Tuesday, July 28, 2015

Ashley Monroe: ‘It’s Hard for Me to Write a Happy Song’

Two days before the official release of her critically-acclaimed new album, The Blade, singer-songwriter Ashley Monroe launched her third solo LP with a glittering performance at an East Nashville club. Throughout the evening, the Tennessee-born chanteuse invited several of her Music City friends and collaborators to share the stage. Among them were Jessi Alexander, co-writer of four cuts on The Blade, Justin Davis and Sarah Zimmerman, better known as duo Striking Matches, who penned two tracks on the LP, and Vince Gill, who (as he had with Monroe's brilliant 2013 album, Like a Rose) co-produced the disc with Justin Niebank and also wrote a cut with Monroe.

But what quickly had the room, and the Internet, buzzing was the presence of Monroe's longtime pal Miranda Lambert, making her first stage appearance since announcing her divorce from Blake Shelton just days earlier. Although the two co-wrote the album's stone-cold country closer, "I'm Good at Leavin'" (with Alexander), not surprisingly they chose another to perform for the show's encore instead – Lambert's Number One hit, "Heart Like Mine," which the friends penned with Travis Howard. The collaboration was the most poignant example of just how powerful and cathartic both friendship and music can be.

Monroe was born in Knoxville in 1986, although the depth and maturity of her songs certainly belie her years. At 13, she faced grown-up heartache when her father died of cancer. Still in her teens, she relocated to Nashville and soon signed a music publishing deal, followed by a developmental deal with RCA Records, then a full-fledged contract with Sony Music that yielded one project, the remarkable 2006 album, Satisfied, which would go unreleased until 2009. In addition to two albums with Pistol Annies, the trio she formed with Lambert and Angaleena Presley, a Kentucky coal miner's daughter and a gifted songwriter in her own right, Monroe released the outstanding solo LP, Like a Rose, to resounding acclaim in 2013. A few months after the album debuted, she married pro baseball player John Danks, and in 2014 had a Number One country hit, singing on Blake Shelton's "Lonely Tonight."

As a solo act, Monroe has yet to crack mainstream country radio's narrow – and decidedly male-centric playlists, an unfortunate reality of the current climate and certainly not a reflection on the new album's songs themselves. In a perfect world, "The Blade," an absolute stunner of a tune and, surprisingly the only one Monroe didn't have a hand in writing, would be a multi-week Number One and a CMA nominee, and other tracks on the album, in particular the clever and devastating "Bombshell" and the biting "Dixie," would follow in its footsteps. Regardless of The Blade's chart accomplishments or critical praise, Monroe's songwriting is as pure and unvarnished as her heart-piercing voice, making The Blade an instant classic, and cementing Monroe's status as a top-flight writer and a country legend in the making.

Rolling Stone Country sat down with Monroe to talk about the songs on her Like a Rose follow-up, including one that emerged as a combination birthday/wedding gift and another that sums up her feelings about country radio. She also revealed why her manager waited a whole month before playing her "The Blade" and why she finds it challenging to write positive songs.

What do you remember about the first time music had an effect on you?
I grew up in the Southern Baptist Church with the shape note hymnals. The first time I got chills when I was singing, I'll never forget it. We had just started going to church and the church was so small. I was the only kid in the choir because they would say, "Does anybody want to come up and sing?," because it was that kind of church. There wasn't a pre-selected choir. I remember singing, [sings first lines of "Have a Little Talk With Jesus"], I got chills from the very tip of my head all the way down to my toes. It caught me off guard. I was four. I remember after I got through singing with the choir I ran down to my mom and I said, "Mom I got chills." She said, "That's the spirit." That's when I first associated that you can sing the songs and have that feeling. It happens a lot now!

One of the songs on The Blade that has a bit of a gospel feel to it is "Winning Streak." It also has a bit of a tribute to the Jordanaires' quartet singing.
That's actually the Superlatives, Marty Stuart's band. One of the things Vince does when he produces is find a reference. For one of the songs on Like a Rose, he played [Emmylou Harris'] "Boulder to Birmingham" to just get us all in a particular zone. For "Winning Streak," he played an old gospel quartet from the Forties. The song reminds me of Elvis, too. I get into it because I love rockabilly!

