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UPCOMING RELEASES

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Artists > Myspace / DC > Feature

August 31

Alain Johannes - Spark
Carl Broemel (My Morning Jacket) - All Birds
Goo Goo Dolls - Something for the Rest of Us
Heart - Red Velvet Car
Jarrod Gorbel - Devil's Made A New Friend
Jenny and Johnny (Jenny Lewis/Johnathan Rice) - I'm Having Fun Now
Land of Talk - Cloak and Cipher
Magic Kids - Memphis DC
Philip Selway (Radiohead) - Familial DC
Portico Quartet - Isla
Rebecca Martin - When I Was Long Ago
Richard Thompson - Dream Attic DC
Ryan Bingham - Junky Star DC
Sahara Smith - Myth of the Heart DC
Secret Sisters - Silver Threads and Golden Needles
The John Henrys - White Linen
The Weepies - Be My Thrill DC

September 7

Andreya Triana - Lost Where I Belong
Brendan James - Brendan James DC
Eden Brent - Ain't Got No Troubles
Imelda May - Mayhem (U.K.)
Interpol - Interpol
Jerry Lee Lewis - Mean Old Man
Jukebox the Ghost - Everything Under the Sun
Kid Rock - Born Free
Sara Bareilles - Kaleidoscope Heart DC
The Acorn - No Ghost DC

September 14

2AM Club - What Did You Think Was Going to Happen?
Azure Ray - Drawing Down the Moon
Black Mountain - Wilderness Heart
Blonde Redhead - Penny Sparkle
Brandon Flowers (The Killers) - Flamingo
Clare Burson - Silver and Ash DC
Edwyn Collins - Losing Sleep
James - The Morning After The Night Before
Junip (w/ Jose Gonzalez) - Fields
Justin Jones - The Little Fox EP
Justin Townes Earle - Harlem River Blues
Lizz Wright - Fellowship
Kanye West - Good Ass Job
Kerry Ellis (w/ Brian May) - Anthems (U.K.)
Kim Richey - Wreck Your Wheels
Kirsty Almeida - Pure Blue Green (U.K.) DC
Leonard Cohen - Songs From the Road/Live (CD/DVD)
Matt Costa - Mobile Chateau
Matt White - It's the Good Crazy
Mavis Staples - You Are Not Alone
of Montreal - False Priest
Olof Arnolds - Innudinr Skinni
Peter Himmelman - The Mystery and the Hum
Richard Barone - Glow
Robert Plant - Band of Joy
The Chapin Sisters - Two
The Parlotones - Stardust Galaxies
The Script - Science and Faith (U.K.)
The Walkmen - Lisbon DC
Underworld - Barking

September 21

Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson - Original Cast
Chris Hillman and Herb Pedersen - At Edwards Barn
Imogen Heap - Everything In-Between: The Story of Ellipse (DVD)
Jane Monheit - Home
John Legend & The Roots - Wake Up!
Juliet Commagere - The Procession
Lauren Pritchard - Wasted In Jackson (U.K.) DC

Lloyd Cole - Broken Record (U.K.)
Margot & Nuclear So & Sos - Buzzard
Michael Franti & Spearhead - The Sound of Sunshine
Maroon 5 - Hands All Over
Paula Cole - Ithaca
Rain Perry - Internal Combustion
Santana - Guitar Heaven: Greatest Guitar Classics

Swans - My Father Will Guide Me Up A Rope To The Sky
Taylor Eigsti - Daylight at Midnight
Teddy Thompson - Bella

September 28

Adam Stephens - We Live On Cliffs
Ben Folds/Nick Hornby - Lonely Avenue
Deerhunter - Halcyon Digest
Fences - Fences
Gin Blossoms - No Chocolate Cake
Jimmy Eat World - Invented
Kenny Chesney - Hemingway's Whiskey
KT Tunstall - Tiger Suit
Liza Minnelli - Confessions
Manic Street Preachers - Postcards from a Young Man (U.K.)
Mark Ronson - Record Collection
Nellie McKay - Home Sweet Mobile Home
Paul McCartney - Band on the Run (Expanded)
Pete Yorn - Pete Yorn
Phil Collins  - Goin' Back (Soul Covers)
Raul Malo - Sinners and Saints
S. Carey (Bon Iver) - All We Grow
The Posies - Blood/Candy
Tired Pony - The Place We Ran From (U.S.) DC
Tony Joe White - The Shine
Yaz - Reconnected Live

