Featured Single: Band of Horses’ Tyler Ramsey swoons with “A Dream of Home”

via Ear To The Ground

Tyler Ramsey lives near Asheville, NC and likes to reflect the sweetness of his life, member of the band Band of Horses, in his music. This lush folk rock track is everything that’s right about music production in 2019.

It’s easy to come up with comparisons like Neil Young, but honestly it’s the way that Ramsey’s “complete package” comes together that has us excited. It’s what we love about others in this space like Noah Gundersen and David Ramirez. This single’s got us looking forward to the rest of the music this chill folk rocker has coming soon.

 

A Dream Of Home, a song by Tyler Ramsey on Spotify

 

Carl Broemel & Tyler Ramsey in Illinois (A Gallery)

 
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via Relix

My Morning Jacket guitarist Carl Broemel and former Band of Horses lead guitarist Tyler Ramsay recently teamed up for a short duo tour throughout the Midwest. Stephen Bloch shared some photos from the guitarists’ stop at Evanston, IL’s S.P.A.C.E. on Friday night. View the full gallery at Relix.com.

Music Journeys: Carl Broemel and Tyler Ramsey

 
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via WCBE

Two musicians who've spent more of their time touring in bands than on their own have completed new solo releases and joined forces for a set of shows. Carl Broemel of My Morning Jacket and Tyler Ramsey, formerly of Band of Horses, bring their tour to Columbus tonight and WCBE for a live session this afternoon. Be sure and listen to the full podcast just below the feature. Broemel and Ramsey share more about their new songs, memories of their bands, and you'll enjoy the songs they select in the Fast Five.

Dark Matter plays...

Carl Broemel says his latest release titled Wished Out represents a bit of his personal journey navigating current times.

"There's a lot of negativity and strangeness and confusion in the world, and I realized I was taking part in it," Broemel said. "I wanted to change that. If there's a theme to the record, it's taking control of your life and taking responsibility for how it feels no matter how much the external world seems to be causing it all. You have a way to flip a switch and make it work."

Wished Out plays...

"It's enlightening to do it because I realize what I'm good at and not good at," Broemel said of working on solo material. "I'm not 100 percent comfortable being the front guy. But when I get through it, I'm glad for the challenge. I adore working with other singers and songwriters. That's my role in this world. 'm just trying to make something better than the last one."

Broemel's current collaborator on the music scene shares similar sentiments.

A Dream Of Home plays...

The song A Dream of Home comes from new material Tyler Ramsey releases in April. Ramsey spent a decade with the group Band of Horses. His new music reflects the changes in his life, including becoming a father for the first time.

"It's that thing that any working parent goes through whether you're a touring musician or going to work in an office," Ramsey said. "We all have to make a living to support our family, but you want to be around as much as you can to help and experience such a life-changing thing. I felt I was missing out on that. There's a shift in my focus now where I need to do my own songs and if I'm going to be out touring, it needs to be at my own pace."

Ramsey and Broemel say they're looking forward to touring together.

"He feels like a musical brother," Ramsey said. "In the process of learning his songs and digging in, I'm in awe of his arrangements. His guitar playing is a contrast to mine. He's such a great solo player, so figuring out how to support him in the songs, it's going to be fun."

"Our bands did many shows together before he left Band of Horses," Broemel said. "He's a super talented guitar player who's also a singer but wasn't the lead singer. It's a bit of an experiment. We're pals but we've never really played together. We're going to do shows where it won't be separate sets. It'll be one set where we accompany each other and bounce songs back and forth."

Broemel and Ramsey bring their tour to Columbus tonight at the Rumba Cafe. They also perform Live From Studio A here at WCBE this afternoon during the Global Village.

Listen to the Podcast at WCBE.org.

Columbus Underground: Concert Preview

 
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via Columbus Underground

One of the indisputable joys of being a music writer is discovering new artists and their recorded works, and I have many publicists and managers to thank for the growing list of phenomenal albums, EPs, and singles that now play in heavy rotation through my headphones.

Hearing the stories behind their songs is an even greater reward, and when Cincinnati-born singer-songwriter Tyler Ramsey’s “A Dream of Home” came across my desk a few weeks ago, I knew immediately I wanted to talk with him about the creation of such an enchantingly idyllic ballad. With each passing verse, it effortlessly evokes a portrait of the environs that inspired such a loving, longing ode to his serene North Carolina abode at the foot of the mountains outside of Asheville.

