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Watchhouse Releases New Album ‘Rituals,’ Announces Expansive 2025 Tour

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Rituals, the long-awaited new studio album from North Carolina duo Watchhouse (Andrew Marlin & Emily Frantz), is officially out now via Tiptoe Tiger Music / Thirty Tigers. Co-produced with Ryan Gustafson (The Dead Tongues), the 11-track collection marks Watchhouse’s first album of entirely new, original songs since their acclaimed 2021 self-titled release, which debuted at #1 on the Billboard Bluegrass chart and earned praise from Rolling Stone, NPR Music, Mojo, American Songwriter, and more.

With Rituals, Watchhouse invites listeners into a world shaped by small moments and big transformations. The album glows with the quiet beauty of daily life — lullabies at dawn, unspoken gestures, and the grounding rhythm of routine – all while balancing a subtle darkness. The result is a gently radiant meditation on change, love, and the spaces in between. 

Woven with the duo’s signature acoustic textures, Rituals blends layered arrangements and soothing vocal harmonies into an album that is as intimate as it is expansive — a sonic embrace in uncertain times.

Listen to Rituals in its entirety HERE.

The duo recently performed the album’s lead single “All Around You” on The Kelly Clarkson Show. Watch the intimate performance HERE.

What began over a decade ago in the quiet corners of North Carolina coffee shops has blossomed into one of the most respected voices in modern folk. From sold-out shows at Red Rocks and The Ryman to hundreds of millions of streams, Watchhouse continues to evolve with each new chapter. Rituals is both a continuation and a new beginning — a poetic soundtrack for life’s shifting seasons.

Watchhouse is currently on tour in support of Rituals, with performances scheduled across the U.S. throughout 2025. Highlights include dates supporting The Avett Brothers this weekend, along with appearances at major festivals like MerleFest, Rocky Mountain Folks Festival, Green Mountain Bluegrass & Roots, and Iron Blossom Music Festival. Their headline tour continues this summer with stops in Chicago, Seattle, New York City, Boston, Nashville, Atlanta, and more. Full dates and ticket info can be found at https://watchhouseband.com.

Watchhouse 2025 Tour Dates

May 31 – Vienna, VA – Wolf Trap *

June 5 – Nashville, TN – Grimey’s In-Store 

June 14 – St. Paul, MN – Palace Theatre

June 15 – Maquoketa, IA – Codfish Hollow Barnstormers

June 17 – Kalamazoo, MI – Bell’s Eclectic Cafe

June 18 – Madison, WI – The Sylvee

June 19 – Chicago, IL – Thalia Hall

June 20 – Indianapolis, IN – Rock the Ruins

June 21 – Nelsonville, OH – Nelsonville Music Festival

June 22 – Louisville, KY – Old Forester’s Paristown Hall

July 11 – Morrison, CO – Red Rocks Amphitheater *

July 12 – Cheyenne, WY – The Lincoln

July 13 – Salt Lake City, UT – Red Butte Garden Amphitheatre

July 14 – Jackson, WY – Center for the Arts

July 16 – Seattle, WA – Neptune Theatre

July 17 – Jacksonville, OR – Britt Festival Pavilion

July 18 – Portland, OR – Revolution Hall

July 19 – Portland, OR – Revolution Hall

July 20 – Vancouver, Canada – Vancouver Folk Music Festival

August 9 – Lyons, CO – Rocky Mountain Folks Festival

August 10 – Colorado Springs, CO – Pikes Peak Center

August 12 – Toronto, ON – The Concert Hall

August 13 – Buffalo, NY – Asbury Hall

August 14 – Homer, NY – Center for the Arts of Homer

August 15 – Portland, ME – State Theatre

August 16 – Manchester, VT – Green Mountain Bluegrass & Roots

August 18 – Charlton, MA – The Pavilion at Tree House Brewing

August 29 – Charleston, SC – The Refinery Charleston

August 30 – Wilmington, NC – Greenfield Lake Amphitheater

September 6 – Evanston, IL – Evanston Folk Festival

September 21 – Richmond, VA – Iron Blossom Music Festival

October 2 – Del Mar, CA – The Sound at Del Mar

October 3 – Los Angeles, CA – The Ford

October 11 – Charlotte, NC – The Amp Ballantyne

October 15 – Glenside, PA – Keswick Theatre

October 16 – Boston, MA – Royale

October 17 – New York, NY – Webster Hall

October 19 – Washington D.C. – 9:30 Club

November 7 – Atlanta, GA – Tabernacle

November 8 – Nashville, TN – Ryman Auditorium

November 21 – Asheville, NC – Orange Peel

November 22 – Asheville, NC – Orange Peel

November 23 – Knoxville, TN – Tennessee Theatre

* supporting The Avett Brothers 

Sister Sadie Teams Up With Steve Earle for Bold, Healing Album ‘All Will Be Well’

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Two-time Grammy-nominated and multiple International Bluegrass Music Association award-winning sextet Sister Sadie returns with All Will Be Well, their boldest and most personal album to date, due out June 27, 2025, via Mountain Home Music Company. The all-female group continues to push the boundaries of bluegrass while remaining firmly rooted in its soul, navigating themes that range from heartbreak to healing. Steve Earle lends harmony vocals on their rendition of “I Wish It Would Rain,” while the album’s emotional terrain spans from the fiery “First Time Liar” to the 90s-soaked defiance of “Prodigal Daughter” to the sweet vulnerability of “If I Don’t Have You.” The album’s centerpiece, “Let the Circle Be Broken,” confronts generational trauma with searing honesty, inspired by fiddler Deanie Richardson’s personal reckoning after the death of her abusive father.

