moe. is celebrating its milestone 30thĀ anniversary year with the release of their long awaited new album ā the groundbreaking jam bandās first studio LP in more than six years. THIS IS NOT, WE ARE arrives at all DSPs and streaming services on Friday, June 26 and will see a physical release later in the year.
THIS IS NOT, WE ARE ā which marks the 12thĀ studio album from moe. and first since 2014ās acclaimed NO GUTS, NO GLORY ā includes eight new songs written by members Chuck Garvey, Alan Schnier, Rob Derhak, Jim Loughlin, and Vinnie Amico, most of which have been fine-tuned over the past two years while the band has spent time on the road. In addition, THIS IS NOT, WE ARE features one song making its first appearance anywhere, the Garvey-penned āUndertone.ā
āWe kind of went back to our roots a bit,ā Derhak says. āWe just wanted to do something that made us feel inspired like we had felt when the band first started. But it also has everything that weāve picked up along the way, all the good baggage ā and maybe some of the bad ā that weāve dragged along for the past thirty years.ā
Hailed byĀ American SongwriterĀ for their āmind-bending musicality,ā moe. is undoubtedly among our most vital and inspired bands, treasured for their mesmerizing musical synergy, expansive showmanship, and resonant songcraft. Since coming together in Buffalo, NY, the band has embarked on a truly original journey that has now spanned three decades, encompassing a remarkably wide-ranging discography rich with crafty, clever songwriting and genre-blurring creativity.
Chart topping musician, vocalist and songwriterĀ Lindsay EllĀ today announces her highly-anticipated sophomore albumĀ heart theory,Ā out August 14. The albumās pre-order launches tonight with the trackĀ āwAnt me backā which was co-written with Kane Brown, Matt McGinn & Lindsay Rimes and premieres at 23:00 British Summer Time / 5pm Central Daylight Time on BBC Radio.
With fans clamoring for new music from her āĀ heart theoryĀ marks Ellās first new original album in three years ā she captivated them with a digital scavenger hunt this week, teasing the big news across social platforms before revealing album details on TikTok.
heart theoryĀ is an incredibly personal concept album comprised of 12 tracks that journey through each stage of grief: shock, denial, anger, bargaining, depression, testing, and acceptance. Ell co-wrote 11 of the songs, enlisting help from acclaimed writers & artists including Tyler Hubbard of Florida Georgia Line and Brandy Clark among others on the project.
WhileĀ heart theoryĀ stemmed from Ellās personal experience, its arc serves as a source of solace for the universal process of experiencing any type of hardship.
āIf theory is the science of music, heart theory is the science of a heart,ā Ell says of the record. āI hope this roadmap can be a comfort if you need it, reassurance when you need to remember to believe in yourself or maybe just a glimpse into a memory thatās made you who you are.ā
The concept ofĀ heart theoryĀ extends to every aspect of the album ā its cover art features the spectrum of corresponding colors to each stage, mirroring the musicās movement itself from dark to light, while its tracklist subtly reveals the album title through use of seemingly random capitalization.
Due to quarantine, Ell completedĀ heart theoryĀ with legendary producer Dann Huff from a distance and two different locations. Ell takes the unique challenge posed by the pandemic to almost every element of album completion in stride: āIf my last record was calledĀ The Project, this could be calledĀ The Process.ā
The ProjectĀ ā Ellās first full-length album ā debuted at No. 1 on the Country Album Sales Chart and was named Billboardās Best Country Album of 2017.
Ell will co-host CMA Summer Stay-Cay special on July 1 with BBR Music Group label mate Jimmie Allen. She recently marked her first No. 1 at U.S. Country radio with her Brantley Gilbert duet āWhat Happens In A Small Town.ā Ell has amassed more than 123 million on demand streams to date and is currently nominated for two 2020 ACM awards ā New Female Artist of the Year & Vocal Event of the Year.
Old 97āsā, the iconic alt-country outfit fronted by āRhett Millerā, is returning with their twelfth album, the aptly titled āTwelfth,ā to be released on āAugust 21 āon ATO Records. Twenty-seven years in, Old 97ās still features its original lineup ā Miller, guitarist āKen Betheaā, bassist Murry Hammondā, and drummer āPhilip Peeples ā and āTwelfth is a testament to the bandās staying power. The albumās cover image of former Dallas Cowboys quarterback āRoger Staubach is both an homage to Millerās childhood hero and a recognition that, in making their livings as musicians, the 97ās themselves have achieved their lifelong dreams.