October 5

Antony and the Johnsons - Swanlights
Elvis Costello - National Ransom
Fran Healy - Wreckorder
Gang of Four - Content
Guster - Easy Wonderful
Marnie Stern - Marnie Stern
Secret Sisters - Silver Threads & Golden Needles
Taylor Swift - Speak Now
Tim Kasher (Cursive) - The Game of Monogamy
Todd Snider - Live from Nashville (CD/DVD)
Weezer - Pinkerton (Deluxe Edition)

October 12

Darius Rucker - Charleston, SC 1966
Indigo Girls - Holly Happydays
Kelley Stoltz - To Dreamers
Lauren Pritchard - Wasted in Jackson
Lynn Miles - Fall For Beauty
Shawn Mullins - Light You Up

October 19

Brooke Fraser - TBA
Elton John/Leon Russell - The Union
Sugarland - Incredible Machine
Wooden Wand - Death Seat

October 26

Bryan Ferry - Olympia

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    Monday
    Mar152010

    Nathaniel Rateliff - In Memory of Loss

    Denver-based singer/songwriter Nathaniel Rateliff's upcoming April 27 album In Memory of Loss (Rounder) is one of those rare, wonderful finds: a stark and assured collection of small masterpieces that evoke modern American roots music and neo-folk with subtle restraint. The timeless influences run deep and wide, with Time Out NY noting "the ghosts of Nick Drake and Gram Parsons" and it's obvious that Rateliff owes much to to the classic "modern" songwriting eras of the 60's and 70's. “It was more about songs, and not about an industry,” he observes of those times. “It was about a movement, not about making money. I think we’re moving back into that again. There’s still an importance in actually writing songs again. People are interested in hearing things that make sense."

    Produced by Brian Deck (Iron and Wine), Rateliff's Memory maintains an unvarnished, spacious naturalness that serves the album's diverse moods well. There's also an unflinching, to-the-heart direction that renders the deep melancholy and faint glimpses of hope in bold hues and unwavering lines. Newer artists often have the passion without the control. With quiet majesty, Rateliff finds both on songs such as the raw, striking "Early Spring Till", tender lament "Once In A Great While" or gorgeous Beatle-ish piano ballad "Happy Just to Be". In Memory of Loss, he says, “is for everyone who’s willing to listen." Take him up on the offer. Highly recommended.

    Myspace  Artist Site

    Nathaniel Rateliff - "Early Spring Till" (from the album In Memory of Loss)

    Nathaniel Rateliff - "Once In A Great While" (from the album In Memory of Loss)

    Our streams are for sampling only. Like what you hear? Respect the artist and buy the music!

    Photo: Tim Griffin

    BIO:

    The first things you notice are the voice and the space. That voice belongs to Nathaniel Rateliff, a man who’s earned the twang and hard-knock weariness that shines through on his Rounder debut. The space comes courtesy of producer Brian Deck (Califone, Iron & Wine, Modest Mouse), who helped transform 8-track bedroom demos into miniature epics of contrast, beauty, and yearning. In Memory of Loss is a stunning, heartbreaking sonic document from a singer-songwriter who’s made his way from a childhood in Bay, Missouri (pop. 60) to the national stage.

    Rateliff grew up of modest means, the son of devout Southern churchgoers. The family sang together throughout his childhood. At age 7 Rateliff learned the drums. As a teenager, he stumbled across a cassette of Led Zeppelin’s IV abandoned in a local barn; he wore the tape out listening to it on headphones, drumming along with “When the Levee Breaks” and “Misty Mountain Top.”