Ramsey wrote “A Dream…” and a handful of other tracks that comprise his forthcoming album, For The Morning (due April 5th via Fantasy Records), while at a personal and professional crossroads near the end of his decade-long stint as lead guitarist for renowned indie-rock outfit Band of Horses.

“This album came about in the midst of a lot of change,” he explains in a recent press release. “The birth of my daughter, a move to the country, and the steady realization that I needed to switch the road I was on in my life as a musician and songwriter. I tried to express and balance images of life as a constantly traveling and touring musician with the more connected life I live at home and the time I spend hiking in the mountains where I live.”

When we interviewed last week, Ramsey articulated how the change of pace has specifically impacted his craft as a songwriter.

“I do gather inspiration from all the traveling and all the places I see, and conversations and the things I come across,” he reflects. “But, I don’t really process it into a really creative thing until I can get super grounded and back to myself. And that does happen here. There’s more quiet here. If I can get my feet on the ground, I can start to remember things that were inspiring, or writing them down and using them for songs.

It’s getting my feet back in the dirt rather than running around and trying to finish things when you’re on the go, because there’s so much coming at you all the time. When you get done with that and you start walking in the woods, then your mind can slow down and translate that into something, hopefully.”

Although he’s back on the road for the foreseeable future to support For The Morning, Ramsey’s taking advantage of the connections he’s made over the years to bring music to his audiences on his own terms. On Monday night, he’ll share the stage with My Morning Jacket guitarist Carl Broemel for an intimate performance at Rumba Café.

When do you remember first making a profound, meaningful connection to music?

“Oh, man. So, the profound meaning came sort of when I found out I could pick songs out on the keyboard by ear at a pretty early age. I could pick up little songs and peck them out. I started taking jazz piano lessons when I was…I think I was around nine, or something. The teacher that I had – his name was Bob Zahn – was a really, really good jazz piano player, but he also knew that I could hear music well. He did a lot to encourage that, and he did a lot to teach me about improvisation and playing music that way. It was just such a cool way to be introduced to formal music by having [that] freedom.

Being so young and knowing ‘oh, I can play any note I want in this scale,’ and try to figure out solos and pick things out by ear – it was the beginning of what would continue into what keeps my inspired about music. There’s a lot of freedom of expression, and I learned that from early on.”

You’re well regarded for your guitar work, so how did that sense of free expression and experimentation eventually translate from keys to strings?

“When I first picked up the guitar, I was doing the pretty regular thing of taking lessons at the local music store. It was, ‘what songs do you want to learn?’ And I was, like, ‘well, I don’t know…’ I remember working on…they’d kind of throw things at you, like, ‘here’s a Beatles song. Here’s a Led Zeppelin riff…’ I had an Ibanez Roadstar II electric guitar, and I was learning riffs. And at some point, I got an acoustic guitar in high school, and I think I broke string and didn’t have another one, and my friend helped me tune it to this weird open tuning. And then I just started messing around with that, and I remember that feeling of, like, ‘oh, this thing’s a total mystery now.’ Standard tuning guitar was also a mystery at that point because it wasn’t like I’d mastered any Led Zeppelin songs or even knew how to solo or anything like that.

But all of a sudden, it turned the guitar into something I was inventing myself and exploring, and I began making up little instrumental songs and trying to write instrumental things. I had started listening to a lot of instrumental guitar – even back in high school, I was the weirdo that would listen to Leo Kottke or Michael Hedges. A lot of that fingerstyle guitar got me excited back then. That’s how that transition happened, and everything that came after that was based on it. I still use a lot of alternate tuning and still feel like I don’t know what I’m doing [laughs], and that I’m learning and figuring things out all the time.”

I’m curious how guitarists skill build. I can articulate how I do that in my job when I sit down with a new piece of technology or resource and muck around with it until I figure it out and become comfortable. Since you’ve learned so much by ear, how does that manifest in extending your concrete musical abilities?

“Yeah, I never really was the kind of person who would just sit down and learn note-for-note songs the way someone else would play it. I still don’t really do that – I mean, I can do that, but my approach is more ‘okay, these are the tools I have, and this is my vocabulary on the instrument. But here’s this song that I have to play on, or that I want to play on – so, how am I going to take the way I speak and basically tell the story of this other song?’ Kind of what I’m doing with Carl Broemel right now and working on his music and learning all his songs is approaching it like ‘this is what I do, and I’m going to interpret these – and we’re going to play them together.’

