WATCH: Katie Pruitt, “Normal”

Artist: Katie Pruitt
Hometown: Nashville, Tennessee
Song: “Normal”
Album: Expectations
Release Date: February 21, 2020
Label: Rounder Records

In Their Words: “‘Normal’ was always a concept I fought against… I hated dresses, played with action figures instead of Barbies, I even cut my hair short. Kids aren’t afraid to be themselves, which is something we lose sight of as adults. We all feel this pressure to conform when the truth is… there is no mold we need to fit, no script we have to read from, and no such thing as ‘normal.'” — Katie Pruitt


Photo credit: Alysse Gafkjen

LISTEN: The Sea The Sea, “Rainstorm”

Artist: The Sea The Sea (Mira & Chuck e. Costa)
Hometown: Troy, New York
Song: “Rainstorm”
Album: Stumbling Home
Release Date: August 28, 2020
Label: AntiFragile Music

In Their Words: “There is a love story in this song — about trying to find your person in the world, yourself in the world, your way in the world. The first time Chuck and I sang together, a storm rolled in. And it’s taken me awhile to find how to write about it in a way that felt right, but there’s something about how it physically feels before a storm that feels akin to some deep level of knowing — something is about to happen, or it’s already happening. This song is also about what it feels like to turn away from or be lost in that instinct, and then find your way back to it again. Chuck and I lost touch for a few years after we met; I wasn’t playing music almost at all during that time. So this is also a love song to the thousands of times we have to lose our way sometimes to find our way back.” — Mira, The Sea The Sea


Photo credit: Kiki Vassilakis

LISTEN: Josh Ritter, “Time Is Wasting”

Artist: Josh Ritter
Hometown: Brooklyn, New York
Song: “Time Is Wasting”
Album: See Here, I Have Built You a Mansion
Release Date: August 28, 2020
Label: Pytheas Recordings

In Their Words:See Here, I Have Built You a Mansion is a collection of songs and performances that I love from the previous several years. I did the artwork a while back, and the title just popped into my head. I’ve really been missing making music with my band. On record or live, it’s always an adventure.

“I wrote ‘Time Is Wasting’ for a movie. The song didn’t get used, but I ended up thinking about it again as COVID lockdown stretched away in front of us. The rest of the songs soon fell into place behind it. There is a lot of time and distance and farewell on these recordings.” — Josh Ritter


Photo credit: David McClister

LISTEN: Decoration Day, “Harry Goes to War”

Artist: Decoration Day
Hometown: Toronto, Ontario
Song: “Harry Goes to War”
Album: Makeshift Future
Release Date: September 18, 2020

In Their Words: “A few months before he died, my grandpa sent me a typewritten letter in the mail with the title ‘Anti-Dementia Memoir #4.’ Every one of the grandkids had gotten one — it was just his charming way of preserving his memories and keeping his mind sharp until the end. The letter recounts his times as a soldier in the Canadian Army during World War II. There is quite a range in the two short pages; he writes about a joyous weekend playing hooky from the army camp, and also about the weight of being forced to burn the instruments of prisoners of war, who would later go on to open their own businesses in Canada. The story flowed in such a natural, folk-like way that I knew it had to be adapted into a song. When I hear it back now, it doesn’t feel like anything I’ve written, but instead like a piece of family lore that’s always existed.” — Justin Orok, Decoration Day


Photo credit: Brianna Roye

LISTEN: Ashley Ray, “Lawrence, Kansas”

Artist: Ashley Ray
Hometown: Lawrence, Kansas
Song: “Lawrence, Kansas”
Album: Pauline
Release Date: August 14, 2020
Label: Soundly Music

In Their Words: “‘Lawrence, Kansas is a love letter to my hometown. Sean McConnell and I wrote it at a time that I was coming up on living one half of my life there and one half of my life in Nashville. It really made me stop and think about how much I don’t want to lose my roots, I don’t want my memories of home to fade, I don’t want to lose my twang, I don’t want to forget how to get from one town to the next by way of all the back roads. Which made me think of what my Dad always told my sister and me on those back roads, ‘If you ever lose your way back home, look for Blue Mound Tower and remember we live north of there.'” — Ashley Ray


Photo credit: Electra King

LISTEN: Heidi Newfield, “When Heaven Falls”

Artist: Heidi Newfield
Hometown: Healdsburg, California
Song: “When Heaven Falls”
Album: The Barfly Sessions, Vol. 1
Release Date: August 28. 2020
Label: Notfamousenough, Inc.

In Their Words: “I wrote this song with Chris Stapleton and Trent Willmon. It was the second of two songs we wrote that day. The first was very cool and a great start… but we had a lot of day left so I told the guys I had this title called ‘When Heaven Falls,’ which originated with the loss of my mother Mary Ann back in 2004. I’d been carrying around all this grief, but hadn’t properly mourned her. I worked through the pain. I stayed on the road and in the studio. That kind of pain always manifests and finds its way out eventually — and for me, a lot of it was through this song.

