new music release
Every few years, musicians arrive on the scene with an undeniably fresh approach to a tried-and-true genre. Showcasing this with unparalleled proficiency is the acclaimed Los Angeles-based Americana band The Americans. Upon hearing Stand True the band’s forthcoming 11-song, sophomore studio LP (out May 6 via Loose Music) it’s evident why revered producer T Bone Burnett raved, calling them, “genius twenty-first century musicians that are reinventing American heritage music for this century. And it sounds even better this century.”
The title track and album opener, “Stand True,” showcases the group’s riveting grip on storytelling, dynamics and melodic hooks that leave listeners cemented to their speakers. Patrick Ferris (vocals/guitar), Jake Faulkner (bassist) and Zac Sokolow (guitarist) collide to deliver a moving collection that lands somewhere between Bruce Springsteen, John Mellencamp and Nathaniel Rateliff.
Following their 2017 debut album, I’ll Be Yours, The Americans took a step back, regained focus, and went into Big Bad Sound studios in Los Angeles to carve out an album of material that “is more our own than ever before,” the band confirms. The overall touchstone of Stand True, which the band self-produced, is devotion in the face of loss. And with that, the album’s sophomore single, “Born With A Broken Heart,” solidifies that concept as it showcases an edgier side to the band; a gritty ode to the way romantically wounded people sometimes find one another. “Driving home from gigs, Zac would tune into a Navajo AM radio station out of Window Rock, AZ,” recalls Patrick. “Parts of the song came from some of that music. It feels like driving through Los Angeles at night.”
It was sometime in the 1970s, a decade before front man Patrick Ferris and bassist Jake Faulkner were born, that their mothers met on a train to Woodstock. Patrick and Jake met as children, but they lived in different cities and saw very little of one another before reconnecting in high school. They got along immediately through their joy for busking (street performing), and pre-war American country and blues. “Nobody I knew liked the same music,” recalls Patrick. Jake came to San Francisco from Los Angeles to visit, bringing his guitar and baskets of recording gear. They spent that summer recording homeless street musicians with a mobile unit they lugged around the city, making copies of the recordings for the performers to sell. Guitarist Zac Sokolow had dropped out of high school and was busking on the streets while working construction in Los Angeles when Jake saw him playing guitar. Jake convinced him to move in and start a band. They spent years digging through obscure records and arcane field recordings, teaching themselves the banjo, fiddle, mandolin, harmonica, and slide guitar. Patrick calls this long immersion, during which he created and hosted a radio show, a “purist” phase. “We were suspicious of modern rock music,” he says. “When we got together and formed a band, we had to make everything from scratch. We had no template. There was no band we wanted to be like. We were curious if we could create something brand new, summoning the spirit of old blues and country through what we’d learned firsthand, leaving nostalgia behind.” “We write our songs inside-out,” says Patrick. “We grab hold of something minuscule and primitivea simple turn of phrase or an unusual beatand try to build a song around it. It’s inefficient, and hard to write words over, but it’s magical when it works.” The band’s distinctive, powerful works have captured the attention of a number of stars. They’ve backed Nick Cave, Lucinda Williams, Ashley Monroe, and Devendra Banhart, and twice joined Ryan Bingham on national tours. They worked closely with Jack White and T Bone Burnett, joining Nas, Elton John, and Alabama Shakes in the PBS primetime series American Epic.
Their live show, honed over many hundreds of performances, is something to behold. Ron Wray (No Depression) writes, “they’re led by lead singer, guitarist Patrick Ferris, looking like James Dean but even better…Jake Faulkner, with his dark black beard and jaunty hat, dances across stage, lifting his stand-up bass like a dancing partner.” Steve Wildsmith (Daily Times) admires their “anthemic guitar hooks and a heartland sense of urgency that’s tailor made for road trips and late-night parties beneath a field of brilliant stars.”
The band’s first tour was different from most. A friend who’d introduced them to Robert Frankwhose collection of photographs inspired the band’s namewas appointed drummer. He was allowed to play with only a plywood suitcase, which he beat with a soup spoon. The band set off on a meandering, quixotic odyssey that found them playing honky-tonks, rural bars, a Navajo radio station, and a wine cellar in an abandoned Coca-Cola bottling plant. Some of the venues hadn’t hosted a live band since the 1980s. “We had a passport to the hidden heartland of our country,” recounts Jake. “What you learn exploring the nooks and crannies of any place, but especially this country, is that there’s no type of person.” Zac adds that “stereotypes break down at the individual level. What makes American
music great is the same thing that makes America greatpeople who come from all over the world, each with a story, each with something to contribute.”
