LISTEN: Jesper Lindell, “If There Comes a Time”

Artist: Jesper Lindell
Hometown: Ludvika, Sweden
Song: “If There Comes a Time”
Album: Twilights
Release Date: March 18, 2022
Label: Brunnsvik Sounds

In Their Words: “I wrote ‘If There Comes a Time’ around March 2020 and together with ‘Living Easy’ they are the first songs I wrote for what came to be Twilights. ‘If There Comes a Time’ is probably my own personal favourite on the album, because of what the words mean to me and just the overall vibe we managed to get on that song. And I hope people are going to like it and the whole album as much as all of us who recorded it do. And I guess I can only speak for myself when I say that recording Twilights is the most fun I’ve ever had playing music, but I think everyone in the band feels somewhat the same way at least. And I hope that shines through in the songs as well.” — Jesper Lindell

Rootsy · 02 If There Comes A Time

Photo Credit: Emilia Bergmark-Jiménez

LISTEN: Bob Davoli, “Speed of the Sound of Loneliness”

Artist: Bob Davoli
Hometown: Lincoln, Massachusetts
Song: “Speed of the Sound of Loneliness”
Album: Hello Out There
Release Date: April 8, 2022
Label: Gutbrain Records

In Their Words: “John narrated his poignant vignettes with a plain-spoken and plaintive voice — and his imagery was so compelling that you could clearly see his characters in your mind’s eye. He had an innate knack for finding just the right words to sculpt his stories and illuminate the essence of the emotions he seeks to convey. He wrote from his gut and aimed for your heart because that’s where most people live! His writing epitomizes the power and beauty of simplicity.

“‘Speed of the Sound of Loneliness’ exemplifies how keen was John Prine’s imagination. Using imagery, he cleverly juxtaposed a phenomenon, the speed of sound, with an emotion, angst. He was going through a relationship breakup, and he happened to see on the cover of TIME Magazine the person who broke the speed of sound on the ground with a stretched face (exaggeration, of course, by TIME Magazine) resulting from the force of gravity; stretched is how Prine’s heart felt!” — Bob Davoli

Bob Davoli · Speed Of The Sound Of Loneliness

Photo Credit: Lynn DeLisi

Basic Folk – Suz Slezak (David Wax Museum)

Suz Slezak is one half of the extremely talented, thoughtful and kind folk band David Wax Museum. Suz, along with her husband David, have been touring and performing their Mexican inspired, Americana folk act since 2009. Along the way, the two got married, had a couple of kids and settled pretty finely into the pandemic with bi-weekly and then weekly live streams. All the while, Suz has been living with her bipolar disorder, which has impacted her life in incredibly unbelievable ways.

 

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She’s also been pretty vocal, especially lately, about how she interacted with her brain health, mental health and treatment for both of those elements, which includes her intense journey with medications. Her Instagram is filled with brutally honest posts about the difficulty of finding meds that continuously help her stabilize her brain. She’s also very willing to share stories from the times where it didn’t matter what prescriptions she was on.

On her new album, Our Wings May Be Featherless, Suz is addressing her life from the perspective of a person who is bipolar, a mother, a touring musician and a creative person. She digs into the power of acceptance, traumatic birth, and grief. In our conversation, we talk about what a special musician she is and how she’s been able to cultivate and keep a childlike wonder alive through her playing. This conversation is heavily rooted in Suz’s journey with her bipolar disorder and you’ll learn a lot about her experience, as she is very open. She addresses the choice to share her experiences publicly and how the sharing impacts her. About the album, she says, “I hope you will also hear the way that a song, or any piece of art, can transform haunting pain into sounds and rhythm, allowing it to finally diffuse. I have needed to make this record for a long time. The relief I feel that it is finally emerging into this physical realm for you to enjoy is immense.” SUZ!