In an interview with āRolling Stoneā, Miller talks about how his five-year sobriety influenced the new album, saying, āāGoing back in, I thought, āWhat if I donāt bring anything to the table? What if Iām like Samson and the whiskey was my long hair and I cut it off and canāt write songs anymore?ā⦠But [āTwelfthā] was the first record where, top to bottom, I felt I was back in the driverās seat, found my voice, and came out the other side. It feels good.ā
The band shares āTwelfthāās first single āTurn Off The TVā today alongside a video directed by āLiam Lynch that features Puddles the Clown as well as footage of the band throughout their career.ā āWatch the video below.
Old 97ās ā āTwelfth
August 21, 2020 ā ATO Records 1. The Dropouts
2. This House Got Ghosts
3. Turn Off The TV
4. I Like You Better
5. Happy Hour
6. Belmont Hotel
7. Confessional Boxing
8. Diamonds on Neptune
9. Our Year
10. Bottle Rocket Baby
11. Absence (What Weāve Got)
12. Why Donāt We Ever Say Weāre Sorry
āSomehow what weāve got never breaks down,ā Rhett Miller sings on Old 97ās exhilarating new album, āTwelfth.ā At first, the line comes off as a boast, as a declaration of invincibility from a band thatās managed to survive three decades of rock and roll debauchery, but as the phrase repeats over and over again, it slowly transforms into something more incredulous, something more vulnerable, something deeply human.
āWe experienced some close calls over the last few years,ā says Miller, āand I think that led us to this dawning realization of the fragility of it all. At the same time, it also led us to this increased gratitude for the music and the brotherhood weāve been so lucky to share. I think all of that combined to make recording this album one of the most intensely joyful experiences weāve ever had as a band.ā
That joy is utterly palpable on āTwelfthā. Loose and raw, the record is an ecstatic celebration of survival, a resounding ode to endurance and resilience from a veteran group that refuses to rest on their considerable laurels. Working out of Sputnik Sound in Nashville, Miller and his longtime bandmatesābassist Murry Hammond, guitarist Ken Bethea, and drummer Philip Peeplesāteamed up once again with GRAMMY-winning producer Vance Powell (Chris Stapleton, Jack White), and while the resulting album boasts all the hallmarks of a classic Old 97ās record (sex and booze, laughter and tears, poetry and blasphemy), it also showcases a newfound perspective in its writing and craftsmanship, a maturity and appreciation that can only come with age and experience. Perhaps the band is growing up; maybe theyāre just getting started. Either way, Old 97ās have never been happier to be alive.
āYou have to take pride in the unlikeliness of it all,ā says Miller. āItās mind boggling to think that weāve been able to last this long, that weāve been able to support ourselves and our families on our own terms for almost thirty years. Twelve is āa lotā of records.ā
Formed in Dallas, Texas, Old 97ās first emerged in the early ā90s with an adrenaline pumping blend of rock and roll swagger, punk snarl, and old-school twang that quickly brought them into the national spotlight. Conventional wisdom places the band at the forefront of a musical movement that would come to be known as āalternative country,ā but, as the āNew York Times so succinctly put it, their sound always āleaned more toward the Clash than the Carter Family.ā Fueled by breakneck tempos, distorted guitars, and wry storytelling, the foursome built a reputation for high-energy albums and even higher energy shows, earning themselves performances everywhere from āConan and Letterman to Bonnaroo and Lollapalooza āalongside countless rave reviews. āNPR lauded the group as a āpioneering force,ā while āRolling Stone hailed their musicās āwhiskey-wrecked nihilism and slow-burn heartbreak,ā and āThe New Yorker praised their songwriting as āblistered, blasted, and brilliant.ā On top of his prodigious output with Old 97ās, Miller simultaneously established himself as a prolific solo artist, as well, releasing eight studio albums under his own name that garnered similarly wide-ranging acclaim and landed in a slew of prominent film and television soundtracks. A gifted writer beyond his music, Miller also contributed essays and short stories to āThe Atlantic,
Salon,ā āMcSweeneyāsā, and āSports Illustrated among others, and in 2019, he released his debut book, a collection of poetry for children, via Little, Brown and Company.