It’s almost always that way if I have a cover song that I’m working on – I think the last one I did was Creedence Clearwater Revival’s ‘I Wish I Could Hide Away.’ But I just did it in a weird tuning and I got the gist…I got the chord progressions on the song, and then I just played it the way I was going to play it. And that turned out to be really fun. It’s kind of the way I approach other people’s music – I interpret it using the skill set I’ve developed over the years.”

You started as a solo artist before you joined Band of Horses, and now you’re back to being on your own again. How has flexing inward and outward along your career path affected you creatively?

“I’m still learning a lot. I kind of had a feeling when I joined that band that I might lose track of that path I was already on as a songwriter. I tried to stay on it, but it certainly got pushed a little bit to the side because of the schedule. The timing of things had to be perfect if I was going to put a record out – I had to find the perfect window of time, and I wasn’t necessarily going to be able to tour on it enough or make sure it was supported and things like that. It became that it was fading out too far in the background of what I felt strongly about doing.”

Of course. And I’m sure it’s vastly different releasing solo records when you’re your own entity as opposed to doing so when you’re a member of a well-known band and it’s more of a sidestep.

“Right, right. I mean the process for this record was the same as it always was – I tried to just represent my songs the best I could and make them sound the way they needed to sound. But, now the cool thing about this record is that I have an absolutely amazing team of people, and I have the full ability to go out and support it as much as I need to and can. I’ll be able to put a lot of time into playing shows, connecting with people, going into radio stations, and traveling around.

It’s really exciting because I feel like that last record Valley Wind that I put out – which was a long time back – it kind of got lost. And I was super proud of that record and I loved some of those songs, and the way we captured them was so…it was a really cool, emotional time. We did a really good job of just documenting that time. But, then all of a sudden, it was, like, ‘well, I’m back on the road and I can’t do the work it takes.’ I had a talk with Fat Possum at the time who put out the record, and I said, ‘how do we make it come back from a disappearing act? [laughs] It just disappeared really quick!’ And they said, ‘well, you really can’t do anything if you can’t get out there and play shows.’ The way everything’s working out in music nowadays, you have to play shows. But, I wasn’t able to, and I felt like that record was done a disservice by letting it just kind of disappear.

So, now I have Fantasy Records, and I’ve got a really cool management company, and Virgin Records in the UK – just a lot of really cool things happening that are blowing my mind, first of all. And the fact that I’m going to have the energy and the time to do my part and play these songs to as many people as I can and support them that way – it’s a really amazing opportunity that I’m lucky to have.”

As you’ve been talking to the press about For The Morning, you’ve discussed how you intentionally recruited expert musicians to infuse their strengths into different parts of the album instead of filling in gaps yourself. You said they created some really special moments across the record. What are some specific examples?

“Man, there’s a lot of them that happened on this record. The first one was…I’ve always wanted really good pedal steel on a record, and Seth Kauffman, who’s a friend of mine from the band Floating Action, was in the studio with me. He was in the studio with me when I was up in Louisville with Kevin Ratterman at La La Land, and I’m talking to both of them saying, ‘I’ve got to get to get the perfect pedal steel on these two songs.’ And Seth had luckily done some session where he’d gotten to work with Russ Pahl, who lives in Nashville and is a big pedal steel player there and has done a lot of session work. I’ve never met him in person, but he’s apparently the sweetest and a great person to work with. So, we sent the tracks to Russ, and he worked on them and sent back, like, the perfect pedal steel part. When we heard it the first time, I was jumping up and down in the studio in the control room. It just blew me away. I said, ‘that’s exactly what I would’ve hoped for,’ and he did it with an ease, you know?

And it happened again when I said, ‘I need a really good harmony on these songs,’ and Kevin was, like, ‘I’ll see if Joan Shelley’s in town, because she’s unbelievable.’ And I said, ‘well, that would be amazing.’ I’d just finished reading an article, maybe it was in Uncut, about her, and had listened to her music a bit. And she came in and sang on some songs, and – again – goosebumps. It was the perfect fit in the songs and it just elevated them, which is such a cool thing for someone to do for you – to lift them to a place where there’s more emotion and more things to listen to. Then Nathan Salsburg came in and played this mind-blowing acoustic guitar part on an instrumental. Things like that just kept happening – there’s a whole list. There were all kinds of fun and surprising things that made this record better.”

Tyler Ramsey & Carl Broemel
Rumba Cafe - Columbus, OH
February 25, 2019

Concert preview: Tyler Ramsey & Carl Broemel at Rumba Cafe

via Columbus Alive

Former Band of Horses guitarist and co-writer readies forthcoming album, ‘For the Morning,’ and partners with My Morning Jacket’s Carl Broemel on duo tour

Tyler Ramsey lives near Mount Pisgah, one of the bigger mountains on the Blue Ridge Parkway, southwest of Asheville, North Carolina. It’s a postcard-worthy setting, and that natural environment tends to make its way into Ramsey’s songs.