Photo Credit: Tristan Williams

LISTEN: Tim Gartland, “The Thing About the Truth”

Artist: Tim Gartland
Hometown: Nashville, Tennessee
Song: “The Thing About The Truth”
Album: Truth
Release Date: March 18, 2022
Label: Taste Good Music

In Their Words: “The song was a collaborative effort between me and Karen Leipziger. We both live in Nashville and wrote it over a couple of sessions at her studio. We chose a topic which both of us were passionate about, which is how the truth is manipulated to fit the narrative of certain groups. Working with Karen, we both wanted to express that while everyone has their point of view about societal ills, those views need to be based on facts. The facts, however inconvenient, must be accepted and dealt with. Only then can we work together to make things better. The music was written to capture the vibe of the song and expertly produced by Kevin McKendree at The Rock House in Franklin, Tennessee. The song features Wendy Moten on supporting vocals and Robert Framm on guitar. The musical conversation between the chromatic harmonica and guitar was meant to evoke how people can artfully have a meaningful discussion.” — Tim Gartland


Photo Credit: Erika Rock

LISTEN: Edgar Loudermilk, “The Deal That Won’t Go Down”

Artist: Edgar Loudermilk Band
Hometown: Eastanollee, Georgia
Song: “The Deal That Won’t Go Down”
Album: The Dark Side of Lonesome
Release Date: March 18, 2022
Label: Rural Rhythms Records/Green Hill Music

In Their Words: “This is a song that I wrote with Zack Autry one night while traveling through the beautiful state of Colorado. We were driving out of Denver on I-70 during a snow storm and saw these big canyon walls. This immediately put us in the mindset to write a western-style cowboy song. It’s about a roving gambler who falls in love with a girl at one of his regular stops. He finds betrayal and catches himself in a bit of trouble.” — Edgar Loudermilk


Photo Credit: Paris Mountain Photography

WATCH: Dietrich Strause, “Out of Mind”

Artist: Dietrich Strause
Hometown: Boston, Massachusetts / London, UK
Song: “Out of Mind”
Album: You and I Must Be Out of My Mind
Release Date: April 29, 2022
Label: Blueblade Records

In Their Words: “‘Out of Mind’ was the the last song I wrote for my new album, You and I Must Be Out Of My Mind, and it became the artistic center for the project. The track went down easy, spacious, and free. Co-produced by Brian Joseph, Shane Leonard, Sam Kassirer and myself, it captured a feeling I have been struggling to express in a song. I have come to see songwriting as a potentially dangerous personal endeavor. Like walking along a beautiful mountain path with a sheer drop on one side. Through songs I have the power to create icons, symbols, and myths about my experience and point of view over the years. I paint a picture that I find alluring. I worry through singing them night after night, that I might start to believe them and see the painting as real. I worry because what ends up in a song comes from that space between my best recollections and my best rhymes. If a detail from my memory doesn’t fit, I can change it until it does and sounds good. My experience of the world and the people around me is far more complex, and I don’t want to live inside myself in such a way.

“Sam Kassirer and I made the video together. He shot the film on a Super 8 camera, capturing the footage at the recording studio where we made the album.” — Dietrich Strause


Photo Credit: Sam Kassirer

WATCH: Mavis Staples & Levon Helm, “You Got to Move”

Artists: Mavis Staples & Levon Helm
Song: “You Got to Move”
Album: Carry Me Home
Release Date: May 20, 2022
Label: ANTI- Records

Editor’s Note: Mavis Staples’ concert appearance at Levon Helm’s renowned Midnight Ramble series from the summer of 2011 will be released for the first time on
Carry Me Home. The new album features a mix of Staples’ and Helm’s bands performing tunes made famous by the likes of Nina Simone, The Impressions, Bob Dylan, and The Rolling Stones. Staples spent five or six days on the property in Woodstock, New York, leading up to the show. Helm’s daughter, Amy Helm, sang backing vocals at the performance and remembers her father rehearsing for hours to prepare for the concert.