While part of Old 97ās charm has always been the air of playful invulnerability they exude onstage every night, reality began catching up with the band in 2017. The night before a television appearance in support of the groupās most recent album, āGraveyard Whistling,ā Peeples collapsed in a hotel parking lot, falling backwards and cracking his skull on a concrete abutment. He spent weeks in the ICU and was forced to miss the first leg of tour. Bethea, meanwhile, began to notice a loss of feeling in the fingers of his right hand. As his condition continued to deteriorate on the road, the numbness spread to his leg, and he was eventually forced to undergo spinal surgery in order to regain full motor control. Miller, for his part, found himself at more of an existential crossroads, questioning attitudes and behaviors heād long taken for granted. Yes, he was a rock and roll star (whatever that means nowadays), but he was also a father and a husband, and he decided it was long since time to get sober.
āBack when we were in our 20ās, we put ourselves through these terrible trials because we thought we could survive anything,ā says Miller. āBut over the last few years, it started becoming clear that weāre human.ā
Rather than slow things down, the band decided to embrace their mortality as all the more reason to seize the day. Life is shortāa lesson that was hammered home on the groupās first day of recording in Nashville, when a series of deadly tornadoes ripped through townāand āTwelfth is the sound of Old 97ās recommitting themselves to making the most of every moment theyāve got left. Addictive opener āThe Dropoutsā sets the stage, taking stock of the bandās journey from its very first days, when they cut their teeth playing the bars of Deep Ellum in exchange for pitchers of beer and pizza. Like much of the record to come, itās a nostalgic look back on simpler times, but it smartly avoids looking at the past through rose-colored glasses, instead recognizing that change is neither inherently good nor bad, only inevitable.
āThereās a line about sleeping on hardwood floors in that song,ā says Miller, āand thatās what we did in the early days. But that image of hardwood floors keeps coming back and building on itself in different songs throughout the album, and over time it begins to mean different things as we grow up and start families and own homes.ā
Miller has a knack for capturing those sorts of little details that tell a larger story, for crafting richly cinematic scenes that transform seemingly mundane moments into metaphors for life itself. The driving lead single āTurn Off The TV,ā for instance, spins a
free cable hookup into a celebration of the visceral pleasures of living in the present, while the larger-than-life āDiamonds On Neptuneā turns an astronomical phenomenon into a meditation on what really matters, and the waltzing āBelmont Hotelā finds emotional symbolism in the restoration of a Dallas landmark.
āāBelmont Hotelā is a microcosm of the album, and of our band,ā says Miller. āWhen we first started out, the Belmont was in absolute ruins, and we even did a photoshoot in the empty parking lot. Now, though, itās more beautiful than it was in its glory days, and that got me thinking about the way we approach our relationships. Whether itās a friendship or a marriage or a band, itās inevitable that youāre going to go through ups and downs, but if youāre willing to put in the work and stick out the hard times, you can wind up with something thatās better than it ever was before.ā
While Miller collaborated with writers like Butch Walker and Nicole Atkins on Graveyard Whistling,ā he penned everything on āTwelfth himself (outside of the Spaghetti Western-esque āHappy Hourā and hypnotic album closer āWhy Donāt We Ever Say Weāre Sorry,ā which were both written and sung by Hammond). Itās a return to form he credits in part to his increasing comfort with sobriety, a comfort that finds him effortlessly running the gamut from playful romance (the dreamy āI Like You Betterā) and brash bravado (the blistering āConfessional Boxingā) to supernatural fantasy (the Kinks-ian āThis House Got Ghostsā) and old-school twang (the rollicking āBottle Rocket Babyā). Itās perhaps the jaunty āAbsence (What Weāve Got)ā that captures this particular moment in Old 97ās history best, though, as Miller marvels at the way things change while staying the same. āThe wine turns into whiskey / And the whiskey turns to tears / Itās been this way for years,ā he sings, later summing the whole magic act up with a deceptively simple confession: āThis is what I do.ā
Old 97ās may be human, but somehow what theyāve got never breaks down.
