LISTEN: Juni Ata, “Philadelphia”

Artist: Juni Ata
Hometown: Nashville now; born in Cuyamaca, California
Song: “Philadelphia”
Album: Saudade
Release Date: August 21, 2020
Label: Flying On Fire Records

In Their Words: “’Philadelphia’ is a personal story that tells of when I lost the love of my life as a younger man. We grew up in a tiny town of about 60 people, living across a meadow from one another. When we left school, she moved to Philadelphia for a job and I was supposed to follow immediately. I never got that Subaru Forester into Drive, for a multitude of reasons — some legitimate, some not. Ultimately, ‘Philadelphia’ is a song that uses the City of Brotherly Love as a symbol for all the places to which we have not yet traveled, but would still like to get to. If only in the reckoning and redemption of our past missteps. Whether or not we ever get there is intentionally left open-ended. Simply arriving upon a moment of truth whereby we are even able to identify the place where our heart — and destiny — lies, well… sometimes we never even get that far in our journey. Ultimately we are in command of our own victory, and regret.” — Juni Ata


Photo credit: Joshua Black Wilkins

LISTEN: The Infamous Stringdusters Feat. G. Love, “Cold Beverage”

Artists: The Infamous Stringdusters feat. G. Love
Single: “Cold Beverage”
Release Date: May 29, 2020

In Their Words: “I met G. Love a few years ago at my favorite local venue here on Long Island called Grey Horse Tavern. Last fall [the band] wanted to head into the studio to record collaborations, so I reached out to G. and he was down. The Stringdusters were due in Philly for our annual Halloween show (where G. is originally from) and coincidentally he was going to be in town at the same time. We booked some time at Rittenhouse Soundworks which has a very cool old warehouse-looking live room, and tracked a bluegrass version of G. Love’s hit ‘Cold Beverage.’ We did it live (aside from a few background vocals) and had such a blast hanging and making music with G., who is such a seasoned pro. It was really a special day in Philadelphia. We hope the fun we were having in the studio comes through in the track, enjoy!” — Andy Falco, The Infamous Stringdusters

“Andy Falco and I met and jammed at the Grey Horse Tavern a couple years back with Ron Artis during my BeachSide Blues tour. We’ve kept in touch since then and when Andy suggested a collaboration with the Stringdusters I was over the moon. I was thinking either let’s cook something up from scratch or do a bona fide hit down-home style. We decided to rock the Special Sauce hit ‘Cold Beverage’ which has become one heck of a great drinking song over the years. I went down to Philly the day before Halloween as everybody was off before the Stringdusters’ Halloween show at the TLA [Theatre of Living Arts in Philadelphia] so we had some studio time in Germantown (where I went to high school). We circled up and ran the song acoustic until we had a killer arrangement. We cut it live and nailed it in the first couple takes and added a few harmony vocal overdubs. The next night I sat in at the Stringdusters show and we debuted the collaboration to a full house. It was such a pleasure to get to work with these amazing musicians and I look forward to the jams to come.” — G. Love


Photo credit: Jay Strausser Visuals

LISTEN: Gina Sicilia, “For a Little While”

Artist: Gina Sicilia
Hometown: Philadelphia, PA — with East Nashville as her adopted/current home
Song: “For a Little While” (feat. Luther Dickinson)
Album: Love Me Madly
Release Date: May 29, 2020
Label: Blue Élan Records

In Their Words: “I wrote this tune in a dark room late at night, and I think that moment is captured by the tenderness and melancholy mood of this song, which is about missing someone — something I’ve felt often. I kept the lyrics brief, saying all that needed to be said to express a pretty simple, pure emotion. Luther Dickinson’s guitar solo is stunning and I love how this song almost has the feeling of an interlude, of a fleeting thought that you express, tuck away and don’t dwell on. This is a fragile song and getting my vocals to be as delicate as the song’s temperament was a challenge, but I’m so proud of the overall feeling that was accomplished with the help of my producer, Cody Dickinson, who devoted so much time to making sure we got this song right.” — Gina Sicilia


Photo of Gina Sicilia with Cody Dickinson: Madison Thorn

BGS 5+5: LULLANAS

Artist: LULLANAS (twin sisters Atisha and Nishita Lulla)
Hometown: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Latest album: Before Everything Got Real EP

Which artist has influenced you the most … and how?

It’s really hard for us to pick just one… honestly our music catalogue really started developing when we noticed the music in the background of tv/film/commercials. Once we saw how instrumental (pun intended) songs were to telling the story… that’s what really took our breathe away. Some artists who inspire us through that realm are Ingrid Michaelson, Peter Bradley Adams, and Gregory Alan Isakov.

