EP. The song is about loss and dwelling in a painful memory. The video marks her debut as writer and director.

https://www.instagram.com/alasdeliona/

Derek Eisel – Easy (Spotify)

Categories: Audio, Rock, The Latest|Tags: , , , , |

“First impressions are that of a well performed, timeless classic country record that you may have heard before? Then upon closer inspection, you will discover that the narrative deals with an issue seldom discussed openly. The bitter-sweet relationship between two young men, set against an idyllic backdrop that sometimes may not feel like home sweet home.”

-Nagamag.com

Several years ago, Derek Eisel left Seattle to make his home on an island off the coast of Washington, where the farmlands are lush and the community of a mere 2000 brims with music and homemade tortillas.

Though Eisel’s debut EP, Last Resort Fire Department, is born of a man who recognizes the beauty of his life, it also explores the balance between what can be considered heaven and, of course, its counterpoint. The beauty around him becomes a backdrop as Eisel explores the emotions that unfold between two men, and the challenges and sweet reward that sometimes simultaneously exist within a relationship.

“I’m trying to share an honest point of view and not make anything up. In all the songs there’s nothing fake in terms of what they’re about and how I feel,” Eisel says of his music, a quality that allows him to paint portraits of relationships that feel immensely human. Eisel holds together at the same time the joys of being married to his husband, the pleasure of former lovers and the lived possibility that relationships can fall apart or reconfigure with little warning.

“The songs explore a feeling of ‘I want to be in this, but I also don’t want to be in this at the exact same time.’ To me, that’s a lot more accurate to how a lot of relationships feel.”

Last Resort Fire Department articulates this truth with elegance. Arresting and earnest, Eisel’s voice soars over a lush blend of guitars, strings, and pedal steel that paint something of an americana Eden, an echo of the lovely place Eisel calls home. It is fitting that this serves as the backdrop for the tumult that Eisel unfurls within his lyrics. The songs feel timeless, like classic country songs from some familiar past. Upon closer listen, however, they crackle with the brilliance of a story seldom told.

The forthcoming EP was produced, recorded, and mixed by Johnny Sangster (Mudhoney, Neko Case, Mark Lanegan) at Crackle & Pop! Studios in Seattle, WA. In addition to Eisel and Sangster, it features Dan Walker (Heart), Andrew Joslyn (Courtney Marie Andrews, David Bazan), Bill Patton (Fleet Foxes), Rick Krejci, Rick Wever, and Jim Sangster.

https://www.facebook.com/derek.eisel
https://www.instagram.com/derekeisel/

Dennis Ellsworth – Rainy Slope (Spotify)

Categories: Audio, Pop, The Latest|Tags: , , , , |

“Soft vocals, guitar, scorching bass and drums. Such a modest bouquet of instruments sounds very solid and one-sided. Strong song with excellent performance.”

“Мягкий вокал, гитара, обжигающий бас и ударные. Такой скромный букет инструментов звучит очень цельно и однопланово. Крепкий материал и прекрасное исполнение.”

-Nagamag.com

Dennis Ellsworth closes the loop on landmark Bound By Love Series, with Wolves Not Far, sharing ten portraits of fatherhood and life amid the struggle to find peace in this world.

“The future is grim on this one,” said Ellsworth (he/him). “Wolves Not Far has a few tributes on it, but largely deals with troubles and threats. The reality is that I strive to cast positive light onto the messy world, which all feels like a confusing dream right now. Darkness comes at the close of each day, but the light returns if we nurture our world and ourselves within it.”

“Let’s see how long it takes until it’s too late / let’s see how long it goes,” the songwriter muses on focus track, “Rainy Slope,” which mourns a lack of political leadership and accountability. “Thought you knew it all but I guess you don’t / and now you’re hanging on to a rainy slope.”

Inspired by graffiti Ellsworth would pass on morning walks with his daughter Esme, Wolves Not Far balances a fear of the unknown (“Dusk Over Everything” & “Wolves Not Far”) and human selfishness (“Cut Corners” & “Rainy Slope”) with expressions of devotion (“Sweet You” & “Honey Sky”) and tributes to heroes near and far (“DH Money” & “What’s Left?”).

Wolves Not Far marks the third and final installment in Ellsworth’s Bound By Love Series, which reconsiders the status quo of how artists release music, while sharing a staggering 32 new songs across 3 albums and 3 EPs.