“I think it has a huge impact on what I do,” Ramsey said recently by phone from his home. “I do get out in the mountains a lot. ... Sometimes it gives me the opportunity to get the space that I need to work out lyric ideas in my head while I’m walking in the woods. There’s something about the rhythm of walking in the woods that can help songs. It’s helped me finish songs that were being stubborn. Just having that solitude is important for the way that I write.”

Ramsey wrote some of his forthcoming album, For the Morning (out April 5 on Fantasy Records), during his tenure as lead guitarist and co-writer in Band of Horses, a group he departed after 10 years in 2017. Other songs took shape at home during bleary-eyed nights as he tried to lull his then-infant daughter to sleep by playing guitar or piano.

“She didn’t sleep very well for a long time, and still kind of doesn’t, but I spent a lot of time with her in a carrier when I was home from tours,” he said. “I’d have her in a carrier and be playing the piano with her asleep on my chest. ‘For the Morning’ came directly from that experience, and that time of being a parent for the first time. I don’t know if the lyrics really reflect that, but the mood of it does.”

Ramsey, a Cincinnati native, made home demos of the songs and then headed to Louisville to record the follow up to his 2011 album, The Valley Wind, with engineer Kevin Ratterman and musician Seth Kauffman (Floating Action). In the process, Ratterman invited other Louisville musicians to come by and play on various For the Morning songs. Joan Shelley contributes gorgeous harmonies on “Cheap Summer Dress,” and Nathan Salsburg lends his guitar work to an instrumental track. There are cameos from Thad Cockrell and Molly Parden, and pedal steel player Russ Paul helped transform Band of Horses track “Evening Kitchen” into a Southern send-up, now titled “Evening Country.”

For this tour, which will make a stop at Rumba Cafe on Monday, Feb. 25, Ramsey is partnering with Carl Broemel, a solo musician best known for his guitar work in My Morning Jacket.

“We’re going to do each other’s music. I’m going to go hang out with him for a couple of days, and we’re going to rehearse, but we’ve both been at home working on each other’s songs,” Ramsey said, then chuckled. “We were laughing, because Carl and I have never played music together.”

But Ramsey isn’t worried. He’s excited. Sometimes shaking things up can transform his music in ways he never anticipated. “These songs have already been going through a lot of change,” he said. “It seems like these songs are taking on a really cool new meaning.”

Rumba Cafe
8 p.m. Monday, Feb. 25
2507 Summit St., North Campus

Looking Forward To: Tyler Ramsey + Carl Broemel @ The Burl 2/19

 
 

via Dead Audio Blog

Tyler Ramsey (former lead guitarist and co-songwriter for Band of Horses) and Carl Broemel (guitarist of My Morning Jacket) are headed to The Burl this coming Tuesday, February 19th to kickoff their co-headlining 2019 Winter Duo Tour.

Touring in support of his upcoming album For the Morning due out April 5th, Ramsey has honed his signature sound, weaving elements of Rock, Folk and Country to create an album that focuses on change and balance, something every touring musician has to come to terms with at some point in their career.

Filled with expert guitar work, twinkling pianos and wistful, nostalgic lyrics, For the Morning finds Ramsey yearning for his peaceful, family-centric life at home in Asheville, NC., all while questioning the Rock n’ Roll lifestyle that comes with being a part of a household, Grammy-nominated outfit like Band of Horses. This is perhaps best illustrated on the catchy lead track “A Dream of Home” (available for listening below). All this translates to album that is both meditative, soulful and full of depth and beauty, all while reinforcing Ramsey as one of Americana’s most gifted songwriters.

 
 

Released in late 2018, Carl Broemel is still on the road showcasing his fourth solo album Wished Out, a guitar-shredding, vocal-heavy record that features several tracks that wouldn’t be out of place on any MMJ venture, such as the opening track “Dark Matter”. On Wished Out, Broemel also seizes the opportunity separate himself from the band with slower, acoustic-driven tracks like “Starting From Scratch” with simple structures that make for perfect crowd sing-alongs.

The 2019 Winter Duo Tour is a short run of shows that will pair two of the best Americana/Folk artists for a special night of meaningful tunes, however I wouldn’t be surprised if we get a few guitar-heavy barnburners throughout the sets.

