Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Soul Music Great Charles Wright Pens First In Series of Autobiographies “UP FROM WHERE WE’VE COME”



Inaugural Book Details 56 Chapters of Racism and Hardship The Wright Family Faced As Sharecroppers Near Clarksdale, Mississippi Circa The ’40s

Book Includes a Glowing and Empathetic Foreword by Little Richard


(Los Angeles, CA – September 23, 2015) While fans of Soul Music great Charles Wright are accustomed to hearing the singer/songwriter/guitarist shout “Express Yourself” on oldies radio, in movies and dozens of television commercials, the multi-talented messenger has taken up his pen to complete the first in a planned series of autobiographies that detail his profound life story as a southern Black man that miraculously brought himself from poverty to prosperity. The inaugural installment is “Up From Where We’ve Come,” an up-close and intimate telling of the Wright family’s profound struggles as sharecroppers near Clarksdale, Mississippi through the 1940s. Written in the raw dialects and rhythms of how Blacks and Whites communicated with each other in the era, it is a riveting insider’s glimpse into the realities of the times.

In the Preface to his book, Wright writes, “Some may consider these chapters a vital part of American history which has yet to be told in this particular fashion. “Truer words could not be spoken as the reader receives a series of history lessons from a firsthand account straight out of the memories of a most impressionable and observant youth. Through his hindsight insights as an older/wiser man, Charles Wright imparts knowledge, culture and context in each of the tome’s 56 chapters.

Through Wright’s eyes, the reader will meet his long put upon father, his wily but loving mother, his young brothers, sisters and cousins, and two different White land owners that overworked and underpaid them all with utmost disrespect to go around. While no one that studies history will find that surprising or enlightening, the personal portrait shared here makes it all the more poignant and real.

Along with the strife and struggles, however, are visions from a wide-eyed child of the natural world around him and the industrial changes happening on that very land. There’s the warmth and play of a family co-existing in a shabby home in spite of hard times. And then there’s a love story between a woman and a man that blossoms against all odds and challenges as they fight to understand each other, support each other and still find a way to romance each other.

“Up From Where We’ve Come” emerges as a triumphant and highly unique literary statement from a man whose music has already touched several generations of fans. So powerful are the stories that Wright has not one but four separate Forewords from supporters across the spectrum: California Congresswoman Maxine Waters, Rock ’n’ Roll Originator Little Richard, acclaimed Broadcast Journalist Roland Bynum and renowned Music Educator Reggie Andrews.

“I wanted to reveal just how thin the line between sharecropping and slavery really was. It’s important to me because I spent a significant part of my life under that regime. I started writing this book 40 years ago. It’s something – given the right circumstance – I wish I could have shared long ago...But now is the optimal time because discrimination never went away. Racism simply vaulted to a whole ’nother level. Honestly, in some cases, I’d take the way it used to be over what it is today. The process of systematic racial elimination is extremely ugly to me. I can see it so clearly. I need others to see it, too. So I’m expressing myself.”

Charles Wright is a world-renowned musician and songwriter best known as the leader of the ’60s-founded Charles Wright & The Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band and for recording the enduring 1971 classic “Express Yourself” (#3 R&B, #12 Pop – Billboard). The ensemble also recorded the classics “Loveland” (sung by drummer James Gadson who became an ace session musician in Los Angeles), “Do Your Thing” (featuring lead guitarist Al McKay who went on to become a star member of Earth Wind & Fire) and the racial equality anthem “Comment” (also recorded by jazz legend Les McCann, alternative rockers Wilco and others). The Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band also worked closely with Bill Cosby in its infancy as his backup band for a music album (Silver Throat: Bill Cosby Sings – 1967) leading to
The Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band becoming the first R&B act to succeed on Warner Brothers Records with its self-titled debut LP the same year.

Wright still records Doo Wop, Blues, Soul, Pop and Funk music – now on his own label, A Million $ Worth of Memories Records. His latest CD is Let’s Make Love Tonight. He also has a forthcoming CD, tentatively titled Be Careful What You Wish For, featuring the already released first single, “Lookin’ For An Ugly Woman!” His company slogan: “True Soul Music Made By Human Beings, Not By Machines.” Also among his new recordings is a remix of “Express Yourself,” this time tied-in with a cell phone app. Charles Wright has come a long way.

