WATCH: Keturah Allgood, “Rosary Beads”

Artist: Keturah Allgood
Hometown: Brevard, NC
Song: “Rosary Beads”
Album: Shine 
Release Date: May 29, 2023 (single); August 25, 2023 (album)
Label: Charlotte Avenue Entertainment

In Their Words: “This song was written in my cabin on my farm where I was living at the time. It was a snowy day and everything outside was beautiful and peaceful. I closed my eyes and this song unfolded like a movie. I could see a young man driving down a Southwestern highway with rosary beads hanging on his rearview mirror. He was grappling with his childhood memories which were beautiful and his current reality which was formed from trauma, from war, from pain. The movie in my head was beautiful and tragic all at the same time. My partner is a combat vet and as the person who loves him and is close to him I watch him struggle with his past and how to live a happy and fulfilled life while still being faced with the trauma of war. No matter where we come from all of us have darkness that we have to confront and deal with in order to heal and move forward. I don’t want anyone to ever feel alone with that struggle and that is why it was so important to add a message at the end of the video for this song to remind everyone that they are not alone and that there are resources out there if you find yourself struggling. You don’t have to be afraid to ask for help.” — Keturah Allgood

“As a Director, working on a song as beautiful as ‘Rosary Beads’ and an artist as gifted as Keturah, leaves you a wide open pallet to work with. Keturah and I discussed some issues that were near and dear to her when coming up with this powerful story and I couldn’t be more proud of this video and Keturah. The cast was amazing and our production crew and DP were all stellar.” – Michelle Robertson (producer, Charlotte Avenue Pictures)


Photo Credit: Jeremy Ryan

WATCH: Nina de Vitry, “Open”

Artist: Nina de Vitry
Hometown: Born in Lancaster, Pennsylvania; based in Nashville, Tennessee
Song: “Open”
Album: What You Feel Is Real
Release Date: August 25, 2023

In Their Words: “At its core, ‘Open’ is intended to coax listeners out of their shells. My personal experience creating the song and video parallels this message, as I found myself expanding out of my own comfort zone both as a musician and a visual artist in the creation process.

“‘Open’ builds from lonely, sparse verses to layered vocal harmonies and string parts, pleading with listeners to step out of isolation and towards connection. I originally intended to completely hire out the arrangements, but it soon became apparent to me that it was personally meaningful to arrange the harmony violin solo and the vocal harmonies (with background string pads by composer/arranger Duncan Wickel). Using my own voice as a violinist and harmony singer enhanced my creative confidence, and the ensuing world of strings and vocals elevated the expansive openness that I aimed to create.

“In the visual representation of ‘Open,’ a flower opens and the black and white illustration eventually turns into a full watercolor painting. The experience of making the video was cathartic, and reconnected me to a part of myself that I thought I had lost. Though I had always loved to draw as a child, I found that I had closed myself off to this creative outlet as an adult. Producing this song and video has helped me to expand my definition of what I do as an artist, and open myself to new artistic possibilities. It is my hope that pairing the song with this visual can appeal to the childlike wonder in all of us, and that it might inspire viewers to open themselves up to the world in a new way.” — Nina de Vitry


Photo Credit: Joseph Ross Photography

WATCH: Josie Toney, “City Girl Blues”

Artist: Josie Toney
Hometown: Olympia, Washington
Song: “City Girl Blues”
Album: Extra
Release Date: April 7, 2023
Label: Like You Mean It Records

In Their Words: “‘City Girl Blues’ was one of the last tracks written for the album, Extra, which was recorded in summer of 2020. From 2018-2020 I lived in Boston, by far the biggest city I had really experienced, and I loved being in school there. Between the hustle to and from class, riding the T, and the endless things to do in a big city, the longing for wilderness was only a distant nagging feeling until I graduated in December of 2019.

“I was already starting to feel claustrophobic when the stifling weight of the COVID pandemic hit the city, and all the things I loved about it vanished. Suddenly all I could think about were the skyscraper evergreens and endless tides of my home on the Puget Sound of Washington State, and it started to feel like between class, networking, and gigging, maybe I’d ‘paid my dues’ in the city and I was ready to make a home somewhere green.

“This brought me to Nashville, where I now very happily live on two acres of my very own; I even managed to find property with a couple of evergreen firs to stand beneath when I miss home. Extra is full of themes like home and the search for belonging, and ‘City Girl Blues’ addresses the particular affinity we have for whatever environment we grew up in — whether it’s the Smoky Mountains, the Mississippi River, or Washington State, where the water meets the woods.” — Josie Toney


Photo Credit: Natia Cinco
Video Credit: Jesse Weeden

WATCH: Anna Tivel’s Tender, Heartfelt Tiny Desk Concert

Singer-songwriter and musical storyteller Anna Tivel recently stopped by NPR headquarters in Washington, D.C., to perform at the iconic Tiny Desk. Supported by drummer Micah Hummel and Galen Clark on keys, her four-song set showcases her empathetic, tender, and heartfelt style that runs through her entire 2022 release, Outsiders. But her performances are anything but one-note, she teases nuance from each number and complicates the stories within them through emotion and passion and, at times, a beautiful understated tension. The team at NPR Music puts it aptly: “Tivel’s remarkable empathy elevates her folk-based, jazz-touched compositions from mere stories to secular prayers.”