 
 

2019 Winter Duo Tour
Tyler Ramsey + Carl Broemel
The Burl - Lexington, KY
February 19, 2019

LexGo! Winter Duo Tour Comes to The Burl

 
 

via Kentucky.com

8 p.m. Feb. 19 at The Burl, 375 Thompson Rd. $15. theburlky.com.

Here is an intriguing winter diversion — a pair of proven song stylists familiar to regional audiences through music made with their highly visible bands playing in a duo setting. That’s the premise for a week-long string of performances featuring guitarist Tyler Ramsey, formerly of the acclaimed North Carolina troupe Band of Horses, and fellow fret-man Carl Broemel of top Louisville rock export My Morning Jacket. Both artists have new but very different recordings to promote.

Ramsey will be previewing music from “For the Morning,” his first solo album since departing Band of Horses in 2017 and his fourth album overall. It’s a hushed, neo-country colored set of songs that sound summon early ‘70s Southern California introspection with a heavy Neil Young-meets-Eagles accent. It was recorded during sessions in a home studio constructed outside of Band of Horses’ Asheville, N.C., home base.

Curiously, Ramsey echoes some of the sounds Broemel designed on past records. But on “Wished Out,” the latter’s fourth and newest album, the mood shifts. While Broemel has said Southern California, especially a series of drives and hikes through Malibu, inspired one of the record’s highlight tunes, “Starting from Scratch,” much of the new music accelerates into a huge, bright and pop-worshiping electric drive that might catch fans of his previous solo albums (especially 2016’s fine “4th of July”) off guard. Broemel cut “Wished Out” with help from two of his MMJ bandmates, bassist Tom Blankenship and keyboardist Bo Koster.

Though essentially a co-headlining bill, Ramsey and Broemel will be very much a team when they play The Burl on Feb. 19. The two will collaborate on each other’s songs and serve up, as indicated on Ramsey’s website, “some special covers.”

Listen: Tyler Ramsey - 'A Dream Of Home'

 
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via Clash Music

Former Band Of Horses guitarist Tyler Ramsey has shared rich, absorbing new solo cut 'A Dream Of Home'.

The talented multi-instrumentalist takes charge on the new solo offering, with new album 'For The Morning' landing on April 5th.

Shoots of Spring permeate new solo track 'A Dream Of Home', with subtle shades of Springsteen working alongside pastoral Americana.

It's a neat opening statement, driven by those opaque acoustic chords, and Ramsey's own yearning vocal.

"This album came about in the midst of a lot of change,” he comments. “The birth of my daughter, a move to the country, and the steady realisation that I needed to switch the road I was on in my life as a musician and songwriter. I tried to express and balance images of life as a constantly traveling and touring musician with the more connected life I live at home and the time I spend hiking in the mountains where I live."

Tune in now.

 
 

Ex Band Of Horses guitarist Tyler Ramsey announces solo record with lead track ““A Dream Of Home”

 
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via The Line of Best Fit

Tyler Ramsey, the former lead guitarist of Band Of Horses, has announced his first solo record in eight years, alongside the lead single "A Dream Of Home".

Back in 2017, Ramsey closed the Band Of Horses chapter, alongside bassist bassist Bill Reynolds.

"A Dream Of Home" is the first taste of his new solo album For The Morning. On the new track, Ramsey shares, "Parts of this record were written on the road, back and forth and on airplanes and in hotels while traveling. Some of it comes from the endless touring and that feeling you get after a while of not knowing where you are, and longing for your home and child. A lot of people see the touring life as glamorous, but there are plenty of times where it’s hard to keep up. It becomes difficult to miss your family that much, and you want to be around your newborn child rather than sitting in a room ten hours away while knowing you won’t be home for three more weeks."

For The Morning is Ramsey's first solo record since 2011's The Valley Wind. Ramsey says, "This album came about in the midst of a lot of change. The birth of my daughter, a move to the country, and the steady realization that I needed to switch the road I was on in my life as a musician and songwriter. I tried to express and balance images of life as a constantly traveling and touring musician with the more connected life I live at home and the time I spend hiking in the mountains where I live."

Ramsey's new record is written and produced by himself, and features harmonies on various tracks from Joan Shelley, Thad Cockrell, and Molly Parden. After making the demos, he went to record the album at La La Land studios in Louisville, Kentucky.