All Will Be Well opens with the track “Winnebago.” The lyrics harken back to Molly Tuttle’s Crooked Tree, “Can’t you see a crooked tree won’t fit into the mill machine – They’re left to grow wild and free. I’d rather be a crooked tree.” Sister Sadies summons that familiar listener as they invite you into their musical masterpiece of a composition. “Take me somewhere I can lay low. All good things are wild & free.” Sister Sadie taps into that same wild heart. They let the wheels carry them as far as they’ll go – “Make me a feather on a southern breeze, far is never far enough.” The mandolin climbs canyon walls to see what’s on the other side. This song strides in style with their Winnebago. Inside their time travel tube, there are should be’s, could be’s, more than groupies, on the woods seas of stages throughout the nation. So many of these polished versions leave me wanting breathlessly to catch them live on tour, where hopefully these songs will spill into a summer afternoon that stretches well into night.

The second song, “I Wish It Would Rain,” covers a Naci Griffith tune from 1988. Covered by many artists since then, it is no exception to the entire catalog of Nanci Griffith’s storytelling songs. It fits perfectly on Sister Sadie’s lineup of emotional expressions of longing mixed with a little bit of sweet sorrow.

“First Time Liar” follows. Like a Patty Loveless tune with grit, the band confesses and cleanses through their own unburdening song in a sinfully sweet 3 minute serenade of loss and lament. By track 3, we know exactly who Sister Sadie is: sharp, soulful storytellers with voices that cut through the noises and harmonies that hold you in their gaze.

“Make Me Stay or Make Me Go” picks up the pace and dusts off the heartache. They wash their face and get back up after a momentary knockdown with that dirty “First Time Liar” sadness. The track triumphantly returns them to their instincts with perhaps an explanation of why they lied. We’re all armed with a bag full of pretty white lies when the occasion calls for it. “Make Me Stay or Make Me Go” is a breezy summer sing-along song, “Tell me what I want to hear, or please just tell me no. Make me stay or make me go.”

Clamoring for clarity is such a relatable emotion – with a knock out hook?! That is specifically what I am talking about when I rub the genie on catching Sister Sadie perform live. The jammed-out treatment of “Make Me Stay or Make Me Go” is what I wish for when I treat myself to a Sister Sadie show, live, in real life. A jammed out version deserves to stretch beyond its run time.

Fans of Gretchen Wilson, Miranda Lambert, or (I think everyone loves) Shania Twain, you will be particularly fond of the Sister Sadie track, “Devil Don’t Care.” There is serious line dance potential here. I could easily see Shania jumping on stage to share the sisterhood as they all smiled and sang, “They say there’s a reason to this rhyme… The lord ain’t listening and the devil don’t care.” The dirty-get-down-grimy bridge lets up into pure rock n roll riffs. It’s time to blow off some steam with this tune.

Now we’re having fun, and next up is the title track, “All Will Be Well.” Riding over the ridge, no looking back while you spin this track. “Illuminating what I know is true, All Will Be Well. You can ask me how but only time will tell.” This fiddle forward funk anthem of trust and faith is a turning point, centered right in the middle of the album.  A deep well of knowing, this tune inspires. It is the beam of sunshine that spills onto your dish washing hands, signaling adventure just beyond the sink. It’s easy to tell why this became the namesake of the album.

From every precipice, we must fall. “Prodigal Daughter” is where the album plummets into that deep well. This is the part of the album that speaks so clearly as we take a turn and dive into it together. Pondering the infinite mystery of life, Sister Sadie keeps the music flowing while adding their signature stamp of femininity. The times, they are a-changin. Tracks like “Prodigal Daughter,” “Do What You Want,” “This is Me (You’re Not Talking To),” and the masterpiece, “Let The Circle Be Broken,” really take the listeners into brand new territory.

“Prodigal Daughter” paints the picture of “that kind of girl” betting on the long shot. With natural landscapes violently changing, it speaks to the long-shot girls out there – the ones betting on themselves despite the odds. These gals are tough as nails, but a song like this displays their glass cage, soft as silk. Their softness, their strength, their resilience – it’s all there.

The honky tonk YOLO track, “Do What You Want” follows like a whiskey chaser. It talks about how you’ll never be happy if you don’t do what you want. Whether it’s babies or dreams, the eternal conundrum from women, uniquely understood by women. Do it or don’t, the clock is ticking. Live how you need to live, create what you must – do what you want. (Maybe whenever you want to?)

“This is Me (You’re Not Talking To)” strikes a chord right from the prelude. The quiet gut punch of “All I need from you is to let me know if I should stick around. This silence won’t do. This is me, you’re not talking to.” Tale as old as time, a cry for connection in a world that too often rewards withdrawal, silence can be deadly. Suppressing emotions does not make anything beautiful. “This is Me” is a bare-all of hoping he’ll tell her to go to hell, something, anything, to keep the conversation going. Pleading not to shut her out, this tale from the heart is looking for more heart-to-hearts because we’re all just human after all. We become what we give our attention to.

The album’s magnum opus is “Let the Circle Be Broken.” The juxtaposition of secular and sacred in this track is astonishing. Talking about Quiji boards and darkness in their blood in a song from a world that so often included gospel influences. Redemption is a deeply rooted Christian belief, but also one that dogmatic religious folk dole out in very limited quantities.

Will the Circle Be Unbroken is one of the most iconic American Roots songs. It took moxy to rework it and add their voice to a song like that. They stood on the shoulders of giants. Both versions, “Let the Circle Be Unbroken” and Sister Sadie’s “Let the Circle Be Broken,” convey hope and unity. Especially in the context of the musical community of humans everywhere that always conspired to uplift and connect.