    Rateliff’s youth in rural Missouri was quiet and rambling. He built skateboard ramps, explored caves, slept outdoors in the heat. “I loved growing up there,” he says. “It’s beautiful. There’s something really nice about there not being much to do; it really helped me be a creative person.” After his father passed away, when Rateliff was only 13, he picked up the guitar. His mother taught him three chords, a friend showed him a few more, and there was no need to bother with lessons; he started penning his own songs on an acoustic. He’d later go electric, gaining an appreciation for the freedom of effect pedals: “I was really into making feedback for hours at a time.” Both impulses are present on In Memory of Loss, with its shards of raw guitar rising beneath hushed, insistent melodies.

    At eighteen Rateliff relocated to Denver. He scored a job with a trucking company, working on the dock and the yard. The money was good, but Rateliff kept falling asleep at the wheel. “I had a little stint of narcolepsy,” he says. “My limbs were going numb, the color was all weird in ‘em. My thyroid wasn’t working. Weird stuff that shouldn’t be happening when you’re in your 20s, but it was.” After a battery of tests Rateliff decided to take time off from the job. It was a period of rest and recovery, but also one of artistic growth and fresh challenges. Rateliff used the break to learn the piano, much as he had other instruments—by teaching himself. The first song he tackled was Leonard Cohen’s melancholy classic, “Hallelujah.” (That same mixture of the sacred and profane is recognizable on “We Never Win,” with its throwbacks to gospel vocal harmonies, Rateliff harkening to “an old time revival.”)

    Meanwhile, Rateliff developed a dedicated following within the Denver music community and beyond. Spin praised his “massive, alluring” voice. Billboard dubbed the unsigned singer-songwriter a ‘must hear.’ This wave of acclaim lead to a live set on the popular indie site Daytrotter and a solo tour opening for the Fray. The New York Times praised Rateliff’s “stark, eloquent [Johnny] Cash echoes,” and he earned enthusiastic mentions from Time Out New York and the tastemaker music blog, Brooklyn Vegan. New York magazine pegged Rateliff as an “artist everyone should be listening to” during the pivotal CMJ Music Festival.

    Rateliff began writing a different sort of song than he was used to: quieter, more introspective and patient. A friend turned him on to the bedroom recording potentials of the time-honored 8-track, and a new working method was born. “I just kind of went back to my roots,” he says. “It was a different sound, but it was still coming from the same place.”

    While recording In Memory of Loss, Rateliff lived in Chicago, working with producer Brian Deck to craft the nuances: mournful harmonica on “You Should’ve Seen the Other Guy,” the ominous organ of “Longing and Losing,” propulsive bass drum on “Early Spring Till.” Rateliff’s Rounder debut is rooted in a bygone era. It’s both fresh and classic, imbued with a melancholy nostalgia, the rough candor of rock’n’roll’s past and the warmth and earnestness of folk storytellers. Rateliff has a personal connection to the sounds of the 60s and 70s. “It was more about songs, and not about an industry,” he says. “It was about a movement, not about making money. I think we’re moving back into that again. There’s still an importance in actually writing songs again. People are interested in hearing things that make sense.”

    These thirteen tracks, with their soulful minimalism, certainly make sense. Hints of the music he grew up on – Van Morrison, Muddy Waters, the Beatles—shine through. (Album closer “Happy Just To Be,” with its pounding piano chords, is a close cousin to the Lennon-penned “Across the Universe.”) Yet Rateliff is also at home in what may be called, for lack of a better term, the neo-folk revival. His voice is so confident that you can occasionally imagine the music dropping out entirely, a song propelled solely by Rateliff’s a capella strengths—equal parts church spiritual and TV on the Radio riffing on the Pixies’ “Mr. Grieves.”

    “The one thing that made me want to write and play music was trying to get the same feeling that it gave me when I listened to it,” Rateliff says. “Like having an anxiety attack—where you almost start to weep, at the same time feel a strange pressure in your chest.” This persistent troubadour has struggled and persevered to this point; now, the wider world is ready for Nathaniel Rateliff. “In Memory of Loss,” he says, “is for everyone who’s willing to listen.”

     

     

     

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