It's an upbeat song, yet it doesn't really have a positive message to it. Do you find it more challenging to write uptempo, positive songs?
I find it extremely more challenging to write uptempo, positive songs. It does not come naturally to me. "Winning Streak," songs like that I can write better – ones that have sad lyrics to a fast beat. Roger Miller's "Dang Me" had that, and I love that. He's singing, "They ought to take a rope and hang me" to a fast beat. The melodies I hear that come to me the best are slow ones, beautiful melodies or waltzes. It's hard for me to write a happy song, something that just says I'm happy. I don't know how to say that.

Yet there is a sense of hope in several of the songs.
I think hope and heartbreak go hand-in-hand. "On to Something Good," "Weight of the Load" and "Mayflowers" are all hopeful songs. In just my life alone, I look back at things I've gone through personally and in the business and I'm starting to see a reason for all of them. Even the things that didn't make sense at the time; even if I don't see a reason, I can be grateful that it has led me here. Did I think this is how my career was going to go when I first signed at Sony when I was 17 years old? No, it was like, I'll put out a record and it'll be on the radio and I'll get to tour. [Laughs] It never happens how you think it's going to happen. But I think hope is very important and having faith that there is a reason for everything. You've just got to trust it and go with it.

It seems like this album, as opposed to Like a Rose, has a few more radio-friendly songs on it. Was that intentional?
I don't disagree that some of them sound a little more radio-friendly than others, but I didn't do anything intentionally to make a song just for radio. Like "On to Something Good," that's a positive, uptempo song that moves me and reminds me to keep going. That didn't work for radio, ironically. I went on a radio tour and everything in it still didn't work. I'm still proud of that song and I'm so proud of "If Love Was Fair," which leans a little bit more that way. If none of them ever see the light of radio day, I'm still proud of them. And that's important to me, that I don't put songs on the record just for radio. Because then it's not your record anymore.

Jessi Alexander is a co-writer on four cuts from The Blade. Why do you think the two of you work so well together?
We are really, really, really close friends. She's from west Tennessee and she just has this soul. She's been through things in her life and you can hear it in her songs. She has so many hits, but every one of her hits means something. Even [Blake Shelton's] "Drink on It" is a fun song but it's got meat to it. I love writing with Jessi because she can deliver these beautiful melodies that have meat to them. I'm a big fan of writing like that.

We wrote "If the Devil Don't Want Me" and "Winning Streak" with Chris Stapleton, and we wrote those two back to back. He's another one I've known for years. I listen to him sing and I just melt. [His wife] Morgane Stapleton and I were on a developmental deal at RCA at the same time before I was signed to Sony. I forgot I even had that deal until the other day. I can't keep up with the chapters. [Laughs] But Jessi, Chris and I have written a few times. There's the line, "If the devil don't want me, where the hell do I go," and in "Winning Streak" there's a line, "Damned old devil won't buy my soul." One of those led to the other song, but I can't remember which one was first.

One of the most beautiful songs on the album is "From Time to Time," which you wrote with Striking Matches. What inspired it?
I got married in October 2013, and it was right around that time I was on tour with Hunter Hayes and planning the wedding. There was a lot of high stress, a lot of activity going on. I was missing my dad so much. I always do, but I was about to get married and I was missing him like crazy. I kept having these memories and I would just cry. So I was making this deal with God, "Please just send me a sign of some sort. Send me a dream. Dad, come to me in a dream, tell me you love me and you're proud of me. . . something." But there was nothing.

I had dozed off on the couch one evening. The melody was what woke me up. I sat up straight and it was almost like someone was playing the melody in my head and the words: "Hush little darling, celebrate, today's going to be your birthday even if it's not the 10th of September." Well, the 10th of September is my birthday. All of that was there. I couldn't write it down fast enough. I heard the melody but I was trying to figure out the chords. I think my dad was trying to challenge me or teach me new chords. It was so clear; it was something from my dad which I love: that it's all right to remember from time to time. You can relate that to someone who's lost or to just a memory, someone who's no longer around.

Another one written with Striking Matches is "Dixie," although it's not exactly a loving portrait of your birthplace, with the line, "I'll be damned if I go down to Dixie when I die."
Justin Davis from Striking Matches, that was his idea. He had started that and I said, "Please let me record that!" It's so funny, when I sing "Dixie," I have a little angst in my voice. Maybe I'm thinking of country radio a little bit. When I sing, "When I cross that line, I'll get what I deserve." It's something about getting rewarded for something that you're not appreciated for. It can be twisted like that. But I used to write those old-fashioned melodies when I was 15 and I would tell my manager I think I was a 90-year-old man working on trains in my previous life. I would write about this really old content and people were like, "How do you even know what you're saying?" So there's a little of that mixed in that song, too. Every time I sing that song I envision somebody working on a train and thinking, "I'm gettin' outta here."

