Flytjendur
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Shakey Graves
Shakey Graves is the stage and performing name of Alejandro Rose-Garcia, an American folk-rock singer, songwriter from Austin, Texas, U.S.
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Built to Spill
Built to Spill was formed in 1993 by Doug Martsch and over the years they have toured extensively and made several albums, with a rotating cast of musicians currently featuring Teresa Esguerra (Prism Bitch) on drums, and Melanie Radford (Blood Lemon) on bass.
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Alela Diane
When an eerie September windstorm roared through the Pacific Northwest, sparking historic wildfires that choked the region with hazardous smoke, Portland singer-songwriter Alela Diane took to the piano in her backyard studio and began to pour her unease into a song.
By the next day, Diane, who is known for her “immaculately beautiful indie-folk songs”(Paste Magazine), had recorded a rough version of the epic “Howling Wind,” the first single from her cathartic and ethereal sixth studio album Looking Glass.
What began during the unfolding of a single natural disaster evolved into a song about the wider instability and volatility of contemporary life. The “howling wind” becomes a metaphor for our many collective fears and sorrows, captured here in powerfully stark imagery. (“The orange sun burning through the smoke/vultures circling til a man choked/There is war in the street.”) In Diane’s warm voice, the mounting chorus itself takes on the feeling of a howl, mellifluous but urgent: “Howling wind, there’s a howling wind/ A wild wind that’s howling through all that we’ve built.”
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Brothers Comatose
“Run Boy Run” out now!
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BriscoePre-order + pre-save new album 'Heat of July' https://atorecords-ffm.com/heatofjuly
https://www.briscoetheband.com/
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WidowspeakWidowspeak is an American indie-rock and dream pop trio that have been crafting hazy, lazy-afternoon soundtracks since 2010, hailing from Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
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The Altons
Listen to "Love You Like That" Out Now 🛼
Tour Tickets 🎟️
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ffm.bio/thealtons
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Folk Bitch Triowww.folkbitchtrio.com
www.instagram.com/fbtband
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Ken PomeroyKen Pomeroy will break your heart. She’ll do it with a single line––sometimes, just one word. The pain begins as an empathetic ache. Then, as Pomeroy sings her stories, you begin to see yourself in her hurt and hope. And you realize: We’re in this together.
Pomeroy’s outstretched hand to the wounded manifests as startlingly good songs. Her soprano is comforting––almost sweet––but perhaps most powerful delivering a devastating line. A deft guitarist, she opts for beds of rootsy strings that can soothe or haunt. But it’s her writing that really shines and stings. “Writing was and is the only way I can fully express an emotion and feel like I got it out,” she says. “I feel like once I get it out into a song, I don’t have to worry about it anymore. If it’s a traumatic thing that happened, I kind of act as if it’s gone.”
Pomeroy creates a wild but safe space of her own––a space that, like 22-year-old Pomeroy herself, is brutally honest, proudly Native American, and undeniably brilliant.
People have noticed. Pomeroy’s “Wall of Death” made its way onto the Twisters soundtrack, while Hulu’s Reservation Dogs featured her soul-mining gem, “Cicadas.” Tour dates with Lukas Nelson, Iron &