Enjoy Anna Tivel’s Tiny Desk Concert right here, on BGS.


 

LISTEN: Margo Cilker, “Lowland Trail”

Artist: Margo Cilker
Hometown: Santa Clara Valley, California
Song: “Lowland Trail”
Album: Valley of Heart’s Delight
Release Date: September 15, 2023
Label: Fluff and Gravy Records

Editor’s Note: Recorded with producer Sera Cahoone and engineer John Morgan Askew, the upcoming album Valley of Heart’s Delight is an homage to Cilker’s birthplace of Santa Clara Valley in California.

In Their Words: “I wrote these songs surrounded by the wild landscapes of the Northwest, but I was leaning toward the place I’d come from. The valley felt like a distant memory to me. I was geographically cut off, and feeling cut off from my family. I spent hours thinking about my sense of belonging. I’d traveled through many places and then, when the travel stopped, I ruminated on where I had ended up. Where were you when the music stopped? I was in Enterprise, Oregon. And there in Enterprise, my mind drifted back to the Valley of Heart’s Delight.

“I wrote about family — about death and rebirth, and the arcs of love and art through a family line. There are songs that hint at missteps and redemption. There are songs about trees: in orchard rows, family trees, redwood trees. And water: agricultural runoff, wild rivers, baptismal flows, tears, brine of the sea. And there’s a [cover] song about a fish, ’cause it’s a damn good song and I wanted to record it.” — Margo Cilker


Photo Credit: Jen Borst

LISTEN: Erin Viancourt, “Should’ve Known Better”

Artist: Erin Viancourt
Hometown: Cleveland, Ohio
Song: “Should’ve Known Better”
Album: Won’t Die This Way
Release Date: July 21, 2023
Label: Late August Records

In Their Words: “A tale as old as time — loving and wanting something ya know damn well ain’t good for ya. When there’s more than enough signs and scars staring at you in the face but they get blurred by all the feel good moments. Like when ya eat too much ice cream before bed, in the moment that pint of Ben and Jerry’s ‘Half Baked’ tastes so good there’s no way I can feel bad after this … but every time, I fall asleep feeling like shit … knowin’ better.

“I hope this album makes people want to move around a dance floor with a cold beverage, sing at the top of their lungs with the windows down, and keep moving forward with whatever they’re looking for in life. Most of all I hope it reminds everyone that they’re not alone and we’re all a little crazy — so let’s all grow together and do it with style.” — Erin Viancourt


Photo Credit: Justin Cook

BGS 5+5: Logan Halstead

Artist: Logan Halstead
Hometown: Racine, West Virginia
Latest Album: Dark Black Coal

What’s your favorite memory from being on stage?

Arlo McKinley brought me on stage at Fallsburg, I wasn’t even supposed to play but he just surprised me, pulled me on stage and put a guitar in my hand.

What was the first moment that you knew you wanted to be a musician?

I realized this could be a career once I saw the support I was getting for “Dark Black Coal” and people were messaging me saying they’d pay to see me play. Before that, playing music was just a hobby.

What has been the best advice you’ve received in your career so far?

Keep your circle small, be loyal, work hard and do not be afraid to bet on yourself.

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

Most of the time I’m not hiding behind anything. I just try to be as honest about my life as possible. However, “Angel on My Shoulder” was a fictional song because I wanted to write a murder ballad.

Which elements of nature do you spend the most time with and how do those impact your work?

I really just like to be outside. There are a lot less distractions, just me and my mind. It helps me to be as introspective as possible.


Photo Credit: Allen Ralph

WATCH: Jess Williamson, “Chasing Spirits”

Artist: Jess Williamson
Hometown: Austin, Texas; Los Angeles, California
Song: “Chasing Spirits”
Album: Time Ain’t Accidental
Release Date: June 9, 2023
Label: Mexican Summer

In Their Words: “‘Chasing Spirits’ opens with a question: are my love songs lies now that the love is gone? You can write a deeply devotional love song about a partner and then one day break up. In that same vein, the title of this song has multiple interpretations. Chasing spirits can be a way of trying to connect with supernatural entities or one’s own higher self, and also, you order spirits at the bar or pick them up at the liquor store, maybe with a chaser.” — Jess Williamson

“‘Chasing Spirits’ was shot in Marfa, Texas, where Jess lives half the year, and the video features a lot of her real-life friends. The party in the Marfa Bus was real, shot in the trailer park where it currently sits. The video plays with some true-to-life elements, but in a hyper-stylized manner that feels fitting for a town like Marfa that has been so culturally mythologized, where real life and legend start to blur.” — Rocco & Giles, video directors


Photo Credit: Jackie Lee Young

WATCH: Annie Bartholomew, “All for the Klondike’s Gold”

Artist: Annie Bartholomew
Hometown: Juneau, Alaska
Song: “All for the Klondike’s Gold”
Album: Sisters of White Chapel
Release Date: June 16, 2023
Label: Muskeg Collective

In Their Words:Sisters of White Chapel is a historic songwriting project inspired by narratives of women who came north during the Klondike Gold Rush to my home state of Alaska and the Yukon Territory in the 1890s. For the past several years, I’ve been researching the lives of Victorian sex workers and women involved in the entertainment industry in these boomtowns, pairing their stories with string band traditions in search of the emotional truth and legacy of this history that persists today.

