Showing posts with label All Eyes Media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label All Eyes Media. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 9, 2017

B.J. Barham Presents Rockingham Tonight at The Pour House

B.J. Barham of American Aquarium shares his solo album Rockingham tonight at The Pour House with support by Charly Crockett. 

B.J. Barham was a long way from home when the tragedy happened.

On November 13, 2015, the singer-songwriter—raised in a small North Carolina town called Reidsville—was in the middle of his fourth European tour with American Aquarium, the rising alt-country act he’d led for nearly a decade. They were in Belgium, less than two hours from Paris, when bad news began to arrive: a series of terrorist attacks, including one in a rock club, had left more than 100 dead. Family members, friends, and the fans American Aquarium had amassed from so many years on the road immediately reached out, making sure the band had been far away.

“The onslaught of text messages, voicemails and everything that came in the next day sparked something in me,” Barham remembers. “In the next two days, the entire record was written.”
The record he’s talking about is Rockingham, Barham’s remarkable and intensely personal solo debut. Not long after the wave of well wishes had passed, Barham found himself piecing together composites of people he’d known since childhood, of those folks and places who had impacted his life in fundamental ways. He sang into his cell phone and scribbled in notebooks, stealing away for quiet moments in order to put the melodies and characters floating through his mind into song.

The shock of the moment and the distance from home seemed to give Barham a crucial perspective on the moments and circumstances that had helped shape him. Wolves, American Aquarium’s much-lauded 2015 breakthrough, had contained Barham’s most honest, vulnerable statements to date. But these songs took the next step, allowing Barham to share stories about those around him. In “O’Lover,” he portrays a hard-working farmer forced to make some desperate decisions to support the ones he loves. In “Reidsville,” named for the place he’d called his home until relocating to North Carolina’s capital, he immortalized beautiful, sweet, doomed souls, stuck in love in the sort of small towns that are disintegrating all across America. You needn’t have been to Reidsville to recognize these elegantly written, expertly realized protagonists.

“This is the first record I’ve ever made that’s not autobiographical—it’s fictional narrative in a very real place,” Barham says. “These songs are human condition stories set in my hometown, Reidsville.” Barham made these songs his new priority. Not long after he returned stateside, he asked Bradley Cook, the musician and mentor who had coproduced Wolves, to hear them. By afternoon’s end, they had hatched the plan to make Rockingham. Two months later, on January 31, Barham returned from another American Aquarium tour.

On Monday, he and the band he’d built to record Rockingham—himself, Cook, Cook’s brother and multi-instrumentalist Phil Cook, drummer Kyle Keegan, American Aquarium standbys Ryan Johnson and Whit Wright—met for the first time. On Tuesday and Wednesday, they rehearsed. And on Thursday and Friday, they cut all eight songs at Durham’s Overdub Lane. They mixed the results over the weekend, between the sold-out hometown shows and various festivities of American Aquarium’s annual pilgrimage, Roadtrip to Raleigh. The whirlwind kept the songs simple and the recordings human, reflecting a reality much bigger and less perfect than the vacuum of a recording studio. These tunes, after all, didn’t need much tampering. Rockingham puts its scenes and scenarios front and center, the beautiful grain and twang of Barham’s voice bringing it all to life. He limns lifelong romance and instantaneous tragedy during the paradoxically heartbreaking, heart-mending “Unfortunate Kind” and details the disappointments and dreams of the blue-collar laborer with “American Tobacco Company.” With its acoustic guitars and pealing organs, ragged vocals and rugged characters, Rockingham is a stunning, personal portrait of small-town America, easily identifiable and familiar.

For the album’s sole autobiographical moment, Barham, now happily married and sober, penned a letter of sound advice and Southern attitude to his daughter-to-be, “Madeline.” It’s too personal to fall under a roots-rock purview, too singular to be swallowed by a larger situation. Like all of Rockingham, it’s not the sound of Barham stepping away from American Aquarium but instead stepping confidently into the thoughts, stories, and feelings of his own thirty years.
“This is just an outlet for a songwriter. It’s me being able to do something different. This is like people who love their jobs, picking up hobbies,” says Barham, “This is an exercise for myself.”

