Itās been a minute or two since weāve heard from SOUNDING ARROW, the solo project of veteran recording artist and touring musician Scott Kinnebrew (Truth and Salvage Co). For the first time since the 2017 album Loving Is Breathing, SOUNDING ARROW return today (September 25) with the warm and radiant single āSkymanā (Blackbird Record Label) and its uplifting, colorful video.
āSkymanāāboth heady and light as a feather, a perfect tonic for these timesāmarks the first release from the singer, songwriter and guitaristās second as-yet-untitled album due out in early 2026 (exact release date TBA). Watch the videoādirected byĀ Doug FrerichsĀ and filmed inĀ Kinnebrewās adopted hometown of Asheville, North Carolina.The track will be available for streaming everywhere thisĀ Friday, September 26Ā HERE.
The SKYMAN album was co-produced by Gary Jules (āMad Worldā from the Donnie Darko soundtrack) and mixed by Bill Reynolds (Band of Horses, The Avett Brothersā Emotionalism). It weaves a vivid sonic landscape rich with the textures of rock, folk, country, blues, British invasion, R&B, and pop. Itās a brew that resists classification, as it lands somewhere between tradition and inventionāwhat Kinnebrew thinks of as āsonic impressionism.ā
Listening to theĀ āSkymanāĀ single feels like driving a lonely stretch of two-lane highway through a terrain of psychedelic optimism. The destination loses importance as the listener absorbs the introspective grandeur of a consciousness unfolding mile by mile. Sure, the songās an invitation to lighten your day by just grooving along with the spacey vibes. ButĀ KinnebrewĀ wants us to keep mindful, tooāas he delicately points out, āEverything is perfect,ā but āsoon weāll all be dying. The now is wow. We are so lucky to be here.ā
Talking about the songās sonic alchemy,Ā KinnebrewĀ says: āI think the song is very mantra-like. The major7 acoustic guitar riff that anchors the song just repeats hypnotically until the bridge, which comes as such a release. And thenāwhen the 16th note tambo comes in on the chorusāitās like the song catches a thermal and you are truly gliding.ā
This lightness of being is captured in theĀ āSkymanāĀ video. ExplainsĀ Kinnebrew: āI started thinking about what could best define āSkymanā within my network and zero budget.Ā Scrolling through Instagram, I came across my friend Alethia Austinās post. Alethia is a professional skydiver who instructs for a living. And she is a badass.
āShe was totally down to work on the video. At that point my wife and brains behind the operation said we needed a narrative. She thought it would be cool to have footage of a kid pretending to skydive cut in with footage of a pro dive. Brilliant idea. Our little buddy Burl Craven fit the bill, and he and his folks were down to help.
āSo all in all, it was a group operation,ā addsĀ Kinnebrew.Ā āI reached out to friends asking if anyone had cool footage of clouds, and folks sent me stuff. I borrowed a camera and had my buddy Jesse McSwain help shoot. None of us knew what we were doing with the camera but followed Dougās (the editor/director) instructions and went for it. Sounding Arrow has a rotating cast of characters so I asked friends around town if they wanted to be my āband.āĀ Everyone chipped in with direction, location, and wardrobe. When we were done collecting footage, we sent it all to Doug (who directed two Sounding Arrow videos, āKing Size Heartā and āYou Will Be Lovedā). He took it and turned into a masterpiece, per usual.ā
Over some 30 years, Scott Kinnebrew has shared the stage with a long list of renowned artists he admires, including The Black Crowes, The Avett Brothers, The Lumineers, Sturgill Simpson, Dawes, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Lissie, Levon Helm, Garth Hudson, Blind Melon, Steve Miller Band, Govāt Mule, and The Doobie Brothers. His former band, Truth & Salvage Co., released two records on Sonyās Megaforce label, appeared on Jimmy Kimmel Live, toured Iraq to perform for U.S. troops in 2009, turned down a gig with Phil Lesh for reasons unknown, and racked up 250,000 road miles in five years.