Check out Charles’ new music video “Lookin’ For An Ugly Woman!” youtu.be/T4sJdTnTYo4


Here is a sample of the poignant reflections and biting insightful processing that Charles Wright’s “Up From Where We’ve Come” has to offer:

As a victim of circumstance, my father developed a habit of sunup `til sundown drudgery. He forced us to work 40 acres of old man Miles’ fertile land practically free of charge. There was a time, though long forgotten, when my parents kept records – until they grew tired of wasting pencils and paper. Since, added to his propensity to manipulate the price of cotton, Mr. Miles had a habit of ignoring my parents’ count. His motto, which said,
“A nigger is at his Best when Bent until Broken,” and which he referred to as, “The Triple B System.

In two years’ time, my dad demanded a hundred pounds a day and not a pound less, something I could never come up with. Yet every time I failed, he whipped me viciously. I’d always start out giving it my best. But by mid-day I’d grow weary. I picked 88 pounds, 89 pounds, 92 pounds and often as much as 98 pounds. But none of these satisfied my father. It was as if he’d developed a revulsion for me and I’d actually became his sounding board – a tool to douse his own sense of defeat. Anytime he was having a bad day, my ass had to pay. It was that simple. He didn’t care what he whipped me with – either an ironing cord, a wet or a dry rope, a huge cotton stalk or an occasional wire hanger. You’d think I would have developed a tolerance for pain but I never did. Instead, I developed an equal distaste for my very own father.

Throughout the ensuing years, however, I learned of the huge tower of pressure hanging over his head, and realized how he was taking out on my behind the equivalence of what Mr. Miles was taking out on his mind – an unfair exchange yet somewhat of a logical conclusion. Whether my dad knew it or not, he’d settled for a diverse form of slavery.


UP FROM WHERE WE’VE COME WILL BE AVAILABLE ONLINE AND IN BOOKSTORES ON OCTOBER 26TH


KEEP UP WITH CHARLES BY VISITING:

expressyourself.net

Facebook: facebook.com/Charleswright103

Twitter: twitter.com/Charles_Wright

Linkedin: linkedin.com/pub/charles-wright/33/625/667

Youtube: youtube.com/user/charleswrightz1

Reverbnation: reverbnation.com/Charlesexpressyourselfwright


Monday, September 21, 2015

Bluegrass Iconoclasts Shotgun Holler Are Fired Up For Loaded, Their Dry Lightning Records Debut, With First National Television Appearance

‘Out in the Parkin’ Lot’ now in heavy rotation on SiriusXM’s Bluegrass Junction

BOONEVILLE, Ky. — The guys in Shotgun Holler aren’t given to sporting retro-rustic looks featuring suspenders, vests or bowler derbies. They feel no need to dress a part; that’s for actors. As soon as these five players start plucking their instruments and merging their voices in close harmony, they provide all the evidence necessary to establish their bluegrass bona-fides.

Besides, as they make clear on their debut album, Loaded, they like to go where tradition meets authenticity — and jump right over that intersection to head in their own direction. Released Sept. 18 on Lonesome Day Records’ new Dry Lightning imprint (with Sony RED distribution), the album is already earning serious attention. SiriusXM’s Bluegrass Junction has been spinning Shotgun Holler’s version of the Guy Clark/Darrell Scott tune “Out in the Parkin’ Lot,” an ode to what goes on outside those honky-tonks, in heavy rotation since June. Since the beginning of September, the band has joined program director/host Kyle Cantrell in the studio for a “track by track” discussion, which will air several times a week starting September 25th.

“Shotgun Holler is bringing bluegrass a freshness I haven’t heard in a long time,” says Cantrell. ”This is the sound that will help take the music to the next level.”

In July, they appeared on CMT’s Josh Wolf Show, where they delivered a masterful rendition of the “guilty pleasure” song: Miley Cyrus’ “Wrecking Ball.” The fact that their version of the pop hit brought a totally new dynamic to the original speaks to the depth of this band’s talent — not to mention their propensity for tweaking conventional notions of bluegrass while having a little fun.