The only song you didn't write on the album is the title track. What was it about "The Blade" that made you want to record it?
I think it will go down in history as being one of the best-written songs. I'm just shocked at how good it is every time I sing it. When I first heard it, I knew Allen Shamblin was on it and I knew Marc Beeson, but I didn't even know there was a girl on it. I started YouTube-ing clips of her singing it and I was like, "Man, she can sing her ever-lovin' butt off!" I love those two writers, obviously, but I love that a woman was in the room because she nailed the feeling. I get completely lost in it. My heart is breaking when I sing that song. It's hard for me to get lost in songs I didn't write. I'm just as attached to it as if I had written it. I've been in that position of having my heart broken and the other person being OK. We all have. Every detail of that feeling is described in that song. The timing of me even finding that song – there were some hard times in my life and my manager even waited a month before he played it for me because my heart was still too fragile.

The sweetest moment of your album release show was the hug you shared with Miranda after the two of you sang together. What was it like for you to have her there?
I didn't even remember that until I saw the video. I kissed her on the head! [Laughs] I'm always happy to sing with her. Of course, I knew she'd be there for me but I didn't know whether she'd get up and sing. She hadn't planned on singing just because she didn't have glam and all that stuff. But when Jessi got up on stage she whispered in my ear, "Miranda's going to come up and do the 'Heart Like Mine' for the encore." It was just kind of a spontaneous thing. I love singing that song with her. I was like, "What a perfect ending." Music is healing.



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Birdman Breaks Silence on Lil Wayne Drama

Birdman expressed sadness over his ongoing feud with Lil Wayne in a preview for an upcoming tell-all interview with Power 105.1's Angie Martinez. The Cash Money honcho said Wayne's screed against him and the label "was shocking to everybody. I never thought Mula [Wayne] would be saying nothing negative about me, ever.

"So that man open his mouth and say something negative about me, that was a lot — that shit fucked my day up," Birdman continued. "I love my son. He mean the world to me. For that man to say something negative about me, that affected my life."

Birdman and Lil Wayne have been going at each other since the latter took to Twitter last December to blast his mentor and label, Cash Money, for withholding his long-awaited LP, Tha Carter V. Wayne then sued Cash Money for $51 million, demanding he be dropped from the label and be named joint copyright holder of all the music released on his Young Money imprint, including recordings by Drake and Nicki Minaj.

In his interview with Martinez, Birdman addressed the rumors that should Wayne leave, Cash Money would also lose the Young Money roster: "No," Birdman said. "You're just listening to what they say." He added: "Nicki and Drake ain't going nowhere, regardless."

Martinez's full interview with Birdman is scheduled to air Tuesday at 4 p.m. on Power 105.1. The Cash Money honcho will also reportedly discuss whether he'll let Lil Wayne walk away from Cash Money, if it was him who threw a drink at the rapper during a performance in Miami and if he and Young Thug orchestrated an alleged shooting against Weezy.

Neither Birdman nor Young Thug are facing any charges for the incident, which took place in April, but both were named in a recent indictment of Jimmy Carlton Winfrey, an associate who worked as a tour manager for Young Thug. The State of Georgia slapped Winfrey with 30 counts, including aggravated assault, claiming he raced up alongside Lil Wayne's two tour buses, opened fire and subsequently attempted to hide the Camaro he was driving.

Amidst all the courtroom drama, Wayne and Birdman's spat took another public turn when Weezy joined the Jay Z-helmed streaming service Tidal where he dropped a new mixtape, Free Weezy Album. Cash Money then sued Tidal for $50 million, claiming they own the exclusive rights to Wayne's music and the rapper's contract stipulates he cannot license his music to anyone else.



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Keith Richards Doc 'Under the Influence' Headed to Netflix

Keith Richards: Under the Influence, a new documentary about the Rolling Stones guitarist, will premiere via Netflix on September 18th. Filmmaker Morgan Neville, who recently won a "Best Documentary" Oscar for a documentary about backup singers called 20 Feet From Stardom and who directed Richards' recent "Trouble" music video, directed the film.