*All Eyes Media 

Thursday, May 28, 2015

Catch Ivan & Alyosha at Local 506

Celebrated Seattle quintet Ivan & Alyosha will perform at Local 506 on Saturday, May 30 in support of the release of their sophomore album, It’s All Just Pretend, available now via Dualtone Music. Listen to The Wall Street Journal exclusive album premiere HERE
The album’s lead single “All This Wandering Around” was recently featured as KCRW’s Today’s Top Tune and has already been played on some of the key, tastemaker Triple A stations in the country, including WXRT (Chicago), KEXP (Seattle), WXPN (Philadelphia) and KGSR (Austin). Paste Magazine said of the track, "The song stands out from the very opening notes, but its message is as captivating as its melody." Check out the Entertainment Weekly exclusive video premiere HERE.
It’s All Just Pretend features 11 new songs produced and engineered by Ryan Carbary, Joe Chiccarelli (Beck, U2, My Morning Jacket) and Chad Copelin. Check out the A.V. Club exclusive track premiere of "Bury Me Deep". 

It’s All Just Pretend is the follow up to the band’s acclaimed 2013 debut LP All The Times We Had. The album received great support from the press, including NPR Music, Filter, American Songwriter, Paste Magazine and USA Today, who said, “[a] sound as filled with hope as it is harmony. These songs are sheer joy, from their melodic surface to deep inside their lyrical core.”
Ivan & Alyosha is: Tim Wilson (lead vox, guitar), Ryan Carbary (guitar, piano). Tim Kim (guitar), Pete Wilson (bass) and Cole Mauro (drums).
See for yourself why Ivan & Alyosha are getting so much attention.  Join us at Local 506 this Saturday, May 30 to experience this talented band live.  The show starts at 8:30 with the support of Kris Orlowski.  


*Information courtesy of All Eyes Media

Monday, November 3, 2014

Award Winning Jason Isbell Plays the DPAC


Jason Isbell took over the 2014 Americana Music Awards in September, winning the coveted titles of Artist of the Year, Album of the Year, and Song of the Year.  The Triangle is fortunate to have this Americana crooner visit once again on Thursday, November 6, this time at Durham's DPAC. 

The Album of the Year, Southeastern, was released in 2013 and has been highly acclaimed.  Upon receiving the greatly deserved recent awards, All Eyes Media released the following statement:



"Southeastern (Southeastern Records/Thirty Tigers) is an artistic triumph on the highest level. Isbell courageously opened himself up and created his most personal work to date. Through his songs, Isbell articulates his deepest fears, failures, regrets and personal growth with poetic beauty and grace. "Do the things that scare you.  That's the good stuff,"  Isbell stated during his Song of the Year acceptance speech. Southeastern has resonated with so many as it has gone on to sell over 125,000 copies to date. The album has received an overwhelming about of support from the press."

Isbell has been touring since the release of Southeastern to constantly growing crowds.  The DPAC show will begin at 8 with the support of Sturgill Simpson.  For a schedule of events and ticket information, visit their website.  Watch Isbell perform the Americana Song of the Year, "Cover Me Up" on Austin City Limits and see all upcoming tour dates below:


  
Remaining 2014 Tour Dates


November 6 - Durham, NC - Durham Performing Arts Center
November 7 - Savannah, GA - Johnny Mercer Theater
November 8 - North Charleston, SC - North Charleston Performing Arts
November 12 - Atlanta, GA - Fox Theatre
December 31 - Louisville, KY - Louisville Palace Theatre
 
New 2015 Tour Dates
February 2 - Charlottesville, VA - Paramount Theatre
February 4 - Washington, DC - Lincoln Theatre
February 5 - Glenside, PA - Keswick Theatre
February 6 - West Long Branch, NJ - Pollak Theatre at Monmouth Univ.
February 7 - New York, NY - Beacon Theatre
February 9 - Munhall, PA - Carnegie of Homestead Music Hall
February 10 - Columbus, OH - The Southern Theatre
February 12 - Chicago, IL - Orchestra Hall at Symphony Center
February 13 - Kalamazoo, MI - Kalamazoo State Theatre
February 14 - St. Louis, MO - Peabody Opera House
February 15 - Des Moines, IA - Hoyt Sherman Theatre
February 17 - Kansas City, MO - Uptown Theater