Hundreds of concert venues, booking agencies, independent promoters/presenters, production companies, and independent music festivals from across Canada have come together, donating thousands of hours of their time and immeasurable resources to launch the #SupportCanadianVenues movement as the Canadian Independent Venue Coalition. The movement is asking for decisive government support for independent concert venues, for which the COVID-19 pandemic has amplified an important and systemic financial fragility. The movement is Canada-wide and covers countless spaces that together define Canadian culture.
Recent industry research indicates that 96% of the independent music industry across Canada, including over 90% of independent venues, will disappear in a matter of months in the absence of a very significant financial aid package. CIVC is asking the federal government to commit substantial emergency funding and an economic stimulus plan for
the unfunded live music and touring sector in Canada. The Coalition maintains that without this assistance, there will be no Canadian live music industry to come back to when venues are finally allowed to re-open.
The CIVC is also calling on people to share the website (supportcanadianvenues.ca in English and souteneznosscenes.ca in French) and social media with friends and colleagues, with the hashtag #SupportCanadianVenues in English and #SoutenezNosScĆØnes in French. Public engagement, sharing this cause, and writing political representatives (see the action page) will be crucial to the movementās success, as will be the voices of Canadian artists, whose careers could not have developed, evolved or flourished without the partnership of venues across the country, from coast to coast to coast, who are now at risk of closing for good.
Independent companies working in live music – including venues, booking agents, promoters, and others – are a sub-sector of Canadian culture not funded by the government. This has created fragile business models across the country, fuelled mostly by passion. Unfortunately, passion isnāt the currency of choice during an economic crisis, and a strong majority of these companies will face bankruptcy if they are left without help to ride out what promises to be an extended shutdown.
The Coalition hopes to encourage the federal government to introduce specific relief and
recovery assistance for the live music and touring sector. Since the federal government does not normally fund independent venues, there is a massive blind spot in its understanding of the role they play. The Canadian Independent Venue Coalition maintains that Canada needs to speak up.
What CIVC hopes to achieve:
ā In the midst of a complete shutdown – that is, with no income for an indefinite period of time for independent venues – specific federal support is needed.
ā We need the public and artists alike to voice what live venues mean to them. Our continued existence is essential to peopleās lives and wellbeing.
ā We need to educate the government on the role that independent concert venues play in the economic and cultural life of our country. Without us, there is no live music industry in Canada – this is the naked truth.
ā Live music venues will be the last to re-open. We need to be in a position to do so as soon as it is safe, and with the publicās confidence in our ability to offer safe and incredible events.
The Canadian Independent Venue Coalition comprises hundreds of concert venues, performance agencies, independent promoters/presenters, production companies, and independent music festivals across Canada. They have come together to address concerns around venue closures due to COVID-19. In collaboration with the Canadian Live Music Association and other industries, businesses, and non-profit organizations, they are advocating for emergency support funding and an economic stimulus package for the independent Canadian live music and touring sector, which was the first to close and will be the last to open. With little or no revenue over an extended period of time, many live music companies will not survive without sector-specific government support. If enough Canadian voices amplify this message, the fate of independent live music venues could change!
The Prism Prize announced today a virtual show to celebrate the Top 20 Canadian music videos of the year and reveal the 2020 Grand Prize winner, taking place Thursday, July 23 at 8:00 PM ET on PrismPrize.com and the @PrismPrize Facebook, Twitter and YouTube channels.Ā Ā
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Following the cancellation of the 2020 Prism Prize Grand Prize screening and awards presentation due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Prism Prize decided to keep all previously announced Top 20 artists in the running for the Grand Prize. A jury of over 120 Canadian creative arts professionals voted to determine the winner who will be awarded $20,000, increased from $15,000 thanks to a contribution from Stingray. Each of the runners-up listed in the Top 20 will receive a $500 cash prize courtesy of Slaight Music and RBCxMusic. The Audience Award will also be announced, a fan-voted prize awarded to a video from the Top 20.
