Tag: Brandi Carlile

  • Americana Music Award Nominees Announced

    On May 15 in Nashville, The Americana Music Association announced the nominees for its 17th annual Honors & Awards. The winners of each category will be announced during the Americana Honors & Awards show on September 12, 2018 at the historic Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, TN. The celebrated program is the hallmark event of AMERICANAFEST: The Americana Music Festival & Conference, which runs from September 11-16, 2018

    The nominees are:

    Album of the Year:
    All American Made, Margo Price, Produced by Jeremy Ivey, Alex Munoz, Margo Price and Matt Ross-Spang
    By The Way, I Forgive You, Brandi Carlile, Produced by Dave Cobb and Shooter Jennings
    The Nashville Sound, Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit, Produced by Dave Cobb
    Rifles & Rosary Beads, Mary Gauthier, Produced by Neilson Hubbard

    Artist of the Year:
    Brandi Carlile
    Jason Isbell
    Margo Price
    John Prine

    Duo/Group of the Year:
    I’m With Her
    Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit
    Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real
    Nathaniel Rateliff & the Night Sweats

    Emerging Act of the Year:
    Courtney Marie Andrews
    Tyler Childers
    Anderson East
    Lilly Hiatt

    Song of the Year:
    “A Little Pain,” Margo Price, Written by Margo Price
    “All The Trouble,” Lee Ann Womack, Written by Waylon Payne, Lee Ann Womack and Adam
    Wright
    “If We Were Vampires,” Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit, Written by Jason Isbell
    “The Joke,” Brandi Carlile, Written by Brandi Carlile, Dave Cobb, Phil Hanseroth and Tim Hanseroth

    Instrumentalist of the Year:
    Daniel Donato – Guitar
    Brittany Haas – Fiddle
    Jerry Pentecost – Drums
    Molly Tuttle – Guitar

    Additionally, the Americana Music Association annually honors distinguished members of the music community with six member-voted awards and with Lifetime Achievement Awards, which will be announced leading up to Americana music’s biggest night.

    Now almost twenty years old, the prestigious ceremony has honored pioneers and emerging artists, while presenting many memorable moments, including Johnny Cash & June Carter Cash’s last live performance together, and performances and collaborations from such diverse artists as by Van Morrison, Bob Weir, George Strait, Don Henley, Bonnie Raitt, Gregg Allman, The Avett Brothers, Solomon Burke, Rosanne Cash, Civil Wars, Dr. John with Dan Auerbach, Patty Griffin, Levon Helm, Robert Plant and more.

    More information can be found here.

    Jason Isbell and Brandi Carlile reviews by NYS Music can be seen here and here.

    Upcoming New York State appearances by AMA nominees include:

    Margo Price, Brooklyn Bowl, Brooklyn, June 2, Governor’s Ball Music Fest, NYC, June 3, CMAC, Canandaigua, July 26

    Brandi Carlile, CMAC, Canandaigua, July 20, BRIC Celebrate Brooklyn Festival, July 26

    Jason Isbell & the 400 Unit, CMAC, Canandaigua, July 20, Forest Hills Stadium, Forest Hills, on September 29

    Nathaniel Rateliff & the Night Sweats, Ommegang Brewery, Cooperstown, on June 5, ; Forest Hills Stadium, Forest Hills, on June 9, SPAC, Saratoga Springs, on September 23,

    I’m With Her (Sara Watkins, Sarah Jarosz and Aoife O’Donovan) Caramoor, Katonah, NY July 7, SOLD OUT

    Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real, Stephen Talkhouse, Amagansett, July 21, SOLD OUT, and July 23, SPAC, September 23

    Anderson East, Mountain Jam, Hunter, June 16

    Molly Tuttle, Grey Fox Bluegrass Festival, Oak Hill, NY, July 20

  • Brandi Carlile Wrestled with Loss to Bring Back Joy at The Palace

    If you were seeking a little bit of country, a touch of rock, some moments reminiscent of church hymns and Irish music, and a whole lot of honesty, the Palace Theatre was the right place to be Sunday night. Brandi Carlile, with special guests Secret Sisters, filled the Palace Theatre with over 2,000 guests to hear authentic harmonies and sometimes almost “too honest to bear” lyrics that offered redemption, forgiveness and even joy.