“Let the Circle be Broken” simultaneously burns the bridge while building a brand new one that will certainly connect to younger generations. The musical family is always alive and thriving when songs like this are being written. This song makes the listener realize that music is healing for both the sender and the receiver. Not many communication modalities these days can be so reciprocal as a song like this is. Like the tide and the shore, we all wash clean and let a little bit go.

 “I won’t pay a debt that isn’t in my name.”

“Light some sage, say a prayer, let the ties come untied. Round and round, I won’t go. Take a light. Leave the bones.”

How delightfully pagan! I want to conjure in Sister Sadie’s circle.

Landscapes laid out in sound is what I love best about Americana music. All Will Be Well reaches peaks sonically and lyrically with a song like the next track, “Orphan Train.” It dips you into the echoing canyon, and you can feel the adrenaline and alertness as you travel through the tunnel of a very real story. The song concludes with a deep chill of having a new last name. It’s a deep, enveloping stillness that pushes you out the other side to the next track, “If I Don’t Have You.” 

The songs on this album speak to each other, stripping away the complex layers of human emotion. “If I Don’t Have You,” answers back to track #8, “Do What You Want.” Can we really have it all if they don’t have you?

The completion of this composition is the final track, #13, “Can’t Let Go of Your Love.” “Some days I love you so much it hurts,” sings Sister Sadie as the picking party resumes. They pass breaks, and the road goes on forever. The music never stops but I’m damn glad the gals of Sister Sadie took some time to record this pure musicianship. 

With All Will Be Well, Sister Sadie has recorded more than just an album – they have bottled a lifetime of truth-telling and trailblazing into 13 tracks. This is music for the long-shot gals, for the dreamers and the doers, the broken and the bold. All Will Be Well will canonize listeners. This touchstone album will firmly plant SIster Sadie’s side of the story into the ever-growing blueprint of blue collar music. 

“This is Me (You’re Not Talking To)” strikes a chord right from the prelude. The quiet gut punch of “All I need from you is to let me know if I should stick around. This silence won’t do. This is me, you’re not talking to.” Tale as old as time, a cry for connection in a world that too often rewards withdrawal, silence can be deadly. Suppressing emotions does not make anything beautiful. “This is Me” is a bare-all of hoping he’ll tell her to go to hell, something, anything, to keep the conversation going. Pleading not to shut her out, this tale from the heart is looking for more heart-to-hearts because we’re all just human after all. We become what we give our attention to.

With All Will Be Well, Sister Sadie has recorded more than just an album – they have bottled a lifetime of truth-telling and trailblazing into 13 tracks. This is music for the long-shot gals, for the dreamers and the doers, the broken and the bold. All Will Be Well will canonize listeners. This touchstone album will firmly plant Sister Sadie’s side of the story into the ever-growing blueprint of blue collar music. 

 

Big Chief Bo Dollis Jr. and The Wild Magnolias Reclaim Otis Redding Classic on New Album ‘Chip Off the Old Block’

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New Orleans musicians and culture bearers Chief Bo Dollis Jr. and The Wild Magnolias release their newest single “Hard to Handle,” featuring Anjelika “Jelly” Joseph of Galactic and the GRAMMY-winning band Tank and the Bangas. This reimagined version of the Otis Redding soul classic finds Joseph in control, compellingly owning the narrative and interpreting the song from a female point of view. Dollis says, “When a woman as powerful and dynamic as Jelly sings ‘Hard to Handle,’ it flips the script—she’s not waiting to be chosen, she’s claiming her power, her magic, and saying, ‘I know what I bring, and you better be ready for it.’” Listen to “Hard to Handle” HERE and via DSPs HERE

“Hard to Handle” is featured on Dollis’ new album with The Wild Magnolias, Chip Off the Old Block, out June 13th on Strong Place MusicChip Off the Old Block expertly blends the vibrant West African rhythms, funk, and jazz of Mardi Gras Indian music with the rich, soulful blues of Memphis. The album showcases a star-studded lineup, featuring Archie “Hubbie” Turner, Rev. Charles Hodges, and Leroy Hodges of the iconic Hi Rhythm Section, the legendary soul “house band”—with the newest addition, Lina Beach, on guitar. Big Chief Bo Dollis Jr. and The Wild Magnolias will celebrate the album release with a show at The Broadside on June 13 as well. Ticket info is HERE.

Big Chief Bo Dollis, Jr. is an award-winning cultural performer, musician, and educator whose work preserves and promotes the rich cultural heritage of Mardi Gras Indians, a distinctly New Orleans tradition. Mardi Gras Indians (also known as Black Masking Indians) are culture bearers that are integral parts of indigenous and native Black New Orleans history and steeped in distinct musical roots, carnival revelry, intricate hand-sewn beaded and feathered suits, and generations of oral history. Big Chief Bo Dollis Jr. took the reins as the Wild Magnolias new Big Chief when his father, Big Chief Bo Dollis Sr. passed away in 2015. 

Produced by Take Me to the River: New Orleans GRAMMY winners Boo Mitchell, Martin Shore and Cody Dickinson (North Mississippi Allstars), Chip Off the Old Blockwas recorded in New Orleans (Number C Studio) and Memphis (Royal Studios). Shore notes, “In working with Bo Dollis Jr. on Take Me to the River New Orleans, I imagined him collaborating with the best soul rhythm section in the world, the Hi Rhythm Section. It was the perfect intersection of Louisiana funk and Memphis soul.” 