Producers are promising an "unprecedented look" at Richards' influences, songwriting process and guitar playing in the documentary. The film, which was made as Richards prepared his first solo record in over two decades – Crosseyed Heart, due out the same day as the movie – culls from interviews, archival material and footage of him recording new music.

"If there's a Mount Rushmore of Rock & Roll, Keith's face is surely on it," Neville said in a statement. "He has always represented the soul of rock music – for all of the light and dark shades that implies. To my relief, Keith Richards turned out to be a real man – full of humor, knowledge and wisdom. That's the real Keith we've worked to capture in our film and I'm honored to bring it to ​a global audience via Netflix."

Richards' new record finds him collaborating with guitarist Waddy Wachtel and drummer/co-producer Steve Jordan, both of whom played on Richards' previous solo outings. It also features appearances by Norah Jones, Spooner Oldham, Aaron Neville and Larry Campbell. Late Stones saxophonist Bobby Keys will also appear on two tracks.

"I had a ball making this new record and working with Steve Jordan and Waddy Wachtel again," Richards said in a statement at the time he released the "Trouble" video. "There's nothing like walking into a studio and having absolutely no idea what you're going to come out with on the other end. If you're looking for 'Trouble,' you've come to the right place."



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Mastodon, Judas Priest Plot Co-Headlining Fall Tour

Two monsters of metal will hit the road together this fall as Judas Priest and Mastodon have announced an 11-date co-headlining tour. The trek will kick off October 16th in Paso Robles, California. Tickets go on sale to the general public on July 31st.

In addition to their joint headlining tour, both Judas Priest and Mastodon have plotted their own fall tour plans. Judas Priest will branch off on their own North American tours this autumn before heading to Europe for a month's worth of dates. Check out the metal act's itinerary for full dates. Meanwhile, Mastodon will mix their solo headlining gigs with the Missing Link Tour, a trek co-starring Clutch and Corrosion of Conformity. Check Mastodon's tour site for those gigs.

Mastodon and Judas Priest, as well as Clutch and Corrosion of Conformity, will also be on hand for Knotfest on October 24th in San Bernardino, California. Slipknot's annual fest will also feature Korn, Ghostface Killah, Mobb Deep, Bring Me the Horizon, Suicidal Tendencies, Gwar, Helmet and many more acts over its two days at the San Manuel Amphitheater and Festival Grounds.

Judas Priest & Mastodon Co-Headlining Tour

October 16 - Paso Robles, CA @ Vina Robles Amphitheatre
October 17 - Las Vegas, NV @ The Pearl
October 20 - San Francisco, CA @ The Warfield
October 21 - San Jose, CA @ City National Civic
October 22 - Chico, CA @ Senator Theatre
October 24 - San Bernardino, CA @ KnotFest
October 26 - Tucson, AZ @ Rialto Theater
November 3 - Peoria, IL @ Peoria Civic Center Theatre
November 6 - Huntington, NJ @ The Paramount
November 7 - Newark, NJ @ Prudential Center
November 10 - Halifax, NS @ Scotiabank Centre
November 12 - Toronto, ON @ Air Canada Centre



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Run the Jewels, Al Green Reissue LPs on Pink Vinyl for Cancer Charity

Run the Jewels, Al Green, Primus and Sturgill Simpson are among the artists who will issue pink vinyl versions of their albums on September 29th as part of Ten Bands One Cause, a RED-led effort to raise cancer aid and awareness. Joey Bada$$, Ingrid Michaelson, Clutch, Chet Faker, Between the Buried & Me and Pierce the Veil will also reissue their LPs on limited edition vinyl, with all proceeds benefitting Gilda's Club NYC. The organization, which provides communities for those diagnosed with cancer, is named after comedian Gilda Radner, who passed away from the disease at the age of 43 in 1989.

Run the Jewels' Run the Jewels 2, Primus' 1990 debut Frizzle Fry and Green's 1977 LP The Belle Album will get the pink vinyl treatment, with the special reissues available at retailers nationwide. This is the second year for the Ten Bands One Cause program; last year, Against Me!, Courtney Barnett, Jason Isbell and more aligned with the cause, which raised $30,000 for Gilda's Club NYC.

"I lost my mother to cancer last year and want to do all I can do to help those affected by this cruel disease," Michaelson said in a statement. "I am honored to be a part of 10 bands One Cause benefitting Gilda's Club NYC."