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Along with the Grand Prize and Audience Award winners, the Prism Prize will recognize several Special Award recipients in the upcoming virtual show including a new honour, the Willie Dunn Award. Named after the groundbreaking Canadian singer-songwriter, film director and politician William āWillieā Dunn, whose 10-minute film for The Ballad of Crowfoot is often cited as āthe first Canadian music video.ā The award is presented to a Canadian trailblazer who has demonstrated excellence within the music video production community. The recipient is asked to select an emerging Canadian music video creative to receive a $5,000 cash grant. The Willie Dunn Awardās mandate is to encourage the professional development of diverse creators within the Canadian music video industry.
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The recipient of the Willie Dunn Award will be announced alongside honourees for the Special Achievement Award (Presented by Slaight Music, established to recognize an exceptional contribution to music video art on the world stage), the Hi-Fidelity Award (Supported by FACTOR, established to recognize recording artists who utilize music video in innovative ways), and the Lipsett Award (Sponsored by iHeart Radio, established to celebrate a unique approach to music video art) in the lead-up to the July 23rd show.
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āThe music video is one the of the most important vehicles for social and political commentary, something the great Willie Dunn pioneered with his urgent art that still resonates today,ā said Louis Calabro, VP of Programming & Awards at the Canadian Academy and Founder of Prism Prize āIn a time when art and music are being used to tell important stories, we are proud to help amplify artists working in music video, as well as to introduce the Willie Dunn Award, to foster the next generation of creators.ā
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āThis namesake award is a special honour for Willie; an innovator that will continue to blaze trails for other filmmakers and artists, making the world a more loving and inclusive place for all,ā said Willie Dunnās family; Liz Moore, Lawrence & Kalloosit Dunn.
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THE 2020 PRISM PRIZE TOP 20 (In alphabetical order):
Alaskan Tapes – And, We Disappear (Director: Meredith Hama-Brown)
BAMBII ft. Pamputtae – NITEVISION (Directors: BAMBII & Kostadin Kolev)
Basia Bulat – Your Girl (Director: Brian Dale Sokolowski)
Backed by an orchestraās worth of strings and horns from musicians from around the world, multi-award nominated Canadian folk singer/songwriter Craig Cardiff paints a picture of love in his new single, an ode of sorts to Canadaās North, āYellowknifeā ā available now.
The song revels in Cardiffās long-standing affection for a corner of the country he has increasingly visited and toured over the past decade. Recorded over the past year between tour dates, and completed during quarantine, the track features players from across the globe ā Hong Kong to New York, and Utah, to home front talents based in Toronto, Ottawa, Vancouver, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia.
Craig Cardiff both a JUNO Award (Roots and Traditional Album of the Year: Solo) and Canadian Folk Music Award (Contemporary Singer of the Year) nominee, plus a certified Gold-selling artist for his single, āDirty Old Town.ā
His signature style of songwriting is often inspired by the sights and souls around him; for almost a decade, the Arnprior, Ontario-based artist has passed around a notebook titled āBook of Truthsā during shows, encouraging the audience to write and share something ā a story, a confession, a hope or a secret ā they might be too afraid to say out loud.
As a result, Cardiff ā dubbed by Gordon Lightfoot as a āsongwriter who needs to be heardā ā often finds himself responding by writing songs that offer glimmers of hope for people to hold onto. Audiences have connected; his growing library of releases have been streamed more than 100 million times, and heard on NBCās award-winning television series, This Is Us.
He has played with and opened for artists such as Justin Nozuka, Glen Phillips, Lucy Kaplansky, Dan Bern, Natalia Zukerman, Andy Stochansky, Sarah Harmer, Kathleen Edwards, Blue Rodeo, Gordon Downie, Hawksley Workman, Sarah Slean, Skydiggers, 54-40, and more, helmed a growing list of workshops and talks at schools, camps, festivals, and churches throughout North America and Hong Kong, as well as TED x University of Western Ontario, TED x Kanata and TED x KitchenerED.
Craig Cardiff is signed to True North Records, and represented by APA Agency, and Tom Sarig and his Esther Creative Group in New York City.
āYellowknifeā is available on all major music platforms.
āI wrote āRain Checkā when remembering the feeling of not being able to let go and move on,ā says Orillia-based folk rock singer/songwriter Shane Cloutier of his new single, available now.