New Orleans musicians and culture bearers Chief Bo Dollis Jr. and The Wild Magnolias release their newest single “Hard to Handle,” featuring Anjelika “Jelly” Joseph of Galactic and the GRAMMY-winning band Tank and the Bangas. This reimagined version of the Otis Redding soul classic finds Joseph in control, compellingly owning the narrative and interpreting the song from a female point of view. Dollis says, “When a woman as powerful and dynamic as Jelly sings ‘Hard to Handle,’ it flips the script—she’s not waiting to be chosen, she’s claiming her power, her magic, and saying, ‘I know what I bring, and you better be ready for it.’” Listen to “Hard to Handle” HERE and via DSPs HERE

“Hard to Handle” is featured on Dollis’ new album with The Wild Magnolias, Chip Off the Old Block, out June 13th on Strong Place MusicChip Off the Old Block expertly blends the vibrant West African rhythms, funk, and jazz of Mardi Gras Indian music with the rich, soulful blues of Memphis. The album showcases a star-studded lineup, featuring Archie “Hubbie” Turner, Rev. Charles Hodges, and Leroy Hodges of the iconic Hi Rhythm Section, the legendary soul “house band”—with the newest addition, Lina Beach, on guitar. Big Chief Bo Dollis Jr. and The Wild Magnolias will celebrate the album release with a show at The Broadside on June 13 as well. Ticket info is HERE.

Big Chief Bo Dollis, Jr. is an award-winning cultural performer, musician, and educator whose work preserves and promotes the rich cultural heritage of Mardi Gras Indians, a distinctly New Orleans tradition. Mardi Gras Indians (also known as Black Masking Indians) are culture bearers that are integral parts of indigenous and native Black New Orleans history and steeped in distinct musical roots, carnival revelry, intricate hand-sewn beaded and feathered suits, and generations of oral history. Big Chief Bo Dollis Jr. took the reins as the Wild Magnolias new Big Chief when his father, Big Chief Bo Dollis Sr. passed away in 2015. 

Produced by Take Me to the River: New Orleans GRAMMY winners Boo Mitchell, Martin Shore and Cody Dickinson (North Mississippi Allstars), Chip Off the Old Blockwas recorded in New Orleans (Number C Studio) and Memphis (Royal Studios). Shore notes, “In working with Bo Dollis Jr. on Take Me to the River New Orleans, I imagined him collaborating with the best soul rhythm section in the world, the Hi Rhythm Section. It was the perfect intersection of Louisiana funk and Memphis soul.” 

Big Chief Bo Dollis Jr. and The Wild Magnolias have performed on global stages stretching from Australia and Japan to England and Jamaica. In the U.S., they have appeared at the Summer Olympics and the White House.  In 2023, they received the Jazz Award at the prestigious Ascona Jazz Festival. They have collaborated and shared stages with GRAMMY-winning icons like Dr. John, Cyril Neville and Leo Nocentelli, as well as Trombone Shorty, Galactic, Master P, Widespread Panic and many others.

Big Chief Bo Dollis Jr. and The Wild Magnolias have performed on global stages stretching from Australia and Japan to England and Jamaica. In the U.S., they have appeared at the Summer Olympics and the White House.  In 2023, they received the Jazz Award at the prestigious Ascona Jazz Festival. They have collaborated and shared stages with GRAMMY-winning icons like Dr. John, Cyril Neville and Leo Nocentelli, as well as Trombone Shorty, Galactic, Master P, Widespread Panic and many others.

10 Crucial Website Tweaks to Turn Curious Fans Into Paying Supporters

Turning attention into action is one of the hardest things for an artist to do — especially online. You’ve made the music, you’ve built the buzz, but without a well-optimized website, those potential superfans might click away before you even get a chance to connect. If you want to turn casual visitors into paying customers, here are 10 serious upgrades your website needs — no fluff, no filler, just actionable advice that works.

1. Fix Every Ticket Link. Test It Twice.
There is no faster way to lose a sale than sending someone to a broken or outdated ticket link. Every upcoming show on your site should have a clean, easy-to-spot button that leads to a working purchase page. Test it on mobile. Test it on desktop. Set a calendar reminder to check links weekly while you’re on tour. Fans don’t refresh — they move on.

2. List All Your Streaming Platforms — Not Just Spotify
Not everyone uses the same app. If your site only links to Spotify, you’re unintentionally ignoring your Apple Music, YouTube Music, Tidal, Deezer, and Amazon Music listeners. Use a smart link or embed buttons for every DSP you’re on. Don’t make fans hunt you down — bring your music to them, on their terms.

3. Add Clear Call To Actions To Every Page (Including the Homepage)
Every single page should tell fans what you want them to do: buy merch, stream a song, join the list, get tickets. And make it obvious. Use bold buttons, strong language (“Get Tickets,” “Join the Fan Club,” “Shop the Drop”), and position CTAs near the top and bottom of every page. Don’t just assume they’ll find their way. Show them the door — and invite them in.

4. Make Sure Your Site Is Mobile-Optimized
Most of your fans are on their phones. If your layout looks broken, text overlaps images, or buttons are too small to tap, they’re gone. Use a responsive website builder and test your site on multiple screen sizes. Fast load time, easy navigation, and a friction-free mobile store are the minimum in 2025.

5. Keep Your Bio, Tour Dates, And News Updated
Old info signals neglect — and that’s a trust killer. Fans want to know you’re active and legit. Make sure your “About” section is up to date, your tour schedule is current, and any major updates (album releases, new singles, videos) are easy to find. A well-maintained site builds credibility, fast.

6. Offer Exclusive Perks For Email Signups
Your mailing list is the most valuable digital asset you have. Add a sign-up form with a real incentive: early access to tickets, unreleased demos, fan-only discounts, or behind-the-scenes content. Make the value clear, and promote it everywhere. Social followers are rented space. Email subscribers? They’re yours.