“Bandcamp has gone above and beyond for artists during this precarious time, and as such, the full length albums will only be available there, in CD, LP, and digital formats,” said Ellsworth. “That said, streaming fans shouldn’t feel left out. As a companion to each full length album release on Bandcamp, we’ll be releasing a sampler EP to streaming services. If you want to hear and support the full project, you know where to find it. Everybody wins."

https://www.dennisellsworth.com/
https://dennisellsworth.bandcamp.com/
https://www.instagram.com/dennis_ellsworth/
https://www.facebook.com/chesterfielddweller/

Christopher Paul Stelling – Die to Know (Spotify)

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“The singing tones of an intricately picked & gorgeous sounding acoustic guitar takes one back to the days when it was such a prominent instrument in folk & country music. A perfect accompaniment to the dulcet, slightly weathered, yet exceptionally mellow tones of Christopher’s vocal,. Die To Know is in a word compelling.”

-Nagamag.com

Christopher Paul Stelling new (sixth!) album - Forgiving It All- is out now, along with the release of its gorgeous lead single, "Die To Know we blog here on Nagamag.

https://christopherpaulstelling.bandcamp.com
https://www.instagram.com/c_p_stelling

Even before 2020 slid historically off the rails, Christopher Paul Stelling confronted an essential exercise in acceptance and gratitude. In December 2019, Stelling started another cross-country sprint from California to Florida, where the songwriter who has long called western North Carolina home was raised. Aside from recording his fifth album, Best of Luck, he had toured much of that year, making relentless laps around North America. He wanted to make it home not only for Christmas but also to see Emma, his 92-year-old grandmother. He didn’t; she passed just days before he arrived. Recorded alone in her modest white ranch house in Daytona Beach, Forgiving It All — Stelling’s wisest, most intimate, and most settled record yet, and his first self-released LP in eight years — feels like a final tribute to her and to everything he and we have lost or gained.

Last year seemed to brim with transformational potential for Stelling. For the better part of a decade, he had been a feverish and itinerant troubadour, spilling guts and blood and sweat in soul-scraping solo sets. He’d lived up the lifestyle, too, hydrating for the stage with booze. But at the end of 2017, he’d gone sober after recognizing that chunks of his life had disappeared. Recorded a year later, Best of Luck — his third album for Anti- and the first he’d cut with a producer, Ben Harper — seemed poised to push him to new audiences, its mix of wistful acoustic ballads and stomp-around-the-room rock somehow both polished and primal. The shows were piling up, so much so that Stelling planned to have barely one day off in all of 2020.

And then, of course, all that was scrapped. The news closed in around him as he toured north along the West Coast. He turned east and got as far as Colorado, then had a panic attack in a Kansas truck stop, wrestling with existential and professional despair as the world wobbled on its axis. Stelling came home and, like many of us, worked to shape a new routine in a world that was instantly alien. So for the first time in years, he spent days on end with his partner, Julia, and their bounding young dog, Ida. He hiked, read, and watched endless television to placate overwhelming anxiety as best he could. Having fulfilled his label contract (and convinced he didn’t want a new one, anyway), Stelling launched a crowdfunding campaign, asking if fans felt compelled to invest in his songs. They said yes — he sold more records in those first 48 hours than he’d ever sold in advance before.

Stelling began at last to unpack a decade into which he had packed so much. What had music taught him that life had not, and vice versa? What did he have to sing about all that he had seen? The spellbinding 10 tracks of Forgiving It All represent the profound distillates of that reflection. Committed to tape in Emma’s home a year after Stelling cut his intended never-ending tour short, these songs are the lessons of a once-wild kid looking at (not quite) 40, expressing acceptance for the struggles and joys of life and singing out his gratitude for still being here. Opener “Die To Know” is a tender ode to innocence, a remembrance of simple joy and sincerity before experience and age dulled our enthusiasms. “Wildfire,” which moves with the ineffable grace of ripples on some idyllic pond, stares down accreted adult fears and begs for the mercy of rebirth.

“WWYLLYD” presents an exercise in radical empathy, apt for our universally troubled times. “Remember, everyone is suffering/not just you,” Stelling pleas over strummed chords that rush like blood. The title is an acronym for “When What You Love Lets You Down.” We’re all starving artists, it suggests, but that’s what keeps us going, interested, and, if we’re lucky, alive.