 

A Dream Of Home, a song by Tyler Ramsey on Spotify

 

From The Hills With Love

 
 

On Saturday, March 16th, 2019, Israel Nash once again swings open the gates to his Hill Country ranch to host the return of Plum Creek Sound Presents: Live From The Hills With Love. Now entering it's 4th year, Live from the Hills with Love presents performances from Israel Nash, Jonathan Tyler, E.B. The Younger, T. Hardy Morris, Tyler Ramsey, Carson McHone, Kyle Emerson, Western Youth, and features a dedicated kids area, artisanal merchants, delicious food and drinks, and pop-up performances throughout the day. $1 of every ticket purchased will be donated to HAAM (Health Alliance for Austin Musicians). 

Doors open at 1 PM, with music from 1:15 PM until 8 PM.

Shuttles are available from downtown Austin departing at 12:30 PM and 2:30 PM, returning to Austin after the last set around 8:15 PM.

There is extremely limited parking available on-site and a parking pass required (1 per vechicle). We highly recommend carpooling if you plan to drive! 

The 6th Uncut New Music Playlist Of 2019

 
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via Uncut Magazine

Another week, another plentiful bounty from friends old and new. Lots to get your teeth into here, from the gorgeous heavy folk of Daniel O’Sullivan

to the vital Tuareg rock of Kel Assouf to a remixed Marvin Gaye rarity. There’s more from Royal Trux’s triumphant comeback, Tyler Ramsey unveils his first new music since stepping away from Band Of Horses, and Sunwatchers showcase their thrillingly seditious psych-jazz-rock. Plus The Chemical Brothers are back doing what they do best. See you on the floor at the Heavenly Social!

TYLER RAMSEY
“A Dream Of Home”
(Fantasy Records/ Virgin EMI)

 
 

See the full list at Uncut.co.uk

2019 Luck Reunion Lineup Announced

 
 

The Luck Reunion at Willie Nelson’s Texas ranch has become an annual tradition, as well as something of an escape for a lucky few from the crowded South by Southwest conference in nearby Austin. Set for March 14th, the 2019 Luck Reunion will feature performances by Nelson, Steve Earle & the Dukes, Mavis Staples, Low Cut Connie, Nathaniel Rateliff and Tyler Ramsey among numerous others.

With performances happening on five different stages, the 2019 Luck Reunion offers a wide array of sounds, from country to soul, rock to blues. Other performers at the event include Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real, Marcus King Band, Shakey Graves, Courtney Marie Andrews, Yola, Brandy Zdan, Hayes Carll, Strand of Oaks, the Nude Party, Quaker City Nighthawks, the Cactus Blossoms, Cedric Burnside and Nicole Atkins. Additionally, country-punk singer Jade Jackson will headline the Saloon Stage and perform with surprise guests.

Nelson’s property in Spicewood, Texas, which includes the Western set of his Red Headed Stranger film, has hosted the Reunion since 2016 along with numerous other musical events throughout the year. Tickets are often tough to come by, but this year the event has instituted a lottery system with periodic drawings for attendees who submit their names.

Mountain Jam Lineup for Bethel Woods Announced

 
 

After 14 years at Hunter Mountain, NY, Mountain Jam is getting a new location in 2019: Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, the site of the original Woodstock (and where Live Nation’s unofficial Woodstock 50th anniversary festival, Bethel Woods Music and Culture Festival, will be held). Festival founder Gary Chetkof confirmed the location change with Poughkeepsie Journal, and Hunter Mountain posted on Facebook, saying, “while we are disappointed to see the festival move, we would like to extend our most sincere gratitude to the many supporters who made Hunter Mountain a successful Mountain Jam venue for more than a decade.”

Mountain Jam may be in a new location this year, but after going in an increasingly indie rock direction, the 2019 Mountain Jam lineup is a return to the festival’s jam band roots. Co-founder Warren Haynes‘ band Gov’t Mule are playing again after taking the past two years off, and the lineup also includes Willie Nelson & Family, The Avett Brothers, Toots & the Maytals, Michael Franti & Spearhead, Joe Russo’s Almost Dead, Marco Benevento, Alison Krauss, Twiddle, Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real, Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe, Amy Helm, The Allman Betts Band, The Nude Party, Tyler Ramsey and more.

Former Band of Horses Guitarist Tyler Ramsey Shares Single from New Solo Album

 
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via Paste Magazine

Former Band of Horses co-writer and lead guitarist Tyler Ramsey has debuted “A Dream of Home,” the lead single from his forthcoming solo album For the Morning, due out April 5 from Fantasy Records.

Ramsey drew inspiration from the wilderness that surrounds his North Carolina home to create the mood for his folksy new album and, lyrically, to carry its messages of perseverance and remaining grounded during times of uncertainty.