7. Integrate A Frictionless Store With Multiple Payment Options
Fans should be able to buy merch, vinyl, or downloads without jumping through hoops. That means a secure storefront, streamlined checkout, and payment flexibility — credit, PayPal, Apple Pay, even Shop Pay. Reduce the number of steps, minimize distractions, and make the sale seamless.

8. Highlight Bestsellers And Limited-Time Offers
Not all merch is created equal. If something’s popular or nearly sold out, make that visible. “Only 3 left!” creates urgency. Bundle items to increase cart size. Use banners or homepage sliders to feature bestsellers, pre-orders, or limited drops. Let your website act like a merch table with a hype person.

9. Use Analytics To See What’s Working (And What’s Not)
Don’t guess — check the data. Are visitors leaving a certain page fast? Are they clicking your CTA or ignoring it? Use analytics tools to monitor bounce rates, top pages, and store conversions. Tweak as needed: change a headline, move a button, update images. A 2% improvement every week adds up.

10. Make Sure Your Branding Is Consistent Everywhere
From your font choices to your color palette to your voice, your website should feel like you. If a fan follows you from TikTok to your site, they shouldn’t feel like they’ve landed in someone else’s world. Cohesive branding creates trust and tells your story before you say a word.

A great website doesn’t have to be flashy — but it does need to be functional. Your site is the one place online where you control the experience, and with the right strategy, it can turn casual listeners into loyal supporters. Take these changes seriously, and you won’t just be seen. You’ll be supported.

If you’re still looking for help, or have any questions, or looking for more information, email me, I’ll be happy to chat – Eric@ThatEricAlper.com and talk soon!

Hinterland 2025 Expands for 10th Anniversary With Lana Del Rey, Tyler, The Creator, and Kacey Musgraves

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Hinterland Music Festival is gearing up for the 10th annual festival. This year’s music and camping festival is set to take place Friday, August 1, through Sunday, August 3, in St. Charles, IA, just 30 minutes south of Des Moines. Highlights include Tyler, the Creator, Kacey Musgraves, Lana Del Rey, Clairo, The Marías, Bleachers, Remi Wolf, Sierra Ferrell, Still Woozy, Royel Otis, Wyatt Flores, Role Model, Glass Beams, Gigi Perez, and more. The Hinterland 2025 lineup is below. 

Since the festival’s inception, Hinterland has drawn attendees from near and far. While located in central Iowa, just south of Des Moines, Iowa, nearly 50% of the attendees come from out of state.  This year, exciting new site enhancements are set to elevate the Hinterland experience even further. The festival grounds have expanded, offering more space to relax and explore. A newly relocated main stage significantly increases the event footprint, adding more room to spread out, additional shade from trees and structures, and increased water access, including upgraded filling stations and strategically placed misting fans throughout the concourse. Hinterland’s new stage continues the festival’s tradition of a seamless, single-stage setup, so there’s no need to move between stages for different sets. Ticket options for 2025 include 3-Day and 1-Day General Admission, VIP, and SAINTS, along with a number of camping (tent, car, RV, glamping), parking, and shuttle options starting at just $25 down with a payment plan. Sunday tickets have already sold out. A limited number of other ticket options are available while supplies last at hinterlandiowa.com/tickets

Camping will be sold on a per-tent or campsite basis, not per person. Improvements for VIP and SAINTS include dedicated entry lines, an upgraded Premium Lounge with a VIP and SAINTS level, an air-conditioned SAINTS lounge in the Premium Area, and more. A new free look policy allows VIP and SAINTS ticket holders to return their tickets if they aren’t satisfied within the first hour of arriving. 

Hinterland 2025 will once again offer three days of music and more within the scenic landscape of rural Iowa. Once the headliners close out the main stage, the Campfire Stage located inside the campgrounds, will keep the music going into the night. In addition, camping and parking areas have been moved to create additional parking, more convenient camping, and more. Further enhancements include improved shuttle efficiency, additional entrances and exits, and more food vendors (including vegan, vegetarian, and gluten-free options). ADA improvements include additional parking, convenient camping options, a shaded ADA viewing area, and more. 

Also new in 2025, Hinterland is introducing a “90 Degree Guarantee,” which allows ticket holders the option to request festival admission ticket returns for any day that is predicted to reach 90° or higher.

If on Tuesday, 7/29 at 10 am CT, the weather.gov forecast for 8/1, 8/2, or 8/3 has a true temperature of 90° or higher for the 50240 zip code, ticket purchasers will have the option to request a return of their festival admission ticket for that day. Return requests are only available for the day/s the forecast is 90° or higher. 3-Day ticket holders can request a return for specific day/s at a rate of 1/3 of the total 3-Day ticket price.

To qualify for a return, ticket holders must fill out the 90° Guarantee Ticket Return Request Form at hinterlandiowa.com/tickets prior to 1 pm CT on Tuesday, 7/29. Returns will be processed within as little as 10 days.

Can’t Stand the Heat? Promoter to Offer Refunds If Temps Hit 90° at Iowa Festival Hinterland promoter Sam Summers hopes his weather-related refund policy will spark a larger conversation about global warming and its impact on the outdoor concert industry.

This policy only applies to festival admission tickets. It does not include camping, parking, or shuttle tickets. To qualify, tickets must have been purchased directly via AXS.com. Tickets purchased from a third party are not eligible.

Hinterland’s Commitment to Climate Awareness: The 10 hottest years on record have all occurred in the past decade. At Hinterland, we are committed to raising awareness about climate change and its impact on our daily lives. We will continue striving to make sustainable choices, both this year and in the years ahead. Together, we can make a difference.