To some extent, these songs are about letting yourself off the hook, about accepting your imperfections even as you deal with them. But title track “Forgiving It All,” as mesmerizing and motivational as a religious mantra, admits that we don’t bear responsibility for all of our baggage, that others have played a part. If we’re going to reckon with ourselves, Stelling says, we have to encourage others to do the same, to share in this catharsis. “Let the doubtful confide in you,” he sings near the start, opening what may feel like the most candid therapy session you’ve ever encountered. Stelling — truth be told, a marquee fingerpicker who’s never been content to make purely wordless music — pauses for the gorgeous instrumental “For Your Drive,” then ends with a hymn of his own, “They’ll All Proclaim.” It is a gracious, gorgeous aubade for what comes after — tomorrow, post-pandemic, whenever.

We will wrestle for our lifetimes with what happened in 2020 and what may follow. Forgiving It All is an instinctual and honest response to trying to make the best of it: sorting through the past and using the present to prepare for an unwritten future. These songs remind us we’re lucky to be here, no matter what or who it is we have to forgive.

- Grayson Currin

Tom Moriarty – Hurricane (Spotify)

Categories: Audio, Rock, The Latest|Tags: , , , |

“Drawn by deep and recognizable elements of rock art, multifaceted arrangement, elegant and lively acoustic guitar. Lulling romantic image, a mirage uncontrollable vortex of fire and elegant dance sound modulations.”

“Глубоко прочерченные и узнаваемые элементы арт-рока, многогранная аранжировка, изящная и живая акустическая гитара. Убаюкивающие романтическими образы, мираж неконтролируемых вихрей огня и изящный танец звуковых переливов.”

-Nagamag.com

Artist shared with Nagamag his story behind this song inspiration:

" To be honest I wrote this song about a homeless girl. It's not one I know but it's her story. When I wrote this song I saw her, going from place to place, the arguments, the sorrow. There are those that can not see how people can become homeless, that sometimes there are people that will have no where to go. We are all closer than we like to think. I found this photo below that to me represented that girl. She's trying to make things better but really she's on the run. Sometimes she's running from people and other times she's running from things in the past, things within her. It's often that people might not see the reasons, or know how to deal with them. So I write this line "You've been running for so long, but do you really know what you're running from". For me homelessness in the 21st century is totally unacceptable. People are so prejudice. I met this person once who honestly said, "homeless people want to be homelesss". And I'm like what the fuck. The point is that when you have people like that in power then you have people like this homeless girl on the streets. Things gotta change. Anyway, here's the song about her called "Hurricane.

- Tom Moriarty
https://www.instagram.com/thetommoriarty/

Aaron Davison x MJ Malone – Oh, My Love (Video)

Categories: Rock, The Latest, Video|Tags: , , , , , |

“Intentionally reminiscent of the classic Beatles mellow harmonies ‘Oh My Love’ does a pretty good job of capturing the late 60’s early 70’s sound.. Aaron Davison and MJ Malone certainly reproducing the mood in this catchy rendition. Nostalgia in abundance.”

-Nagamag.com

“Oh, My Love” is the latest release from Aaron Davison and MJ Malone. Aaron & MJ have decided to pull out all the promotional stops for his latest release. In an effort to reach 1 million streams on both Spotify and Youtube, Aaron & MJ have created a dedicated website (ohmylovesong.com), where they’ll be documenting a variety of unique and outright outrageous marketing techniques they’ll be using to promote their latest release on Spotify and Youtube. “Oh, My Love” was also recently signed to North Note, a London based sync licensing agency who represents Aaron and MJ’s music for use in TV & Films.

https://www.aarondavison.net/

Alas de Liona – Cascade (Video)

Categories: Rock, The Latest, Video|Tags: , , , |

“How many different pictures apear in the mind while listening “Cascade”? This song has the power to turn a new page in your sound vision! Find out the vast singing talent of “Alas de Liona” and will never forget this moment.”

-Nagamag.com

Alas de Liona is a singer/songwriter from the Californian desert, making music in Edinburgh, Scotland.

Radio Astronomy is an EP of 5 original songs – inspired by ‘Twinkle Twinkle Little Star’, it is a collection of space lullabies and cosmic folktales.

Cascade is the third track released from Alas de Liona’s Radio Astronomy EP.

The song is about loss and dwelling in a painful memory,

The video marks her debut as writer and director.