Ramsey said in a statement accompanying For the Morning’s announcement:

This album came about in the midst of a lot of change. The birth of my daughter, a move to the country, and the steady realization that I needed to switch the road I was on in my life as a musician and songwriter. I tried to express and balance images of life as a constantly traveling and touring musician with the more connected life I live at home and the time I spend hiking in the mountains where I live.

Listen to the hopeful “A Dream of Home” below, along with Ramsey’s 2008 Daytrotter Session, and keep scrolling for dates from his upcoming tour itinerary, including select dates with Strand of Oaks and Carl Broemel of My Morning Jacket.

 
 

Tour Dates

February
19 – Lexington, Ky. @ The Burl*
20 – Bloomington, Ind. @ The Bishop*
21 – Davenport, Iowa @ Raccoon Motel*
22 – Evanston, Ill. @ Space in*
24 – Lansing, Mish. @ Mac’s Bar*
25 – Columbus, Ohio @ Rumba Cafe*
26 – Cincinnati, Ohio @ Ludlow Garage*

March
10 – Memphis, Tenn. @ Hi Tone Café
12 – Austin, Texas @ SXSW
12- Austin, Texas @ SXSW
14 – Luck, Texas @ Luck Reunion
15 – Austin, Texas @ SXSW
16 – Dripping Springs, Texas @ From The Hills With Love
19 – New Orleans, La. @ Gasa Gasa
20 – Mobile, Ala. @ Soul Kitchen
21 – Athens, Ga. @ Hendershots Coffee
22 – Columbia, S.C. @ New Brookland Tavern
23 – Charleston, S.C. @ WOOFstock

April
10 – Wilkes-Barre, Pa. @ FM Kirby Center^
11 – Washington, D.C. @ U Street Music Hall^
12 – Durham, N.C. @ Motorco Music Hall^
13 – Atlanta, Ga. @ The Earl^
14 – Birmingham, Ala. @ Saturn^
18 – Nashville, Tenn. @ The Basement
20 – Indianapolis, Ind. @ Lo Fi Lounge
24 – Pittsburgh, Pa. @ Club Café
26 – Northampton, Mass. @ Iron Horse
27 – Burlington, Vt. @ Higher Ground Showcase Room
28 – Exeter, N.H. @ The Word Barn
29 – Boston, Mass. @ Great Scott

May
01 – New York, N.Y. @ Mercury Lounge
02 – Philadelphia, Pa. @ World Café Live
03 – Charlottesville, Va. @ The Southern
04 – Charlotte, N.C. @ The Evening Muse
11 – Asheville, N.C. @ Masonic Temple
20 – London, U.K. @ St. Pancras Old Church
22 – Paris, France @ 1999
23 – Brussels, Belgium @ AB Salon
25 – Amsterdam, Netherlands @ Q Factory
26 – Berlin, Germany @ Silent Green

June
13-16 – Bethel, N.Y. @ Mountain Jam

(* – with Carl Broemel)
(^ – with Strand of Oaks)

Tyler Ramsey Announces New Album, For The Morning

Out April 5th on Fantasy Records

 
 

On Tour Starting February 19th, Tickets Available HERE

Pre-Order For The Morning

Today, Tyler Ramsey, the former Band of Horses co-writer and lead guitarist, announces the release of his exquisite new album, For The Morning, out April 5th, 2019 on Fantasy Records. Inspired by the lush, deep green and stunning landscape of his home in the mountains outside of Asheville, NC, Ramsey threads rock, country and folk into a rich, new branch of American roots music all his own. Listen to the absorbing, wistful lead track, “A Dream of Home” HERE and pre-order For The Morning HERE

"This album came about in the midst of a lot of change,” explains Ramsey. “The birth of my daughter, a move to the country, and the steady realization that I needed to switch the road I was on in my life as a musician and songwriter. I tried to express and balance images of life as a constantly traveling and touring musician with the more connected life I live at home and the time I spend hiking in the mountains where I live."

For the Morning, written and produced by Ramsey, connects the listener to this setting with dexterous guitar fingerpicking and radiant acoustic piano; affecting pedal steel and gorgeous languid vocals. Ramsey, along with engineer Kevin Ratterman (My Morning Jacket, Ray LaMontagne, Joan Shelley, Strand of Oaks) and Seth Kauffman of Floating Action (and touring musician for Jim James, Ray LaMontagne) recorded a clutch of Ramsey demos at La La Land studios in Louisville, KY. For The Morning is complemented by spots from several guest musicians, including Joan Shelley, Thad Cockrell, and Molly Parden who sing harmony on various tracks, the pedal steel player Russ Paul, Nathan Salsburg and Gareth Liddiard from The Drones on guitar.