# # #

HINTERLAND MUSIC FESTIVAL

ST. CHARLES, IOWA

AUGUST 1-3, 2025

FRIDAY, AUGUST 1

Tyler, the Creator

Clairo

Remi Wolf

Royel Otis

Rebecca Black

Good Neighbours

INJI

Scowl

+ Campfire Stage TBA

SATURDAY, AUGUST 2

Kacey Musgraves

The Marías

Still Woozy

Role Model

Glass Beams

Gigi Perez

Willow Avalon

hey, nothing

+ Campfire Stage TBA

SUNDAY, AUGUST 3

Lana Del Rey

Bleachers

Sierra Ferrell

Wyatt Flores

Michael Marcagi

Evan Honer

Orla Gartland

Sam Austins

+ Campfire Stage TBA

John Fogerty Reclaims His Songs With New Album ‘Legacy’ Out August 22

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Legendary musician and Rock & Roll Hall of Famer John Fogerty has announced the release of a powerful new album, Legacy: the Creedence Clearwater Revival years, arriving August 22, 2025 via Concord. The 20-track collection features newly recorded versions of Fogerty’s most beloved songs—from “Proud Mary” and “Bad Moon Rising” to “Fortunate Son” and “Have You Ever Seen the Rain”—marking both a celebration of an iconic catalog and a personal reclamation of artistic ownership. Fogerty announced the album from the stage during his sold-out 80th birthday bash last week at NYC’s Beacon Theatre. He returns to the Beacon Theatre stage tonight for another thrilling performance. 

For the first time in his career, Fogerty fully owns the rights to his groundbreaking Creedence Clearwater Revival catalog—a milestone decades in the making. With Legacy, he offers fresh takes on the music that continues to define American rock, recorded with renewed energy and a deep sense of purpose as he celebrates his 80th birthday.

“For most of my life I did not own the songs I had written,” says Fogerty. “Getting them back changes everything. Legacy is my way of celebrating that—of playing these songs on my terms, with the people I love.” 

Produced by Fogerty and his son Shane Fogerty, with executive production by his wife Julie Fogerty, Legacy is a family affair through and through. Julie Fogerty says, “I knew first hand how much it meant for John to get his publishing back. It has been so joyful and beautiful since this happened for him. This is a celebration of his life’s work. It is the biggest party for the good guy/artist winning.”

Both Shane and his brother Tyler Fogerty perform throughout the album, recorded with Matt Chamberlain, Bob Malone, Bob Glaub and Rob Stone. It was mixed by legendary engineer Bob Clearmountain. The result is a vibrant, electrifying collection that captures the raw spirit of Fogerty’s original songs while infusing them with vital new life.

Today, new recordings of “Up Around The Bend” “Have You Ever Seen The Rain,” and “Porterville” are available to stream on DSPs. Listen here

The album’s release comes during a banner year for Fogerty, who continues to experience a remarkable career resurgence. From a recent induction at the American Music Honors, introduced by Bruce Springsteen, to headlining sets at JazzFest (hailed as a “home run” in a Times Picayune front-page rave review), Glastonbury, The Hollywood Bowl, and more, Fogerty is as fierce and joyful as ever. His recent “Celebration Tour” sold out venues across the country, and his iconic Chronicle anthology has spent over 14 consecutive years on the Billboard 200. 

In another major cultural moment, Fogerty has teamed up with Eric Church and NASCAR on Prime to create the league’s brand-new anthem—a reimagined version of his classic “Up Around The Bend,” available exclusively on Amazon Music.

Still, for Fogerty, the thrill remains rooted in the music itself. As Legacy makes clear, the fire still burns. The album is a testament to an artist who’s not only reclaimed his songs, but continues to shape the sound of American rock & roll—even as he turns 80.

Oasis Launches Merch Capsule With Amazon Ahead of Reunion Tour, Starting With Knebworth ‘96

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Oasis fans—start your wallets. Just ahead of their highly anticipated reunion tour, the band has teamed up with Amazon to launch an official merch store, and the first drop is everything we’ve been waiting for since that last cigarette outside Heaton Park in ‘09.

The debut capsule kicks things off with a nod to Knebworth 1996, the stuff of Britpop legend. We’re talking t-shirts, long sleeves, and jumpers celebrating the gigs that practically shook the British Isles. If you were there, you know. If you weren’t—this might be the next best thing.

And it doesn’t stop at Knebworth. Future releases will spotlight the band’s 2006 North American Tour, bringing the Gallagher swagger across the Atlantic once again, along with gear inspired by their iconic Wembley shows from the “All Around The World” tour in 1997. No word yet on whether they’ll be selling replicas of Liam’s parka, but let’s stay hopeful.

The merch line will also include apparel based on album artwork from fan favourites like Be Here Now and Heathen Chemistry—two records that might not have gotten the critical love at the time, but are carved into the hearts of fans who’ve belted out “Stop Crying Your Heart Out” into a pint glass or two.

This is more than merch. It’s wearable nostalgia. A love letter in cotton and ink to the fans who’ve kept the flame burning through every reunion rumour, solo spat, and headline about that bloody squash game that never happened.

You can shop the current Knebworth drop here. The rest? Stay tuned. If this is how they’re kicking things off, we’re in for a proper tour run, with some of the best-looking crowds since the ‘90s.

Photo Gallery: Barry Manilow and Dennis Blair at Toronto’s Scotiabank Arena on May 31, 2025

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All photos by Mini’s Memories. You can contact her through Instagram or X.