āItās about feeling guilty for being stuck in difficult circumstances, and gives a glimpse of hope that someday in the future, youāll be able to embrace the present,ā he continues. āI think sometimes we carry a lot of luggage from our past, and this can inhibit and sometimes prevent us from living life the way we are supposed to.
āāRain Check,ā for me, is my inner dialogue in those moments of apprehension and uncertainty. I truly believe our inner voice is how our spirit pushes forward, even when that voice feels dark.ā
āOn set shooting, I couldnāt help but get caught up in the emotion I felt when I originally wrote the song,ā he adds. āSometimes we have support we canāt even see because weāre so consumed by our own emotions, and I think this song and video really portray that struggle.
āVisually capturing content that would express my inner dialogue was made easy by the location, which was moody and full of dark corners. Itās always an absolute pleasure to work with Adam Fair of Villa Sound; he shot and edited the video and, because he has an insight into the song having recorded it, provided a real consistency in the translation of the ideas.ā
The track lands as an early preview to his forthcoming album, one that promises to further embody Cloutierās emotive voice and unique approach, complete with his signature heavy metal influence, a sojourn into programmed beats, and a nod to his collaborations with multi-award winning blues drummer Tom Bona and legendary guitarist Frank Marino and Mahogany Rush.
āI wasnāt planning on recording again this soon,ā he marvels, noting his most recent 2019 album release, Red Wagon. āBut everything came out more naturally because I didnāt have time to overthink anything. Everything felt very organic.
āThe material for this new record feels really good to me. I am in a great place in my life and, because of this, I was able to branch out lyrically to more topics and feelings that are important to me. I feel the isolation we have all been in has really pulled some different topics and feelings out.
āThe album Red Wagon was very much a prequel and sequel to In Light,ā Cloutier continues, referring to his debut release. āWhen I wrote In Light, it was very much a cathartic response to some traumatic events in my life, facing the death of my wife and mother of my children. It is very much an album of perseverance and strength, as well as surrendering to vulnerability.
āWhen I wrote Red Wagon, I was in a much happier place, and I feel I had a much more enlightened perspective. Both albums helped me emotionally, physically, and spiritually move forward. They tethered me to real life, sort of, and didnāt allow me to sink ā which was exactly where I felt like I was heading.ā
Sinking has never ultimately been an option for Cloutier, who was once told heād never āmake it.ā āMy grade 12 music teacher was a narrow-minded, mediocre teacher who only listened to classical music,ā Cloutier recalls. āHe told me at the end of grade 12 that Iām a great student, but Iād never make it as a musician for a living.
āEvery day being a full-time, professional musician is me giving him the proverbial finger⦠Especially being asked to join Mahogany Rush and playing for Frank Marino, who is my guitar idol. It still doesnāt feel real, and might never feel completely real to me.
āThis is important to me to hold onto because, in life, we are continuously met by individuals who doubt us.
āI believe everybody has an outlet that they have found ā or need to find ā and this is mine.ā
It’s been nearly 35 years since the Beastie Boys released their classic debut album, Licensed To Ill. In this candid conversation, Rick Rubin, who started out as the Beastie’s DJ, reconnects with Mike D and Ad-Rock. Spike Jonze, who directed the new Beastie Boys documentary, Beastie Boys Story, also sits in and plays moderator. It’s been nearly 20 years since Ad-Rock and Rick have talked and like old friends, they jump right into a slew of inside jokes and hilarious memories of their lives leading up to the release of Licensed to Ill.
In partnership with filmmaker Lauren Tabak and writer/consulting producer Barry Walters, Amazon Music dives into the music career of Sylvester, starting from church choir in South Central LA to his early years in San Francisco. It follows his ascent to stardom through his evergreen, international hits “Dance (Disco Heat)” and “You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)”. Through his groundbreaking career, Sylvester blew open the doors for queer visibility and gender fluidity in mainstream music, leaving a legacy that continues to influence today’s pop music. The documentary features candid interviews with Billy Porter, Martha Wash (The Weather Girls, Two Tons oā Fun), Sylvesterās sister Bernadette Baldwin, biographer Josh Gamson, producer/songwriter James Wirrick, and more.