As for those “bona-fides,” this band’s got too many to list. Mandolinist Shawn Brock, born and raised in the Appalachian hills of Harlan County, Ky., has performed with some of the top names in country and bluegrass. He’s also a jazz player. His Shotgun Holler co-founder, guitarist/lead vocalist Matt Jones, is an Indiana native who grew up hanging out with, and learning from, many bluegrass greats. They’re supported by bassist/harmony vocalist Rod Lunger (another Kentuckian), banjo player Nathan Treadway (an Indiana farm boy) and fiddler/harmony vocalist Alex Benefiel (an Indiana state fiddling champion).

With producer Jim Van Cleve, they’ve crafted a knockout inaugural that is indeed loaded. On three Jones-penned originals (“I’ve Got Ramblin’ On My Mind,” “Miners Grave” and “One Lone Tree”) and eight other carefully chosen snapshots of life, they enter rich emotional territory, bringing to life an array of all-too-real characters: truckers, coal diggers, dirt farmers, men facing assembly-line futures … some of whom go off to serve their country — or serve time. The band gets poignant in the waltz-tempo “This Side of the Grass,” a heart-tugging tale of a mourning husband and father, and “One Lone Tree,” reflects on a life that didn’t end up as glamorous as it once looked from a simple Kentucky home.

In songs such as Son Volt’s “Methamphetamine,” Jason Isbell’s “Relatively Easy,” “Clovis Johnson’s Old Red GMC” and the ever-evolving classic, “My Bucket’s Got a Hole in It,” they sing of addicts, suicides, moonshine-making reprobates and lonely, hooker-loving men with regrets. Oh, and romancing one moonshine-maker’s daughter. You’ve gotta have a love song, after all even if the title does reference a truck.

With the release of Loaded, Shotgun Holler is ready to fire away.

Loaded track list
“Out In The Parkin’ Lot”
“I Hope Heaven Has a Holler”
“My Bucket’s Got A Hole In It”
“Methamphetamine”
“Clovis Johnson’s Old Red GMC”
“Relatively Easy”
“I’ve Got Ramblin On My Mind”
“This Side Of The Grass”
“Miners Grave”
“One Lone Tree”
“I Should Have Started Yesterday”


Shotgun Holler on tour
October 17 – Proud Mary Honky Tonk BBQ, Lexington, KY
October 31 – VFW Post 1108, Richmond, IN
November 27 – Roberts Park, Connersville, IN


shotgunholler.com
facebook.com/shotgunholler
twitter.com/shotgunholler
instagram.com/shotgunholler


About Dry Lightning Records
Dry Lightning Records was established to give a broader range of Lonesome Day Records artists their own home while allowing the original label to continue building on its 12-year history in the bluegrass market Founder Randall Deaton now puts as much passion and energy into Dry Lightning Records as he still devotes to the label he founded in 2002. In partnership with Sony/RED Distribution, the label also includes the critically acclaimed acts Girls Guns and Glory and Sarah Borges. Both Dry Lightning and Lonesome Day, incidentally, take their names from the titles of Bruce Springsteen songs.

Friday, September 18, 2015

PROJECT GRAND SLAM’S UNIQUE TAKE ON JIMI HENDRIX’S FIRE (SONG AND VIDEO) OUT NOW!

THE BAND’S NEW FULL LENGH ALBUM TO BE RELEASED ON OCTOBER 16th

PLAYING NYC’S CUTTING ROOM ON SEPTEMBER 9th JOIN THE #GROOVEMOVEMENT


DONATING PROCEEDS FROM “NYC GROOVE” TO CHARITIES


Robert Miller’s Project Grand Slam is gearing up for a busy fall with the September 18th release of their next single featuring their unique take on Jimi Hendrix’s Fire. The song showcases Guest Vocalist Kat Robichaud from NBC’s The Voice, who lends her rock n’ roll and glam roots to the song and the related video.  This cover of Fire is unlike any other.  It’s a sexy, smoldering version that captures the full emotion of the Hendrix classic.


On October 16th PGS will release their new full length album that includes the singles New York City Groove and Fire as well as two tracks recorded “live” at the world famous Blue Note Jazz Club in New York City.  All of the songs on the album (except for Fire) were composed by Robert and reflect the band’s distinctive trademark sound and feel.


