Thursday, May 5, 2011

NATALIE WALKER RELEASES NEW SINGLE “COOL KIDS” FROM UPCOMING ALBUM “SPARK” DUE OUT JUNE 7


NATALIE WALKER RELEASES NEW SINGLE “COOL KIDS”

FROM UPCOMING ALBUM “SPARK” DUE OUT JUNE 7


Natalie Walker
released her new single, “Cool Kids”, the second single from her highly anticipated third album, Spark, on April 26th. The new single is for sale exclusively on Beatport for two weeks before being released to iTunes, Amazon and other digital distribution outlets on May 10th. There are two remixes of the song done by the Remix Artist Collective and Linus Loves which are also available on Beatport.

“Cool Kids” is the second single from her upcoming release, Spark, slated for a June 7th release date via Dorado Music. The first single, “Uptight”, was released on March 26th and the single debuted immediately on Jason Bentley’s KCRW show, Morning Becomes Eclectic.

Spark is the third album from the Indiana-born, Colorado-based singer-songwriter, whose prior work has been heard on Grey’s Anatomy, Ugly Betty, Bones, 90210, and Entourage, among other places. With her richly expressive vocals floating in elegant, spacious instrumental settings, Walker explores powerfully personal territory on tracks like the reflective “I Found You,” the questing “Sunday Afternoon,” and the gorgeous life lesson “Mars”.

Walker crafted half the tracks with Ted Bruner (Katy Perry, Ke$ha, Plain White T’s) and half with Dan Chen and Nate Greenberg of Stuhr (Mya, Nicole Atkins, Bebel Gilberto), the Brooklyn-based production team behind 2008’s With You and her 2006 solo debut, Urban Angel. Yet Spark is remarkably consistent; its jewel-box arrangements never crowd the song, incorporating eclectic instrumentation such as MiniMoog, vocoder, Fender Rhodes, cello and harpsichord .

Like her spiritual pilgrimages, Walker’s musical search has taken her to an array of locales, including Philadelphia, where she sang in the trip-hop outfit Daughter Darling before going solo, meeting up with Brooklyn-based Chen and Greenberg, and journeying to L.A. in search of a new muse. During that time she’s gathered such champions as Jason Bentley (of trendsetting L.A. noncommercial station KCRW); Electronica luminaries King Britt and Thievery Corporation; and Sofia Coppola, who placed Thievery Corporation’s remix of Angel’s “Quicksand” in her film Marie Antoinette.

“Mars” is currently available for a free download in exchange for a Facebook “like” or a Tweet via Topspin widgets on her Facebook and Twitter pages.

For more information on Natalie Walker or her upcoming album, Spark, including her biography, press photos, and a download of her single, “Uptight”, please visit her media page: http://bit.ly/hkEVMJ

For more information on Natalie Walker please contact:

Chip Schutzman

Miles High Productions

PO Box 93157

Los Angeles, CA 90093

chip@mileshighproductions.com

323-806-0400

NASHVILLE STAR ALUM SINGER DAVID ST. ROMAIN TO RELEASE NEW ALBUM IN APRIL


NASHVILLE STAR ALUM SINGER DAVID ST. ROMAIN TO

RELEASE NEW ALBUM IN APRIL


Tearjerker "Twenty Years Late" Currently Impacting Country Radio

It's not often that a song comes around that makes you want to download it to a disc, wrap a big bow around it, and say, "Hey, mom, this is how I feel," but that's exactly what country singer and "Nashville Star" finalist David St. Romain has done with his new single, "Twenty Years Late" from his new album, All I Really Wanted To Say, which was released April 19 via Aria Records Nashville.

The soon-to-be-classic, which went to country radio earlier this month just in time for Mother's Day (May 8), goes like this:


Hey mom I know that it's late

Hope I didn't wake you

Everything is okay, I just need to talk to you

Today I had one of those days

But I didn't call to complain

Just to say everything that I didn't through all of those years

You were a taxi cab driver, a nurse and a maid

A waitress a cook and a shoulder to lay my head on

To cry on when nothing was going my way

You knew every answer without cracking a book

What I took for granted that I had it so good

And I'm sorry it's taken me so long to say, thank you, I love you, twenty years late

St. Romain explains the origins of the song: "This song is a genuine look at many mother/son or mother/daughter relationships. We, the sons and daughters, often forget how much our mothers have done for us throughout our childhood and as we grow older and have our own children, we realize how much we miss about those childhood memories. Every time I sing this amazing song and my Mom is there, we are both in tears by the second verse. It makes it hard to finish the song without a hint of laughter between the two of us."

