Album Review: Gillian Welch & David Rawlings – Woodland

After the destruction of their Woodland Studios in the Nashville tornado of 2020, Gillian Welch and David Rawlings salvaged what they could of their past and soon began rebuilding. The result is this first recording of original music for many years. In a recent interview with Mojo magazine, Welch said of the album, ‘There is a renewal, but with stories and scars. I feel like a new shoot, tender…’ Woodland has that same fragility, reckoning with the darkness and light of midlife, finding hope in new growth.

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Live Review: Waxahatchee & Anna St. Louis @QMU Glasgow 30/07/24

After releasing ‘Saint Cloud’ during the pandemic, Katie Crutchfield’s life changed. She found a new audience within the Americana scene, while also maintaining her core fans from her earlier indie rock records. Success in the genre led to the Plains collaboration with Jess Williamson and even working with Wynnona Judd, further underscoring her dedication to explore her Southern roots and influences.

Katie and her brilliant band (who included Spencer Tweedy on drums) came to Glasgow for the first time in many years, fresh from releasing the new album Tiger’s Blood. She performed that album in full, relishing in the opportunity to play these songs to a sold out audience.

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E.P. Review: Maren Morris – Intermission

After the release of her last album Maren Morris has faced some tumultuous times in her career and personal life. Idiots on the internet trolled her in numerous, cruel ways simply for speaking her mind and not being their idea of a cardboard cutout country music star. She split from the father of her child and came out as bisexual. You could forgive her for needing some time away from the limelight. Instead what she’s done is taken a little ‘Intermission’ by releasing this short but epic E.P., signalling a switch in directions in more ways than one.

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Emmylou’s Discography – Gliding Bird (1970)

‘I was an imitator; you have to start that way.’ – Emmylou Harris

Finding your voice is never as simple as opening your mouth and hoping you hit the right notes. Rarely do artists arrive fully formed, with something to say and a distinctive voice to carry them into the public consciousness. The history of music is littered with the sound of people hoping to find success by emulating others, many straight up stealing ideas in a desperate form of mimicry.

Work produced during this youthful development stage is referred to as juvenilia. If you make it to the other side of this time of experimentation and exploration then you might just have what it takes to become something original. Of course, once you become a success there is a level of embarrassment associated with this early work and indeed Emmylou Harris’s discography begins with Gliding Bird, an album she is so averse to that she no longer even classifies it as her debut. She actually sued a record company who tried to reissue the album after she became famous.

“I was trying to keep it a secret. I hope somebody in authority will be able to buy the masters and burn them. Everybody involved with that record hated everybody else and I was in the middle trying to keep the peace. It was a disaster.”

The album can be bought on second hand vinyl and some of these copies have been recorded and uploaded onto YouTube (in the internet age you can’t hide your past even if you wanted to).

So let’s take a listen and find out exactly what went wrong with Gliding Bird. Are there any positives to be found in this album? Was Emmylou right to disown this record?

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For Her Upcoming Album Miranda Lambert Sends Us ‘Postcards from Texas’

A few years ago, before Pistol Annies released their album ‘Interstate Gospel’, fans received postcards in the mail giving them clues about song titles and lyrics. Fans loved it so much that Miranda decided to repeat the treat with both analogue and digital postcards sent out this week – each one with the title of a new song and announcing her new album title as ‘Postcards from Texas’.

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Album Review: Carly Pearce – hummingbird

By choosing to start her new album with the killer line: ‘country music made do it and I’ll do it til I die’ followed by the sound of a fiddle, Carly Pearce is making it clear to country fans: she’s in this genre for the long haul.

Her last album, 29 was her most country sounding record and also her most vulnerable lyrically – this combination worked wonders for her career, winning her both commercial and critical acclaim (and a Grammy). Carly continues on that strong streak on ‘hummingbird’, sounding ever more comfortable and confident in her musical choices and songwriting – even producing the album herself.

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