In Their Words: “My dad built The Midnight Rambles to restore his spirit, his voice, and his livelihood. He’d risen back up from all that had laid him down, and to have Mavis come sing and sanctify that stage was the ultimate triumph for him. … My dad was very spiritual, and the music that Mavis and her family made was sacred to him. He absolutely revered and respected the Staple Singers. Everybody in the Ramble band was laughing because it was the first and last time we’d ever seen my dad show up for rehearsals like that. He would have done anything for Mavis.” — Amy Helm

“It never crossed my mind that it might be the last time we’d see each other. He was so full of life and so happy that week. He was the same old Levon I’d always known, just a beautiful spirit inside and out. … We hugged and hugged and hugged [as we said goodbye]. I just held on to him. I didn’t know it’d be the last time, but in my heart and in my mind, Levon will always be with me because I take him everywhere I go. Yes, indeed. I can see him right now. And some sweet day, we’ll be together again.” — Mavis Staples


Photo Credit: Greg McKean

LISTEN: MacKenzie Grant, “Coffee and Wine”

Artist: MacKenzie Grant
Hometown: Syracuse, New York; Nashville, Tennessee
Song: “Coffee and Wine”
Album: Wonder World
Release Date: March 18, 2022
Label: Blackbird Record Label

In Their Words: “I think a marriage or any long-term committed relationship can start to feel like a fever dream, especially when you’re young and have little kids. If you and your partner are struggling, add in sleepless nights and exhaustion, you are just surviving for a while, in the trenches, coping. ‘Coffee and Wine’ is about pulling back from those situations, maybe after years, to take stock of what the state of your partnership really is. So many people I know, including myself, have been through a divorce. It’s heartbreaking to see how you both have been coping with everything as best you can, with whatever crutches you might have used, and you finally just realize that it’s not going to work. This song is about that moment of realization, coming up for air in the midst of things, and processing the grief and loss of what you hoped for in a marriage and facing the truth that it’s over.” — MacKenzie Grant


Photo Credit: Bram Fairhead

LISTEN: The Bad Oats, “This Old Plane”

Artist: The Bad Oats
Hometown: Boston, Massachusetts
Song: “This Old Plane”
Album: The Other Side of Love
Release Date: March 15, 2022
Label: Pine House Records

In Their Words: “I started writing ‘This Old Plane’ one morning while camping in New Hampshire. I had been reflecting on a past relationship and the song became my way of acknowledging that I had finally moved on. We recorded it, along with the rest of our album, in January of 2021 while quarantined together in a cabin in the Berkshires in Western Massachusetts. We recorded the entire record live in the living room with minimal overdubs. In a time of remote recordings and isolation in everyday life we all felt extremely lucky to be able to share a space and create together. We hope the energy and excitement that we experienced from being together comes across in the album.” — Sam Powers, The Bad Oats


Photo Credit: Mike Saunders

LISTEN: Ron Pope Feat. The National Parks, “Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)”

Artist: Ron Pope (Feat. The National Parks)
Hometown: Marietta, Georgia
Song: “Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)”
Album: It’s Gonna Be a Long Night
Release Date: April 28, 2022
Label: Brooklyn Basement Records

In Their Words: “‘Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)’ came out when I was in the 9th grade, so it was pretty much everywhere for a bunch of my formative years. When someone died, we played it. Graduation? Played it. Prom? You betcha. With some of the songs that were played constantly in that era, I grew sick of them pretty much immediately. Not this one. I’ve always admired this song. It’s simple and well-crafted. I also think the guys from Green Day are rad; I was on a festival with them and they were interacting with all the other bands backstage, not hiding somewhere. There was another much less popular band on the festival, hiding in a little sequestered corner. I made a mental note: ‘You’re never too good or too popular to be nice.’ The National Parks are real friends of mine; we’ve toured together, but now we’ve done so much more, celebrated together, mourned together, shared things outside of music (and lots of music too, of course; Syd once learned one of my songs that I couldn’t remember and re-taught it to me). They’re the best; I was so happy to get to do this with them.” — Ron Pope


Photo Credit: Sammy Hearn