"Twenty Years Late" is just one of the many heartfelt songs on the 12-track album All I Really Wanted To Say. The collection also features the self-penned "That's Love," which is an emotional tale of hard working people's everyday sacrifices to provide for their families. The married father of two donated 100% of the proceeds to an organization near to his heart, the National Kidney Foundation of Middle Tennessee.

While "Twenty Years Late" will be serviced to radio in time for Mother's Day, the track is available now at his website at www.davidstromain.com. He will be promoting the single at the Country Radio Seminar (CRS) in Nashville.

St. Romain, who hails from Alexandria, Louisiana, was discovered while competing on the country music reality show, "Nashville Star," where he placed third on season five in 2007. His time on the show made country music critics nationwide take notice, including the New York Times, which wrote, "… with a smoky, R&B-inflected voice David St. Romain may be the show's most well-rounded entertainer."

Following CRS, St. Romain will be hitting the road for some shows and radio appearances including a very special date on March 22 where he has been invited to be one of the first artists to perform at "The Voice," a multimedia broadcast center and radio station, started by Ryan Seacrest as part of his Ryan Seacrest Foundation at the Children's Hospital of Atlanta. The station broadcasts to all the children's rooms in the areas three hospitals.

St. Romain will also be contributing original songs for a children's book by Tia Lynn, an Atlanta-based artist, which will be distributed to children in long-term hospital care whether for cancer or other chronic illnesses. More details to follow.

For more information:

www.davidstromain.com

# # #

Contact: Chip Schutzman

Phone: (323) 871-4821

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

David St. Romain Releases “Twenty Years Late”



"...with a smoky, R&B-inflected voice David St. Romain may be [‘Nashville Star’s’] most well-rounded entertainer." – New York Times

NASHVILLE STAR ALUM SINGER DAVID ST. ROMAIN TO RELEASE NEW ALBUM IN APRIL
Tearjerker "Twenty Years Late" Currently Impacting Country Radio

It's not often that a song comes around that makes you want to download it to a disc, wrap a big bow around it, and say, "Hey, mom, this is how I feel," but that's exactly what country singer and "Nashville Star" finalist David St. Romain has done with his new single, "Twenty Years Late" from his new album, All I Really Wanted To Say, which was released April 19 via Aria Records Nashville.

The soon-to-be-classic, which went to country radio earlier this month just in time for Mother's Day (May 8), goes like this:

Hey mom I know that it's late
Hope I didn't wake you
Everything is okay, I just need to talk to you
Today I had one of those days
But I didn't call to complain
Just to say everything that I didn't through all of those years

You were a taxi cab driver, a nurse and a maid
A waitress a cook and a shoulder to lay my head on
To cry on when nothing was going my way

You knew every answer without cracking a book
What I took for granted that I had it so good
And I'm sorry it's taken me so long to say, thank you, I love you, twenty years late

St. Romain explains the origins of the song: "This song is a genuine look at many mother/son or mother/daughter relationships. We, the sons and daughters, often forget how much our mothers have done for us throughout our childhood and as we grow older and have our own children, we realize how much we miss about those childhood memories. Every time I sing this amazing song and my Mom is there, we are both in tears by the second verse. It makes it hard to finish the song without a hint of laughter between the two of us."

"Twenty Years Late" is just one of the many heartfelt songs on the 12-track album All I Really Wanted To Say. The collection also features the self-penned "That's Love," which is an emotional tale of hard working people's everyday sacrifices to provide for their families. The married father of two donated 100% of the proceeds to an organization near to his heart, the National Kidney Foundation of Middle Tennessee.

While "Twenty Years Late" will be serviced to radio in time for Mother's Day, the track is available now at his website at www.davidstromain.com. He will be promoting the single at the Country Radio Seminar (CRS) in Nashville.

St. Romain, who hails from Alexandria, Louisiana, was discovered while competing on the country music reality show, "Nashville Star," where he placed third on season five in 2007. His time on the show made country music critics nationwide take notice, including the New York Times, which wrote, "… with a smoky, R&B-inflected voice David St. Romain may be the show's most well-rounded entertainer."

Following CRS, St. Romain will be hitting the road for some shows and radio appearances including a very special date on March 22 where he has been invited to be one of the first artists to perform at "The Voice," a multimedia broadcast center and radio station, started by Ryan Seacrest as part of his Ryan Seacrest Foundation at the Children's Hospital of Atlanta. The station broadcasts to all the children's rooms in the areas three hospitals.

St. Romain will also be contributing original songs for a children's book by Tia Lynn, an Atlanta-based artist, which will be distributed to children in long-term hospital care whether for cancer or other chronic illnesses. More details to follow.


For more information:
www.davidstromain.com