Check out the 10 albums available on pink vinyl below:

Run The Jewels - Run The Jewels 2
Sturgill Simpson - Metamodern Sounds In Country Music
Joey Bada$$ - B4.DA.$$
Al Green - The Belle Album
Between The Buried & Me - Coma Ecliptic
Chet Faker - Built On Glass
Pierce The Veil - Collide With The Sky
Primus - Frizzle Fry
Clutch - La Curandera
Ingrid Michaelson - Lights Out



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Help Fund Intimate DJ AM Doc With Indiegogo Campaign

Adam "DJ AM" Goldstein helped revolutionize DJing before his tragic 2009 death, but his life was also filled with tragedy and depression. Kevin Kerslake examined Goldstein's rise and fall in the 2014 documentary As I AM: The Life and Times of DJ AM – and now fans can help fund the project's wide release through an Indiegogo campaign featuring numerous donator rewards from the DJ's personal collection.

Rewards include a signed Banksy art piece, titled "Jack And Jill (Police Kids)"; Goldstein's own Daft Punk full leather jacket and replica of Thomas Bangalter's helmet (worn in 2008 at HARD Haunted Mansion on Halloween); a dog tag-style USB drive filled with 25 DJ AM mixes (two of which are previously unheard); access to AM's personal collections of 900-plus collector sneakers and signed albums, vintage T-shirts and art.

Contributions to the campaign will help fund the movie's music licenses and costs of self-distribution and marketing. Proceeds from the documentary's online, TV or theatrical distribution will benefit MusiCares, the charity for the DJ AM Memorial Fund. 

DJ AM was a crucial player in the expansion of DJ culture into a major commercial movement. As I AM traces Goldstein's life story, using never-before-seen footage, his own photos and music and an autobiographical speech from the performer. The documentary includes interviews with friends and peers, including Mark Ronson, Steve Aoki, Diplo, Jon Favreau, Dr. Drew, DJ Jazzy Jeff, Mix Master Mike and A-Trak. 

Kerslake also details Goldstein's battles with substance abuse – after surviving a deadly plane crash with Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker, the DJ grappled with PTSD and survivor's guilt, which played a role in his fatal 2009 relapse. 

As I AM premiered at last year's Tribeca Film Festival and will close out the San Francisco Jewish Film Festival on Friday, July 31st. 



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Monday, July 27, 2015

Farm Aid 30: Willie Nelson, Neil Young Headline 30th Anniversary Show

Farm Aid is coming to Chicago. The annual event, which is celebrating its 30th anniversary, will be held on September 19th at FirstMerit Bank Pavilion at Northerly Island near downtown Chicago. In addition to board members Willie Nelson, Neil Young, John Mellencamp and Dave Matthews, the show will feature Jack Johnson, Imagine Dragons, Kacey Musgraves, Old Crow Medicine Show, Mavis Staples, Holly Williams, Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real, Insects vs. Robots and Blackwood Quartet.

"We organized the first Farm Aid concert in Illinois in 1985 to respond to the people suffering during the Farm Crisis," Farm Aid President and Founder Willie Nelson said in a statement. "Thirty years later, in Chicago, we'll bring together so many of the people — farmers, eaters, advocates and activists — who have made the progress of the Good Food Movement possible. At Farm Aid 30, we'll celebrate the impact we've had and rally our supporters for the work ahead."

"In 1985, alternatives didn't exist for most farmers and people didn't understand that there was a role for them in changing the system," Farm Aid co-founder John Mellencamp said in a statement. "The Good Food Movement didn't exist. People thought the farm crisis was a rural problem. But after that first concert, people listened. They realized that if we lost family farmers, we lost Main Street and we lost our food. They stood up with family farmers and now things are changing. We've got a lot more work to do, but the connection between rural and urban communities is more real and important to people."

The first Farm Aid was held September 22nd, 1985 at Memorial Stadium in Champaign, Illinois. It has been held nearly every year since, raising $48 million for family farmers. Over the past 30 years, everyone from Phish to Elton John to Guns N' Roses to Jerry Lee Lewis and the Allman Brothers have performed. Young played with Lukas and Micah Nelson at last year's event at Walnut Creek Amphitheater in Raleigh, North Carolina, a spontaneous decision that led to him recording The Monsanto Years with them a few months later.

Tickets for this year's Farm Aid — ranging in price from $49.50 to $189.50 — go on sale Monday, August 3rd at 10 a.m. CDT at FarmAid.org.



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