What’s your favorite memory from being on stage?

We drove down to Nashville for a week and got a chance to play at the Bluebird. It was a moment we built up in our heads for a while and it did not let us down. We only played a few songs, but as soon as Nishita strummed the first chord to our song “Melody” on her guitar… the room went silent. It was the kind of intensity every artist craves. We could tell that the audience was taking in every feeling, every lyric, every note and any intimate artist to listener moment like that is a favorite stage moment for us.

What other art forms — literature, film, dance, painting, etc — inform your music?

When we aren’t creating music, we are in the kitchen baking up a storm. For us, baking is all about the process and attention to detail. The same goes for our music. One of our favorite things to do is create custom cookie designs inspired by artists who we look up to. We use baking as another outlet of artistic release. What we can’t write/sing about, we can bake about.

What’s the toughest time you ever had writing a song?

We had the chorus scribbled on a page for one of our songs off our latest EP. It was just a chorus for about seven months. No matter how bad we wanted to finish it… we just couldn’t. Eventually, taking a step back from it was what helped us complete it. It was one of the toughest times, but also one of the most rewarding.

If you had to write a mission statement for your career, what would it be?

To create music that helps people feel something in a world that can be a little numbing at times.


Photo credit: Lenne Chai

LISTEN: G.F. Patrick, “Tennessee”

Artist: G.F. Patrick
Hometown: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Song: “Tennessee”
Album: One Town Over
Release Date: May 29, 2020
Label: Need To Know Music

In Their Words: “As a musician, Tennessee is one of those places to which all roads seem to lead. Still, to find happiness, we sometimes pump the brakes and pull over before reaching our planned destination. This song examines the tropes of love beyond sense and the draw of bright lights in far-off places. Instead of ending in the fantastic dreaming where these stories most often stop, the song continues to the undreamt of conclusion. While the love is real, the belief that it would overcome all obstacles is thwarted and the deeper realities of love are revealed in the settling.” — G.F. Patrick


Photo credit: Gina Fitzpatrick

LISTEN: Seamus Egan, “Two Little Ducks”

Artist: Seamus Egan
Hometown: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Song: “Two Little Ducks”
Album: Early Bright
Release Date: January 17, 2020
Label: THL Records

In Their Words: “This mandolin-driven track is inspired by my love of Baroque music. I spent many hours as a teenager sitting in the front room of the great Irish musician and folklorist Mick Moloney’s house in Philadelphia, listening to mandolin concertos and trying to learn them by ear. I was never very successful in that endeavor, but my love of Baroque, and in particular, mandolin music endured.

“This track is also a nod, in its own way, to an old De Dannan track called ‘Arrival of the Queen of Sheba to Galway,’ from their 1983 album, Song For Ireland. This was their interpretation of the Handel piece, The Arrival of the Queen of Sheba. Hearing that track was a watershed moment for me. It opened my ears to what could be possible with Irish music. It was like getting permission to look outside the tradition and see what you could find and bring back with you. It was incredibly liberating. Joining on this track is Kyle Sanna on guitar and Owen Marshall on bouzouki.” — Seamus Egan

WATCH: The John Byrne Band, “Special Place in Hell”

Artist: The John Byrne Band
Hometown: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Song: “Special Place in Hell”
Album: A Shiver in the Sky
Release Date: November 1, 2019

In Their Words: “The album is about living, about moving forward, the challenges of moving forward, the challenges of living. It is an album about self-preservation and holding on to love and hope. There are cautionary tales, songs about dealing with addiction, about immigration, about relationships of all kinds, about facing prejudice, about leaving things behind. They all ultimately carry a similar message, that living carries with it the possibility of balancing out regret or mistakes with a future that contains something brighter, and that something is love. The shiver in the sky is the remnants of trauma, but it’s not permanent.

“The idea behind the video was to take imagery from the song and write a simple narrative. Nathan Morrow (the animator) had the idea of the underwater setting representing two people who save each other from drowning. The helmets represent the (flawed) armor we develop to protect ourselves. Love, or at least the possibility of love, sees us discard this protection and embrace the possibility of something brighter.” — John Byrne


Photo credit: Suzanne Kulperger

LISTEN: Lizanne Knott, “I Was a Bird”

Artist: Lizanne Knott
Hometown: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Song: “I Was a Bird”
Album: Bones and Gravity
Release Date: October 4, 2019

In Their Words: “I wrote ‘I Was a Bird’ about coming back to a place you’re meant to be, a home, in whatever form that takes. I was a bird. I’ve always been a bird, flying whichever way the wind blows, at the expense of my soul. I’ve learned some hard lessons, lost some friends along the way, even lost myself. But I came back, and (at least for now) I’m here to stay.” — Lizanne Knott


Photo credit: Tod Elmore

BGS 5+5: Bug Martin

Artist name: Bug Martin
Hometown: Philadelphia, PA
Latest album: GUTTERBALL
Personal nicknames (or rejected band names): formerly known as Dead Bugs

Which artist has influenced you the most … and how?