The band’s most recent single, released on July 10th, is Robert’s catchy, snazzy New York City Groove, also featuring Kat Robichaud on vocals.  The song is “a love letter to my NYC home,” says Robert, leader/bassist/composer for PGS.  In the month since its release, the Groove video has been viewed over 85,000 times on YouTube, and the instrumental version of the song is moving up the charts on jazz radio.


The Groove video (http://smarturl.it/NYCGroove) contains Kat and others doing their own “Groove move”, which in turn has spawned a “Groove Movement” of people dancing their own “move” to the song.  PGS is inviting everyone to join the “Groove Movement” by creating their own individual “Groove Move” video and uploading the video to any of their social media accounts (Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, etc.) using the hashtag #GrooveMovement.


On September 9th PGS performed at The Cutting Room in NYC.  This comes on the heels of their highly regarded performance on August 5th at The Iridium in NYC.


The band has decided to donate 10% of the sales from New York City Groove to three New York City based art and culture non-profit organizations that benefit underprivileged and inner-city children. “I thought it was appropriate for us to align the success of New York City Groove with our support for several NYC-based arts non-profits that provide great programs and services for children in need,” said Robert, adding: “It’s our way of ‘playing it forward’.”


http://www.projectgrandslam.com

Thursday, September 17, 2015

THE HUMBLE GRAPES GEAR UP FOR THE RELEASE OF THEIR NEXT SINGLE “YOUNG AND ALIVE” OUT SEPTEMBER 18th OFF OF THEIR FORTHCOMING EP DUE OUT JANUARY 2016

(Los Angeles, CA) September 17, 2015 – The dynamic duo making waves in the NYC indie circuit are The Humble Grapes consisting of producer David Kaufman and vocalist Brie Capone. Set to release their brand new highly anticipated single “Young and Alive” September 18th, the talented musicians will also be prepping for the rollout of their forthcoming EP out January 2016

“We wanted to create a fun and upbeat song. Nothing too heavy lyrically, but we love arranging rich and funky bass lines, drum parts and vocal lines. The lyrics speak to a youthful urge to just be, and have fun, something both Dave and I can relate to. The song is about wanting to get out and enjoy life while you can even if you’re young and broke as a window,” states lead vocalist Brie Capone.

“Young and Alive” is an honest depiction of the band’s unique style and music. The duo bring a fresh breath of modernity. Capone’s incredibly rich, throaty voice that interplays over David Kaufman’s brilliance on the piano into a rock infused, luscious romp through their many original compositions and songs are a joy to listen to and watch.

“Indie rock has melded a lot of genres and styles and Humble Grapes may not be the first to mash up cabaret music and rock but the band adds dashes or blues and classic soul and does it well.” –The Morning Call

The music video for “Young and Alive” was released on the band’s YouTube page September 15th and was directed by Mikhail Torich. Catch The Humble Grapes at The Bitter End in October and November. They will continue playing in the NYC area and have plans to expand touring throughout the tri-state area throughout 2016.
Watch The Humble Grapes “Young And Alive” on Youtube:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vbM0MY8hP0s

Upcoming Tour Dates:
Oct. 7 – The Bitter End – New York, NY
Nov. 14 – The Bitter End – New York, NY
 
For more information on The Humble Grapes:
http://www.thehumblegrapes.com/
https://www.facebook.com/thehumblegrapesmusic
https://twitter.com/thehumblegrapes
https://instagram.com/thehumblegrapes/
https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/the-humble-grapes

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

‘Sasha’s Bloc’ Performs Live at the KJazz Fall Benefit Concert @ Wallis Center for the Performing Arts on Friday, September 18, 2015 Featuring Guest Vocalist Alvin Chea of Take 6 

You’re cordially invited to attend this special benefit concert.

Very limited VIP comped tickets ($200 value) are still available.