Craft Announces ‘Miles ’55’ Featuring Davis’ First Great Quintet, Out Aug 22

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Craft Recordings is proud to announce Miles ’55: The Prestige Recordings, a 16-track retrospective spotlighting a series of landmark 1955 sessions recorded at Rudy Van Gelder’s storied Hackensack, NJ studio for Prestige Records. Featuring selections from Miles: The New Miles Davis Quintet, Miles Davis and Milt Jackson Quintet/Sextet, and The Musings of Miles, among others, Miles ’55 showcases one of jazz’s most important ensembles: the “First Great Quintet” comprised of then-relatively unknown players, including tenor saxophonist John Coltrane, pianist Red Garland, bassist Paul Chambers, and drummer Philly Joe Jones, plus the likes of Milt Jackson, Ray Bryant, and Oscar Pettiford. That year marked a pivotal turning point for Davis, as he began to find his voice as a trumpet player and confidence as a bandleader, with his live performances hinting at the mythical figure he would soon become. These foundational recordings not only set the stage for the trumpeter’s future classics but also showcased the burgeoning genius of his soon-to-be legendary bandmates.

Arriving August 22, Miles ’55 will be available as a 2-CD set, 3-LP set pressed on 180-gram vinyl, and in both standard and hi-res digital audio. All audio has been remastered from the original analog tapes by GRAMMY-winning engineer Paul Blakemore, with lacquers cut for the vinyl version by Kevin Gray at Cohearent Audio while physical editions of the collection offer a new essay by GRAMMY-winning music historian Ashley Kahn (author of Kind of Blue: The Making of the Miles Davis Masterpiece), as well as insightful session notes by GRAMMY-winning writer, Dan Morgenstern. The complete collection is available to pre-order/pre-save, while the track “There Is No Greater Love” can be streamed today.

The collection builds on Craft’s Miles ’54 box set, which was released to broad acclaim last fall. Tape Op called Miles ’54 “A beautiful box set…The pressings in this release are excellent and sound incredible.” UNCUT added, “If you’re curious about this period in [Davis’] career, the newly mastered and lovingly packaged Miles ’54 is a fantastic place to start.” Tracking Angle noted that the remaster sounded “crisp and dynamic,” with “the bass thumpingly clear and precise, the trumpet golden, the other horns billowing brass and air, and the piano… percussive and blooming—in many ways, fuller-sounding,” while also praising the pressing as being on par with far more expensive editions. Nate Chinen at WRTI,  Record Collector praised its “dynamic remastering,” declaring the tracks to sound “breathtakingly fresh.”

“There was a particular sound that had defined the ’50s,” writes Ashley Kahn in the Miles ’55 liner notes. “It was an approach that balanced a modern, post-bop feel with echoes of a simpler time. And it belonged to one trumpet player in particular.” That musician was none other than Miles Davis (1926 – 1991). By the middle of the decade, Davis was confidently finding himself as a musician, composer, and bandleader. He had certainly paid his dues. After cutting his chops with such luminaries as Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, and Coleman Hawkins, Davis broke out on his own, first forming a nonet (early recordings of which were eventually released as The Birth of Cool), and scoring a recording contract with Prestige Records. Despite his struggles with substance abuse in the first half of the decade, Davis was clean, focused, and ready to get back to work by 1954.

That year, Davis headlined major New York venues, including Birdland, and recorded five landmark sessions for Prestige, resulting in albums like Miles Davis with Sonny Rollins, Miles Davis Quintet, and Miles Davis All Star Sextet. Yet, while 1954 found Davis maturing as an artist, it was the following year that solidified his path as a bandleader and genre-defining musician. Kahn notes, “On Miles’s 1954 recordings, one can hear a pronounced musical consistency coming together. In 1955, one can begin to identify it. His trumpet sound had locked onto an emotionally rich identity, intense and now constant.”

Perhaps Davis’ most defining moment of 1955, however, was the formation of a talent-packed yet virtually unknown ensemble of musicians, now known as the “First Great Quintet.” Featuring Sonny Rollins on tenor saxophone (soon to be replaced by another up-and-comer, John Coltrane), Red Garland on piano, Paul Chambers on bass, and Philly Joe Jones on drums, the group made their debut at Birdland in April. In another milestone, three months later, Davis delivered a momentous performance at the second Newport Jazz Festival. His much-talked-about appearance marked “The real beginning of the Miles Davis legend,” according to jazz critic Joe Goldberg in his 1965 book, Jazz Masters of the Fifties.

In between these key moments, Davis was also spending time in the studio, recording marathon sessions that would yield some of his best albums of the decade. Miles ’55 comprises three of these dates (all captured by the great Rudy Van Gelder) beginning with June 7th. Davis was still in the early days of solidifying his new band, and this date (a quartet setting) features two musicians that would become permanent members: Philly Joe Jones and Red Garland, with the addition of bassist Oscar Pettiford. First released as The Musings of Miles in September 1955, the session was comprised of two Davis originals (“I Didn’t” and “Green Haze”), Dizzy Gillespie’s “A Night in Tunisia,” plus the standards “A Gal in Calico,” “I See Your Face Before Me,” and “Will You Still Be Mine?”

In his track notes, which originally appeared on 1988’s Chronicle: The Complete Prestige Recordings, 1951–1956, Dan Morgenstern writes that this session “Represented the germination of The Quintet,” adding that Davis’ approach to balladry here highlights the “muted…playing that was to make The Quintet and its leader so very popular.” Kahn mirrors this in his commentary, noting that “Miles made the most of that feel in particular. It worked exceedingly well on slower blues and ballads, especially after pushing a Harmon mute into the bell of his horn. He came to use it regularly, and it helped him reveal himself through melody and mood.”