Undoubtedly there have been a select few at different points in my life and work, but I’ll say Will Oldham has been a notable influence on me. He occupies a very specific corner of folk, or Americana — or “new weird America” or whatever you want to call it — that can be hard to pin down (as evidenced by the game of horseshoes I just played with genres there). [He] always takes on the task of exploring sound in unique ways.

The first record of his I ever heard was I See a Darkness, the title track of which Johnny Cash later did a version of with him. I listened to I See a Darkness at the recommendation of a friend and didn’t like it for a long time. I’d walk around at work with it playing in my headphones just having an all-around bad time; but there was something about it that continued to draw me back. I’d be thinking about what that unnameable glinting thing was way too much while I was listening to it. Eventually I learned to lean back and appreciate the joy of not knowing the answer.

Years later, I got to meet Will and heard him give a lecture to a very intimate crowd, maybe only 30 people, about topics like what songs are, the songwriting/recording process, and live performance. I asked him a question I had been pondering a while and he gave me an unsatisfying answer. Brought me right back to where I’d originally found him and that initial journey of un-learning and for that I’m forever grateful.

What’s your favorite memory from being on stage?

In the town I grew up in there were lots of loud and lively bands. It’s the common plight of the up-and-coming acoustic act; show up to a bar or venue and play your heart out while folks zone out or talk over you. I always saw all these electric bands come through town that tried to command attention through volume and were also unsuccessful and it got me to thinking.

The next time I played, I brought a few power strips and as many electronics as I could fit in the car — I’m talking toasters, Christmas decorations, a TV looping a muted Looney Tunes VHS while I was playing… pretty much anything that I had in my house at the time to spare. I plugged all of it in around me and turned everything on while I was playing. It was probably the quietest that place had ever been as a room full of people collectively tried to figure out what was going on.

A thunderstorm rolled in and the whole room was pretty much dark and silent except for the glow of all these unnecessary electric props and what I was singing. After the set was over, people came up and talked to me about things they had just noticed in those same songs that I had played a dozen or so times in that same venue. I was glad they were able to be mindful of something going on in front of them and connect with live music. I was gladder still that I didn’t short out the entire fuse box mid-set.

How often do you hide behind a character in a song or use “you” when it’s actually “me”?

My job is to be a conduit for whatever stories the ghosts around us have to tell. When I’m presented with an idea from wherever it is thoughts come from, I can give my opinion on it in a song but that doesn’t mean I can claim any ownership or that the story is mine. Thoughts don’t belong to or define the thinker.

What other art forms — literature, film, dance, painting, etc — inform your music?

My partner is a very talented abstract painter, so our studio space and home are full of visual works. In the past we’ve collaborated on work where, say, the title of a song will be the inspiration for a painting or I’ll meditate on a piece of theirs and try to capture feelings that the colors or forms stir up. It’s a great exercise to shake up patterns you fall into as an artist.

Besides that, I’m a film buff and a fairly avid reader. I had the pleasure of working recently with a friend of mine who is a dancer to create choreography to a song off of GUTTERBALL. Basically I have no allegiance to any specific medium of expression and recognize that inspiration is everywhere if I have the good sense to accept it.

Since food and music go so well together, what is your dream pairing of a meal and a musician?

Living? I’d happily make brunch for Alice Gerrard any day she’d let me. All-time? I’d take the Carter Family out for ice cream.


Photo credit: Mia Fiorentino

WATCH: Michael Braunfeld, “Maline”

Artist: Michael Braunfeld
Hometown: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Song: “Maline”
Album: Driver
Label: Blind Justice Music

In Their Words: “‘Maline’ was written for my daughter and is about the ups and downs of a life spent chasing your dreams. It’s me telling her to always follow her heart … no matter what. The shoot was done live at Doug Lancio’s East Nashville studio. Doug handled the audio and Stacie [Huckeba] captured and edited the video. It was a pretty great day spending time and collaborating with artists that I truly admire. And they nailed it!” — Michael Braunfeld


Photo credit: Stacie Huckeba