Website: http://alasdeliona.com​​
Instagram: http://instagram.com/alasdeliona​
Tiktok: http://www.tiktok.com/@alasdeliona​
Facebook: http://facebook.com/alasdeliona

Paul Cafcae – Downtown (Spotify)

Categories: Audio, Rock, The Latest|Tags: , , |

“-Downtown- is a competent combination of elements of Native American genres. Traditional country music, a bit of folk and rock, a definite hit from -Paul Cafcae-, which brought together the best creative and musical quality.”

“-Downtown- грамотное сочетание элементов исконно американских жанров. Традиционная country музыка, немного folk и rock и перед нами однозначный хит от -Paul Cafcae-, который собрал воедино лучшие творческие и музыкальные качества.”

-Nagamag.com

Sometimes you just need a jam song — a song that gets the feet moving and gets you lost in the groove. That's "Downtown," by Paul Cafcae. It's got a country two-step feel but quickly whisks you away in blues appreciation with its many licks, head-bopping lyrics, and a harmonica solo by Venezuelan, Hector Alexander, that can cut glass.

It's the kind of track that makes you miss live music and would fit nicely in a dimly-lit, underground blues bar that you happen to stumble upon in the middle of the night. And that's kind of the point of the song; making light of the cultural differences of the big city big wig people—the yuppies—and the rest of the world who grooves in the fringer parts of society. The hole in the wall establishments full of energy, art, and a DIY attitude.

This thought is sealed with Cafcae's lyric "do this dirty, dirty, thing playing blues all the night." Immediately after comes a sensational 12 bar blues solo and then Hector's brief moment in the spotlight. Cafcae will probably get back to playing blues all night once the pandemic lifts.

"It's a slightly satirical song," says Paul Cafcae.

https://www.paulcafcae.com/

David Omlor – Ghosts in Oklahoma (Spotify)

Categories: Audio, Rock, The Latest|Tags: , , , , |

“In this track David recounts the injustice dealt to Native Americans on the infamous ‘Trail Of Tears’ & all in the name of progress. The short intro sets the mood for the clear, melodic & slightly gritty vocal. The tasteful guitar adds a touch of melancholy that sits perfectly with the other instruments to create a sorrowful atmosphere for the thought provoking narrative.”

-Nagamag.com

Acoustic song about the trail of tears.
https://open.spotify.com/artist/2M5qfWXOwj7wysYePv8ca9

Katie Jo – Pawn Shop Queen (Spotify)

Categories: Audio, Rock, The Latest|Tags: , , |

“The forthcoming single from Katie Jo was inspired by major difficulties and negative feelings from life such as rejection, isolation and depression. The artist's message is clear; We should never give up trying and fighting for the best. A beautiful Americana song with outstanding and elegant singing voice.”

-Nagamag.com

American Songwriter recently praised Katie Jo's "expressive storytelling," calling her music "dreamy, nostalgic and infectiously genuine." Her latest single "Pawn Shop Queen"—the title track from her forthcoming debut LP, out April 9—just premiered at top country / Americana site TheBoot.com. The song is an empowering Americana anthem about having your heart broken, being mistreated and cast aside, and questioning your own self worth before finally having an epiphany and coming to truly value and respect yourself and everything you have to offer the world.

https://katiejomusic.bandcamp.com/

Katie Jo is gearing up to release her debut album, Pawn Shop Queen, on April 9th. While she’s a relative newcomer to the scene, she makes up for it in life experience. You can hear it in her voice—sweet yet road-weary, a contemporary torchbearer for classic country stars like Patsy Cline, Loretta Lynn and Tammy Wynette. Her lyrics tell the tale of a woman who’s had her heart broken more than once but still stands strong.

Pawn Shop Queen tackles themes at the dark heart of country music: infidelity, religion, depression. But what sets Katie Jo apart is her ability to tackle taboo subjects like infertility and abortion with honesty and rawness. The catalyst for her new record came four years ago while she was going through a trying period in her personal life.