The second session, taking place on August 5th, featured the great vibraphonist Milt Jackson, pianist Ray Bryant, bassist Percy Heath, and Art Taylor, then an up-and-coming drummer. Tenor saxophonist Jackie McLean also joins for two of his own compositions: the bluesy “Dr. Jackle” and the up-tempo “Minor March.” Released in 1956 as Miles Davis and Milt Jackson Quintet/Sextet, the set also features Thad Jones’ “Bitty Ditty” and the reflective “Changes,” penned by Bryant.

Davis’ final session of 1955—captured on November 16th—is the most notable, as it resulted in the bandleader’s debut album with his solidified quintet (Coltrane, Garland, Chambers, and Jones). Released in 1956 as Miles: The New Miles Davis Quintet, the LP was comprised of four standards, an unusually snappy rendition of “How Am I to Know?,” plus “Just Squeeze Me,” “S’posin’,” and “There Is No Greater Love” (the only track not featuring Coltrane), as well as the debut of Benny Golson’s “Stablemates,” and the Davis original, “The Theme,” which would become his classic sign-off.

Simply featuring the bandleader’s first name emblazoned across the cover, the album, Morgenstern writes, “Exemplifies the group’s repertoire, pacing, and presentation.” While the quintet was still gelling, their raw talents were palpable. Morgenstern elaborates: “John Coltrane still seems to be seeking his true identity, he is certainly a new and distinctive voice and a commanding presence, the perfect foil for a fully matured and supremely confident Miles. And that rhythm section, while it was to refine its unity and suppleness even further, is already something to marvel at.”

Although Miles was not initially embraced by critics, the album would later be regarded as a defining moment in the trumpet player’s career. Kahn writes, “In 1965, [jazz critic] Joe Goldberg wrote that ‘It has been called the most important and influential group of its time. But when…Miles was released, few thought so.’ He argued that, in fact, all of Davis’ music since that album—save for his work with Gil Evans, and modal experiments like Kind of Blue—‘has been an extension and further exploration of ideas set down in…Miles.’”

As Davis skyrocketed to international fame, the quintet became the dominant small jazz group of the late ’50s and a defining voice in the hard-bop scene. In the ensuing years, Davis continued to push the limits of jazz music—shaping the sounds of post-bop and fusion, while experimenting with electronic elements, funk, rock, pop, and African rhythms well into the late ’80s. Today, Davis holds a mighty legacy as one of the most important figures of 20th century music, with an influence that expands far behind the realm of jazz.

Click here to pre-order/pre-save Miles ’55: The Prestige Recordings

Tracklist (3-LP):

Side A

1.  I Didn’t

2.  Will You Still Be Mine?

3.  Green Haze

Side B

1.  I See Your Face Before Me

2.  A Night In Tunisia

3.  A Gal In Calico

Side C

1.  Dr. Jackle

2.  Bitty Ditty

Side D

1.  Minor March

2.  Changes

 Side E

1.  Stablemates

2.  How Am I To Know?

3.  Just Squeeze Me

 Side F

1.  There Is No Greater Love

2.  The Theme

3.  S’posin’

Tracklist (2-CD/Digital):

Disc 1

1.      I Didn’t

2.      Will You Still Be Mine?

3.      Green Haze

4.      I See Your Face Before Me

5.      A Night In Tunisia

6.      A Gal In Calico

7.      Dr. Jackle

8.      Bitty Ditty

Disc 2

1.      Minor March

2.      Changes

3.      Stablemates

4.      How Am I To Know?

5.      Just Squeeze Me

6.      There Is No Greater Love

7.      The Theme

8.      S’posin’

Openness Trio to Release ‘Openness Trio’ Debut Album on Blue Note Records July 11

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Blue Note Records has announced the July 11 release of Openness Trio, the debut album by a unique collective comprised of guitarist and producer Nate Mercereau, saxophonist Josh Johnson, and percussionist Carlos Niño. Free-thinking creators who bring a depth of experience from wide-ranging collaborations with the likes of André 3000, Meshell Ndegeocello, Kamasi Washington, Shabaka, Jeff Parker, Makaya McCraven, and many more, the trio presents a profound musical offering.

The album is five recordings from five different sessions all around Los Angeles and Ventura County – outdoors in the hills of Ojai with a view of the Topatopa Mountains, an intimate living room setting in Elysian Park, in an Oak Tree Cathedral at the Churchill Orchard in Ojai, a Garden of Electronics in the courtyard of an Echo Park home, and a recording session under a pepper tree at Elsewhere in Topanga Canyon. Listen to the lead track “Hawk Dreams.”

“Openness Trio is a title that could easily be the name of this group,” says Mercereau. “‘Openness’ is the ideal word and description for what is happening here. Listening, Immersive Emoting, Deep Communication, Discovery, Trust, Exploration, and arriving to the moment to witness and share where we are, where we are going, and where we’ve been – these are all things that allow our music to happen in the way that it does.”

“It is very rare to feel so able to trust anyone so much, it expands your trust and awareness of yourself, and your sense of being trustworthy,” says Niño. “My favorite thing about playing with this Trio is in the Title: Openness. The totally psychic communication, connection that we have together is electric and deeply nourishing, invigorating… It is Open.”

“The trio’s title speaks to the music and so much more,” says Johnson. “The trio and its members have expanded my perceptions in and outside the music. For me, it’s reinforced prioritizing beauty and deep care of the music. I remember so fondly being together and playing in the Ojai orchard in early 2021. It was the first time I’d played music with people in a long time, and I remember feeling so so connected. The trio became 3D to me that day – soaring from the start.”