Additional Artist/Song Information:
Artist Name: Americans
Song Title: Stand True
Publishing: HIGH WATER MUSIC
Publishing Affiliation: ASCAP
Album Title: Stand True
Record Label: The Americans
This song, takes ya to the place you’ve been into some 100 shows or more, and ya think to yourself…”if these walls could talk”. Cuz you know you’re in a real deal country joint where the people hanging out there LIVE this stuff. You might even know some of the regulars, while the Newcomers are a little different, but they fit in too. The type of place that’s been run by a family for generations, times change but this place doesn’t.
Musically, Tommy has Nashville writers on this track telling the story too. Listeners will hear sweet baritone vocals, drawing from the influence of Alan Jackson, and back to Elvis.
Songwriters:
– Kelly Ann Archer
– Steven Thomas Moakler
– Mark Allen Trussel
Mitch Merrett, Produced it and honestly it brings out the best in Tommy as a baritone singer. Tommy is Originally from the Montreal area, but now lives in Calgary. He travels routinely to Austin TX and area to play, write and make new friends. At 27 years old he speak 6 languages, was a runner up on TV’s “La Vox” (The Voice / Quebec)
The debut single, “Looking Like That”, was released in summer of 2022, via Vancouver-based label, Crank Music, Tommy’s single has been streamed over 25,000 in a short time.
Digitally you can find his songs on Spotify and Apple Editorial Biggest Approved “Country” playlist fitting effortlessly alongside the best names in Modern Country.
Early in 2023, you’ll find Tommy writing, and playing shows in the Austin Texas area. He’s very drawn to the scene and lifestyle of the Tex/Mex region.
Additional Artist/Song Information:
Artist Name: Tommy Charles
Song Title: Last Country Bar
Publishing: Tommy Charles
Publishing Affiliation: SOCAN
Album Title: Last Country Bar
Record Label:
| Record Label: |
| Crank Music |
| Lyle Chausse |
| lyle@crankmedia.ca |
| Radio Promotion: |
| Loggins Promotion |
| Paul Loggins |
| 310-325-2800 |
| Contact LP |
| Publicity/PR: |
| Loggins Promotion |
| Paul Loggins |
| 310-325-2800 |
| Contact LP |
Award-winning actor and recording artist Alexander James Rodriguez was born on June 12, 2007, in Marbella, Spain. During his early years in Europe, he was featured in various magazine print campaigns; however, it wasn’t until his permanent move to the United States in 2011 that his passion for the performing arts was truly cemented.
Since living in Los Angeles, Alexander has appeared in several prominent feature-length films including the 2020 Golden-Globe winner and Academy-nominee ‘Missing Link’, along with Disney’s ‘Alice Through The Looking Glass’ with Johnny Depp, ‘All-Stars’ starring John Goodman, and ‘Flock of Four’, set in 1959 Los Angeles, directed by Greg Caruso.
The young actor, who speaks in both a British and American accent, has also appeared in various national TV commercials, print campaigns and TV Shows including; Toyota Prius, LG, Hackett London, Britta, Intex, Little Tikes, Sketchers and for five years has been the voice of Cardamon in the popular animation TV series ‘Bee & Puppycat’.
On stage, Alexander joined the cast of ‘Appropriate’, as Ainsley, in the highly acclaimed Centre Theatre Group production at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles and he thoroughly enjoyed working with Motion-Capture for the new Xbox One video game ‘Scalebound’, released 2017.
In May 2020, Alexander headed to the recording studio to make three pop records with veteran record producer-songwriter Laney Stewart. My Crew, Your Smile and Up To You. In October he recorded a cover Christmas record, Holiday in LA for UNICEF. At the top of 2021 Alexander started releasing hit after hit with a new vibe.
When Alexander is not acting or singing, he is part of USA swim, and is striving for place in the Junior Olympics. He has a chocolate Labrador called Bosley and a horse called Rosie. Of an evening Alexander can usually be found in his room playing with Ninjago, Star Wars or Minecraft Legos or lost in a VR game. His favorite books are adventure stories or anything relating to dragons, magic, and Greek mythology.
Additional Artist/Song Information:
Artist Name: Alexander James Rodriguez
Song Title: Euphoria
Publishing: Alexander James Rodriguez
Publishing Affiliation: Other
Album Title: Euphoria
Record Label: EMR Media
| Radio Promotion: |
| ADD Promotion |
| Gary Lefkowith |
| (212) 222-5212 |
| hifiadd@aol.com |