    Brandi Carlile

    Secret Sisters Laura and Lydia opened the night with the promise that their music was primarily filled with sadness, and noted they were going to “wrestle joy away” from audience members with their harmonies. Their deadpan humor and teasing of one another juxtapositioned their swampy songs of longing perfectly. From Muscle Shoals, Grammy-nominated Laura Rogers and Lydia Slagle sang about loves lost, mistakes made and poor choices, mostly in minor keys. The women acknowledged the normalcy of loving the wrong person as both human and worth growing through. The sisters joked about how Laura named her previous lover in “He’s Fine,” bringing laughter when the sisters sang his name in the actual song.

    Secret Sisters was so welcomed by the audience that it was easy to forget they were just the opening act. Their easy rapport with the crowd, combined with the women’s amazingly clear vocals and Everly Brothers-like harmonies, struck a strong chord with the audience. The sisters closed with “You Don’t Own Me Anymore,” an original song with a nod in the bridge to Lesley Gore’s 1963 tune “You Don’t Own Me.” The audience responded with a standing ovation.

    The silent stage washed in purple lights opened up with a string trio joined by a French horn, teasing melodies from Brandi Carlile’s new album, By The Way, I Forgive You. The crowd cheered these classical musicians as they welcomed Brandi Carlile on stage with twin brothers Phil and Tim Hanseroth. Playing their most popular radio tune first thing, audience members had to notice: this was confidence. What would be left for the rest of the night?

    Brandi Carlile answered any doubts and questions immediately with her high energy jumping across the stage through 17 years of music. The band could play a Crosby, Stills and Nash sound and then jump into a more rock sound, alternating and enjoying the variety. This was true talent.

    Brandi Carlile

    The band’s newest album is full of hard songs to sing. Lyrics about loss, forgiveness, parenthood and survivorship didn’t sugar coat a moment. Two particular pieces, “Sugartooth” and “Fulton County Jane Doe,” touched upon the drug epidemic and violence against women. “The Joke” is a social advocacy song pushing people to be fearless in whom they are. And “The Mother” authentically tackled the normative ambivalence of becoming a parent.

    The twins and Brandi sang an unplugged acoustic version of “Cannonball” to its audience after declaring the Palace “a singing room.” The band members’ strongest pipes are clearly shared among the three vocalists; all three could fill the hall with equal harmony. If you closed your eyes, you could mistakenly believe you were in church. The screaming fans, of course, would ground you back to the theater.Brandi Carlile

    Sounding of country, rock and folk music, Brandi Carlile’s diversity and range was showing. And she was clearly having fun, jumping around the stage like a teen and sharing stories that charmed about her children. She even introduced her four-year-old daughter Evangeline to the audience, who waved and said, “Thank you Albany.”

    And just when you thought they had done everything possible, Brandi Carlile covered the Led Zeppelin tune “Babe, I’m Gonna Leave You” in quite possibly the sexiest and most compelling song of the evening. Brandi’s achingly gorgeous voice as she leaned into her vocals was a reminder: this band can do whatever it chooses to do.

    And it does. Brandi Carlile chose to make us cry and remember past loves. They reminded us to forgive our parents and love them regardless of faults. They cued listeners to be social activists who encouraged acts of goodwill. Brandi Carlile took the Albany audience on a very human journey Sunday night. With a diversity of style and sound, and generosity to include their opener in their later acts, Brandi Carlile wrestled with loss and pulled it away from Albany, leaving pure joy in its place.

    Setlist: Every Time I Hear That Song, Raise Hell, Harder to Forgive, The Eye, The Mother, The Joke, Have You Ever, Sugartooth, Mainstream Kid, Fulton County Jane Doe, Cannonball (front of stage, off mic), Most of All , Babe, I’m Gonna Leave You (Led Zeppelin cover), Secret Sisters song “Mississippi”, The Story, Whatever You Do, Party of One

    Encore: Hold Out Your Hand, Amazing Grace