MUSIC

PREMIERE | Stephen Day Releases "Guess I’m Grown Now"

Organic pop with complex hints of jazz and soul.

Nashville's pop/soul singer-songwriter Stephen Day's new album, Guess I'm Grown Now, narrates the joy and heartache of becoming an adult.

Day says, "Guess I'm GrownNow feels like the only record I could have possibly made at this time in my life. Somehow all of the things I felt limited by at the beginning of making this album made it a perfect time stamp on my life, which is, I guess, how things work?"


Currently touring with The Brook and The Bluff and Jordy Searcy, Day performed at Nashville's Live On The Green festival, sharing the stage with St. Paul and the Broken Bones, Grace Potter, and Steve Earl.

The ten tracks on the album are both fresh and elusively familiar. Entry points include the polished "All The Time In The World," the delicate tenderness of "Dreams Tonight," and the sparkling flow of "Twenty Two And Some Change."

Speaking subjectively, the best track on the album is "Only Growing," highlighting Day's rich, pure tenor, full of soft surface tones and tangible passion, conjuring up memories of the high, sweet voice of 50's pop singer Jimmy F. Rodgers.

Follow Stephen Day Website | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | Spotify

MUSIC

T. Soomian Debuts Lush First Album: "Love Relief"

An "ode to the nightlife" of Los Angeles.

T. Soomian

Press Photo

Los Angeles native T. Soomian launches his eight-track debut album, Love Relief, on Popdust.

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MUSIC

Katey Brooks Bewitches On "REVOLUTE"

Put simply, this is one of the best albums of the year.

Katey Brooks

John Morgan

Katey Brooks is a major talent.

Her musical gift glows on REVOLUTE, her new album, premiering here today on Popdust.

Produced by Brooks, REVOLUTE merges her delicious soul-folk-blues-country sound with topics like love, loss, learning, rebirth, and emotional honesty. It's the latter notion – honesty – that makes her music so genuine.

Brooks grew up in a cult, where music became her safe haven as she came to terms with her queer identity. According to Brooks, "It was a very chaotic upbringing, full of some pretty colourful and sometimes unsavoury characters. And that led me to feel quite squashed as a person. But when I sang, I felt free and connected. For as long as I can remember, it's been my way of getting what I need to say out."

A bit of a rebel, she later turned down a place at the Brit School, a prestigious performing arts college. When she was 22-years-old, her mom and best friend passed away. A residue of aching sadness enveloped many of her songs. Brooks says, "I guess I'm lucky that I have songs that I can write, as a means to deal with things."

Encompassing 11-tracks, entry points on REVOLUTE include the opening track, "Never Gonna Let Her Go," a sublimely gorgeous song, commencing on gospel choir-like voices flowing into a blues-flavored country-gospel melody. Brooks' voice is nonpareil, rich, alluring, and bewitching.

"Golden Gun" rides wickedly dark flavors, reminiscent of Chris Isaak, tantalizing and inscrutably devout. The rolling, trembling rhythm infuses the tune with tight opaque resolves.

"Call Out," a song about exposing your heart to others, opens on an almost dirge-like piano topped by Brooks' penetrating, evocative, melancholic tones. The last track, "Trouble So Hard" releases cool savors of bluesy gospel energy, traveling on jagged edgy guitars and a deep bass line. Austere and uncomplicated, the song projects murky, affecting dynamism.

Put simply, REVOLUTE is superlative, surely one of the best albums of the year.

Follow Katey Brooks Facebook | Twitter | Instagram

New Releases

theAngelcy Premiere 'Nodyssey'

Traditional folk music blended with pop-lite and classical energy.

Photo Credit: Alex Haager

From Tel Aviv, the indie-folk sextet known as theAngelcy premieres their new album Nodyssey, slated to drop December 7.

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