“When I was 26.” Katie Jo explains, “I was diagnosed with a condition called a bicornuate uterus, which means my uterus didn't form properly. My doctor told me out of the blue, and it was a shock. At the time, a lot of my friends were starting to think about having kids, and I’d always assumed I’d go down that path, too. Then I got this news, but the doctor didn't really give me a lot of information, just kind of brushed it aside and was very dismissive of my questions about how it would impact my life. When you're a young woman, just a woman in general, a lot of times when you try to get medical advice, you're either dismissed or people don't explain all the things that can go wrong.”

https://www.instagram.com/katiejomusic

Eventually, despite her diagnosis, Katie Jo unexpectedly became pregnant. To make matters worse, her long-term relationship was in shambles. “I knew I didn't want to be pregnant. I already knew something was wrong with me, and I just did not want to go through that experience. I wasn't ready to be a mother. I knew I couldn’t go back to the same doctor, so I called Planned Parenthood, and I asked, what does it mean to terminate a pregnancy? What does that look like? It was a very hard phone call to make.”

After an exam with Planned Parenthood, Katie Jo received pills to induce an abortion, an extremely painful process she went through completely alone on July 4th. From there, things got even more complicated. When she returned for her follow-up, she learned that because of her condition she required surgery to complete the abortion. After two failed attempts, she was rushed into an emergency surgery. Despite the fact that the abortion was both medically necessary and extremely risky—a pregnancy in her uterine horn could have resulted in her death—Katie Jo told no one.

“It was a very traumatic, life-altering thing to go through alone. For five or six years, I just kept it to myself and fell into deep depression. All of my friends were starting to get married and have kids while I was forced down this alternate path I didn't quite understand. It really destroyed my emotional fortitude.”

The isolation sparked Katie Jo’s songwriting. She came up with the songs for Pawn Shop Queen alone in her bedroom, and before long started performing them live with a backing band. It became a coping mechanism. “It was a way I could work through things,” she says.

On top of the unplanned pregnancy and resulting medical emergency, Katie Jo also had to deal with a breakup. “I really freaked out,” she says. “It was like, I'm 26, 27, and I'm mad now. I am broken. Like, I don't want to be me, you know? But then I met someone very shortly after this experience, and I just fell head over heels.”

Thinking she’d found someone with whom she could finally be vulnerable, Katie Jo poured her heart out about the hellish months leading up to the new relationship. But when she caught this person cheating on her, she quickly slipped back into an even deeper depression. Music eventually pulled her out.

“I was in a really low place for a lot of years. But once I started writing and performing, it was an escape from this pit of despair I was hiding in. The songs for Pawn Shop Queen came out of that period. While it’s not a black & white diary entry of the events, the record really encapsulates cynicism and emotional isolation.”

The title track on the new record is one of those songs that just came pouring out. “It's about what it feels like when you think the love you’re experiencing is this precious and valuable thing, but then the other person just sort of casts you aside. You still want to be loved and cherished, like you have something to offer. You’re trying to retain your own happiness and self-worth, even in the midst of heartbreak and pain.”

Before heartbreak hit, Katie Jo was cutting her teeth picking banjo on the bluegrass scene. As she evolved down the path toward country and Americana, she discovered a warm and supportive music scene in her adopted hometown of Los Angeles. Like country rebel Dwight Yoakam, Katie Jo has made a name for herself playing unconventional venues like punk clubs and even boxing gyms (in between picking songs, Katie Jo is also an avid student of boxing and martial arts). Having whipped her songs into shape in front of a variety of audiences, an album was the next logical step.

For Pawn Shop Queen, Katie Jo worked with Chris Schlarb at Big Ego Studios in Long Beach. She met Schlarb through her pedal steel player, session musician George Madrid. Schlarb assembled an impressive cast to play on the record, which was tracked live in just three days.

“One thing I appreciated about working with Chris was that decisions were made very quickly,” Katie Jo says. It wasn't laborious, there’s no Autotune, and we didn’t tweak every little last thing. It's very much just, ‘Here’s the performance, how do we best bring out what is here naturally?’ The process was really just to trust the people in the room to do good work. When you get the right people together, it can happen pretty quickly.”

Katie Jo’s plans to debut and tour the record last year were delayed by COVID-19, but she’s pushing ahead as best as she can. “Even if touring isn’t really possible right now, it’s time to get this record and these new music videos out into the world.”

With Pawn Shop Queen, Katie Jo shakes up traditional expectations of what a female country artist can and should sing about. Not only does the record challenge stigmas, it’s the sound of a promising young songwriter coming into her own, taking some of life’s most daunting and painful struggles and turning them into something beautiful.

https://www.facebook.com/katiejocountrymusic

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