“The lyrics to ‘All for the Klondike’s Gold’ were adapted from a 1900 miner’s poem published in Dawson City’s Daily Klondike Nugget which describes three women left behind in the Northland after the deaths of their male companions. These were common tragedies in the backcountry and left women with few choices, forcing some to turn to sex work as a means of survival.” — Annie Bartholomew, Alaskan songwriter


Photo Credit: Julie Shelton

BGS 5+5: Jim and Sam

Artist: Jim and Sam
Hometown: Santa Monica, California
Latest Album: Good on the Other Side
Personal Nicknames (Or Rejected Band Names): Jamantha, Double Lives, JS, Jim Hanft and Samantha Yonack, Sim Jam, The Dialogues

What rituals do you have, either in the studio or before a show?

Before shows we do this “improv shake out” sort of thing where we both shake each of our limbs energetically 10 times while counting out loud while facing each other — and after we get through both legs and arms we count and shake to 9 and then 8 and so on. By the end it usually wakes us both up and we’re smiling feeling like idiots and totally loosened up to get on stage. I’m not sure, but I think it’s something Sam learned at acting school and she introduced it to me before one show where I was feeling a bit insecure and nervous to go on stage… and it worked. Since then we do it almost every time. It only gets weird if there are other people in the green room; however, usually people end up joining in. — Jim

Yes we shake our limbs but mainly we avoid each other. Jim goes and looks for a coffee and people to talk with, while I look for a room with no one in it to have a little quiet and get grounded. Our energies are opposite and we would make each other nuts… so right up until we go on… we usually take a little space. Then we shake. — Sam

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

SHOW UP FULLY… In 2017 we played one show every day for a year, and on the days where a show was canceled or we couldn’t book a show we would have to find a show. It was those impromptu shows that taught us that whether you’re in a beautiful ornate theater in Brussels performing to a sold-out audience or a dingy liquor store in London performing for the cashier, if you don’t show up it doesn’t matter, you may as well have stayed at home — but if you show up, if you’re fully present with the song, the room, the moment and the people or person you’re playing for, magic can happen. When we finished the tour we spent the following year making our film After So Many Days. It was during that process that we were reminded of the importance of showing up to the storytelling, the editing, and the music for the film. We now carry this with us wherever we are in the process of whatever we are creating at the moment.

What has been the best advice you’ve received in your career so far?

Throughout our year-long tour, we kept receiving the same advice from strangers to “keep going.” We still hear many of those voices in our heads on the days when not picking up the guitar or sitting at the piano feels easier than muscling through a hard day. A friend of ours also just shared advice he heard that a career is sort of like a brick wall, and the work you do whether it’s a song, album or a tour it’s all just a brick in a wall that you’re building… so don’t be too precious about one thing as long as it’s placed level with enough mortar, it’s really just a piece or a moment of a larger work of art.

Which elements of nature do you spend the most time with and how do those impact your work?

A lot of the songs on our most recent album were written during the first few months with our daughter, Hazel. The quiet walks with her in Temescal Canyon became a weekly ritual for us that always seemed to ground and reinspire us… similarly to the way a walk or hike while traveling on tour would always bring us back to earth. We are also lucky enough to live a few blocks from the beach and early in the morning we would walk her and our dog Pico down to the water to listen to the waves crash while the rest of the city was still asleep. The consistency of the waves (and the consistency that she has brought into our lives) is something that I think we were craving as two people that spent so many years touring. During these morning walks, Hazel would often fall asleep in her stroller. When we got home, we’d park her in the corner of the living room and use the remainder of her naps to write.

What was the first moment that you knew you wanted to be a musician?

I lost my dad to a tragic accident when I was 20. Up until that point I had written funny songs to try to make people laugh. It was when my father was in a coma that I turned to the guitar and to my notebook to express what I was feeling, and what the people closest to me were feeling. I recorded a demo of a song that I shared with my mom and friends and they connected and reacted to it in a way that I had never felt before. The song was then played for my dad on the final mixtape he heard in the hospital and then again at the funeral. From that point on, music has been a place I have always turned to when feelings have gotten too big to say or too big to just feel. — Jim

For as long as I can remember there was always music in my house. My dad was constantly playing the piano and writing my favorite songs. I would sit next to him and sing along… and eventually we would write songs together. He told me recently that he remembers when we recorded one of the first songs we wrote together at a studio… I poked my head out of the booth and said, “Dad, I really like this.” My mom was also a performer when she was younger so I was introduced to theater pretty early, too. I think the combination of all of it just created an innate desire to create that never went away. — Sam


Photo Credit: Mike Zwahlen