“Chris laid his head back after thinking on it for a bit and began singing that opening phrase… ‘It’s the burning of an angel damned, that lingers in the souls of man…’ Trent and I just looked at each other and said a resounding ‘YES!!’ We jumped in there and out of our efforts that day came this beautiful and haunting song. It is the pure embodiment of loss, hurt, struggle, helplessness, and a broken heart… how it feels, looks, sounds, and hurts when Heaven falls…” [Read more below.]

“The track was the very last song we recorded that week. My voice was a little tired and worn, but my co-producer Jim ‘Moose’ Brown and I felt it would be a beautifully emotional way to close out the 17 songs we’d recorded late that night. We gathered around with Bobby Terry and David Grissom grabbing guitars. Bobby began playing that stunning acoustic opening lick. We wanted to keep it sparse and open…leaving lots of room and space for the listener’s thoughts.

“Michael Rhodes hopped in there with an old funky bass that sounded like a fretless, but wasn’t. Fred Eltringham kept it so vibey on drums playing just enough to hold us together and add those dynamics. He’s so great! That solo was everyone playing a full piece of an arrangement that was a bit fragile. It could’ve fallen apart at any second, but everyone played those notes stunningly, as a team, as a band. We decided to use my tracking vocal and not mess with it. It’s a little tattered and it’s not busy or fancy, but there was a timing and a transparency that was captured in that moment we wanted to keep. I laid down a harmony part or two and Moose laid one down, too, later in the song, but we kept it simple and honest. You can’t listen to this track without feeling a bit empty. That’s the point of it all.” — Heidi Newfield


Photo credit: Jeremy Fraser

LISTEN: Adam Wright, “Darlene”

Artist: Adam Wright
Hometown: Newnan, Georgia
Song: “Darlene”
Album: I Win
Release Date: October 9, 2020
Label: De Casa

In Their Words: I don’t really remember how this song started. Most of my character songs come from something I see or hear and then develop in the notebook later. My grandfather was a mechanic and I guess I have a bit of an affinity for them. I have several songs where the character works on cars. I just like this guy’s attitude. He badly needs this girl to make him feel better. He’s just had it with everything. I can relate. ” — Adam Wright


Photo credit: Shannon Wright

WATCH: Taylor Goldsmith of Dawes Performs at the Autry Museum in L.A.

In an effort to support the visual and musical arts, especially during a time when we can’t visit museums or concert venues, The Autry Museum of the American West is presenting a music video series featuring intimate, acoustic performances by some of L.A.’s best musical artists, all filmed live on location. The Autry will be unveiling a new performance every two weeks.

The Autry Presents: The Best of Los Angeles, produced by Gia Hughes and filmed by Emmy-winning filmmaker Austin Straub, will feature 20+ minute sets by Los Angeles-based artists Taylor Goldsmith, Gaby Moreno, Aubrie Sellers and Chris Pierce. The musicians will perform alongside artwork and objects on display at The Autry including Bridges by James Doolin, War Music II by Mateo Romero, and a Concord Mail Stage Coach made by Lewis Downing.

Hughes tells BGS, “We’re excited that the first video in the series features the prolific songwriter Taylor Goldsmith, of LA’s hometown heroes Dawes. I’ve been fortunate enough to have seen them in countless live settings over the years, and getting to share this particular performance with Taylor is just as special. You feel like you’re in the room with him and get to hear just how unique and special his songwriting is.”

LISTEN: Evelyn Cools, “Yosemite”

Artist: Evelyn Cools
Hometown: Sint-Niklaas, Belgium
Song: “Yosemite”
Album: Misfit Paradise
Release Date: August 14, 2020
Label: Head Bitch Music

In Their Words: “Although I have lived in cities most of my life, nature has always been my main source of inspiration, grounding, and happiness. Yosemite National Park in particular has had a huge impact on how I perceive the natural world and our role as humans in protecting it. I wrote the song ‘Yosemite’ as a sonic representation of what it feels like to drive through the park, starting out slow and peaceful, and building toward the overwhelming moment when the valley opens up to you as if out of nowhere. It is the truest ode to nature I have written so far, and a conversation starter for the preservation and protection of natural lands. To date, it is one of my favorite songs to listen to, play at home, and perform at concerts, and I hope it resonates with all those who yearn for a deeper connection with our planet.” — Evelyn Cools


Photo credit: Tye Edwards

LISTEN: Half Gringa, “Transitive Property”

Artist: Half Gringa
Hometown: Chicago, Illinois
Song: “Transitive Property”
Album: Force to Reckon
Release Date: August 28, 2020

In Their Words: “‘Transitive Property’ is, in my mind, the song most illustrative of the themes of this record. It’s a song about the aftermath of cutting someone out my life that I didn’t know I’d have to. It’s also a reflection of how the state of this country and my own grief felt like places I didn’t recognize or understand. The main guitar riff is a great example of how I write guitar parts. Sam Cantor (the other guitarist in my band) and I play parts that are really intertwined. There isn’t really a lead/backing guitar dynamic when we play; it shifts a lot. I came up with this riff thinking that he could harmonize on it. ‘The Architect’ on the last record, Gruñona, has a guitar part where he did that, and I liked it so much I wanted to do more of that.” — Isabel “Izzy” Olive, Half Gringa


Photo credit: Rachel Winslow