Please RSVP by September 17th to Chip Schutzman: chip@mileshighproductions.com

For additional information on the show please visit: http://jazzandblues.org/features/2015/07/fallBenefitConcert/

To purchase tickets please go to: http://ticketsr.com/benefit

Monday, September 14, 2015

ANN WILSON NEW EP WILL BE RELEASED DIGITALLY ON SEPTEMBER 18 AND IN STORES OCTOBER 9 BY ROUNDER

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“THE ANN WILSON THING” ADDITIIONAL TOUR DATES ANNOUNCED

LOS ANGELES, CA—September 10, 2015—Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee Ann Wilson is set to release her first solo EP, The Ann Wilson Thing, on Rounder Records. Featured tracks on the EP include “Fool No More,” which was written by Wilson and described by her as “a heavy blues song about bad love and the fleeting of time” and “For What It’s Worth,” described by Wilson as “a melding of some timeless lyrics with meat, hair and teeth.”  The Ann Wilson Thing will be released digitally on September 18 and in stores October 9.

Wilson previously announced her first solo mini tour kicking off September 21 in Solana Beach, CA. Additional dates include The Katherine Hepburn Cultural Arts Center on October 6 and a second show at City Winery in New York on October 7. Alison Krauss and Emmylou Harris with be sitting in with Wilson at her Nashville City Winery date on October 15 and Jon Batiste, the band leader of the Colbert show, will join Ann for a song at the New York City Winery show.

In addition, Wilson’s Hartford, CT show at the Kate Hepburn Theater will be filmed by Connecticut PBS as part of their new “Kate Hepburn Series” and will air on PBS in February.

As a songwriter and lyricist, Ann Wilson has created a truly impressive body of work (“Crazy on You,” “Barracuda,” “Magic Man,” “Dog & Butterfly,” “Straight On”, “Even it Up,” “Mistral Wind,” and many, many more).  However, her greatest gift, and first “calling” is singing and with this intimate tour, she prepares to blow away her fans with up, close and personal, raw performances of blues and rock songs. The Ann Wilson Thing won’t replace Heart but it will be a new experience for existing Heart fans, as well as for new fans who will love these songs.




The Ann Wilson Thing Tour Dates:

Sept 21 – Solana Beach, CA – Belly Up
Oct 6 – Hartford, CT – The Katherine Hepburn Cultural Arts Center
Oct 7 – New York, NY – City Winery (two shows)
Oct 9 – Annapolis, MD – Rams Head on Stage
Oct 10 – Annapolis, MD – Rams Head on Stage
Oct 12 – Vienna, VA – The Barns at Wolf Trap
Oct 13 – Vienna, VA – The Barns at Wolf Trap
Oct 15 – Nashville, TN – City Winery
Nov 23 – Oakland, CA – Yoshi’s
Nov 24 – Oakland, CA – Yoshi’s (two shows)

For more information about Ann Wilson, please visit http://www.heart-music.com, follow @AnnHeartMusic on Twitter, @AnnHeartMusic on Instagram and like "Ann Wilson" on Facebook.

Click here to preview “Fool No More” written by Ann Wilson.

Friday, September 4, 2015

Singer-Songwriter-Pianist Shauna Burns Releases New Single “From Flying”

(Los Angeles, CA) Shauna Burns’ new single “From Flying” is inspired by taking risks and following dreams. The lyrics are paired with elegant piano solos for a minimal, dramatic song that highlights Burns’ recognizable vocals and inspirational lyrics.

“From Flying seems like it covers a lot of space and time to me.  The piano feels like it’s flying from planet to planet, past the stars.  From Flying is about jumping off the cliff of possibility even when it seems like it’s impossible.  Going for your dreams against the odds.  Sometimes we need a little push, sometimes we can’t help but want to fly.”

“From Flying” gradually builds with harmonies and echoes of the phrase “can you stop me from flying.” Burns’ lyrics and piano solos have been built on her reputation in the Celtic music world. “It’s heartwarming to receive messages from people who discover and connect with my music and it’s gratifying to know that what I created in solitude has the ability to touch people emotionally,” she says.

Shauna Burns is a Las Vegas based singer-songwriter who recently celebrated the 10 Year Anniversary of Every Thought, her debut album.  While still continuing with the theme of female independence, strength, and freedom from her 2013 album Violet, Burns uses continues to weave these themes throughout all her songs.

Follow Shauna Burns:
http://shaunaburns.com
https://www.facebook.com/shaunaburnsmusic
https://twitter.com/shaunaburns
https://www.youtube.com/user/shaunaburns