 
 

“A Dream of Home,” one of the album’s many standouts, was written on a day off during a Horses tour. Ramsey holed himself up in a hotel room outside of Nashville and began writing about that familiar tug of greener grass, wondering if every musician’s dream of touring the world to play for huge audiences was actually all it was cracked up to be. The absorbing centerpiece “Breaking A Heart” glows with sublime piano chords and beautiful guitar playing while Ramsey’s pristine vocals are left hanging in the air like mist. Elsewhere “Evening Country” is an updated, country music version of the song “Evening Kitchen” he wrote for the Band of Horses’ Grammy-nominated album Infinite Arms that swings with delicate harmonies and pedal steel.

Ramsey will spend much of 2019 on the road with dates across North America, the UK and Europe. The initial tour begins February 19th in Lexington, KY with indie rock musician Carl Broemel (My Morning Jacket) followed by multiple showcases at this year’s SXSW Festival in Austin, TX, appearances at Willie Nelson’s Luck Reunion, Mountain Jam and solo dates with Strand of Oaks.  


Tyler Ramsey On Tour:
2.19 @ The Burl in Lexington, KY*
2.20 @ The Bishop in Bloomington, IN*
2.21 @ Raccoon Motel in Davenport, IA*
2.22 @ Space in Evanston, IL*
2.24 @ Mac's Bar in Lansing, MI*
2.25 @ Rumba Cafe in Columbus, OH*
2.26 @ Ludlow Garage in Cincinnati, OH*
3.10 @ Hi Tone Café in Memphis, TN
3.12 @ SXSW in Austin, TX
3.13 @ SXSW in Austin, TX
3.14 @ Luck Reunion in Luck, TX
3.15 @ SXSW in Austin, TX
3.16 @ From The Hills With Love in Dripping Springs, TX   
3.19 @ Gasa Gasa in New Orleans, LA
3.20 @ Soul Kitchen in Mobile, AL
3.21 @ Hendershots Coffee in Athens, GA
3.22 @ New Brookland Tavern in Columbia, SC
3.23 @ WOOFstock in Charleston, SC
4.10 @ FM Kirby Center in Wilkes-Barre, PA^
4.11 @ U Street Music Hall in Washington, DC^ 
4.12 @ Motorco Music Hall in Durham, NC^
4.13 @ The Earl in Atlanta, GA^
4.14 @ Saturn in Birmingham, AL^
4.18 @ The Basement in Nashville, TN
4.20 @ Lo Fi Lounge in Indianapolis, IN
4.24 @ Club Café in Pittsburgh, PA
4.26 @ Iron Horse in Northampton, MA
4.27 @ Higher Ground Showcase Room in Burlington, VT
4.28 @ The Word Barn in Exeter, NH
4.29 @ Great Scott in Boston, MA
5.1 @ Mercury Lounge in New York, NY
5.2 @ World Café Live in Philadelphia, PA
5.3 @ The Southern in Charlottesville, VA
5.4 @ The Evening Muse in Charlotte, NC
5.11 @ Masonic Temple in Asheville, NC
5.20 @ St. Pancras Old Church in London, UK
5.22 @ 1999 in Paris, FR
5.23 @ AB Salon in Brussels, BE
5.25 @ Q Factory in Amsterdam, NL
5.26 @ Silent Green in Berlin, DE
6.13-15 @ Mountain Jam in Bethel, NY

*with Carl Broemel
^ with Strand of Oaks

Tyler Ramsey Announces Solo Europe Dates

 
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Tyler Ramsey has announced a short run of intimate shows across the United Kingdom and Europe this May. The stripped down performances will take place in some special, beautiful venues across London, Paris, Brussels, Amsterdam and Berlin. Tickets go on sale this Friday 1 February.

May 20 @ St. Pancras Old Church in London, UK | Tickets
May 22 @ 1999 in Paris, FR | Tickets
May 23 @ Ancienne Belgique Salon in Brussels, BE | Free
May 25 @ Q-Factory in Amsterdam, NL | Tickets
May 26 @ Silent Green in Berlin, DE | Tickets

Lowcountry Dog Magazine to debut WOOFSTOCK at Brittlebank

 
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via Charleston City Paper

We love a good dog pun, and Lowcountry Dog Magazine did not disappoint with the announcement of its inaugural WOOFSTOCK music festival, coming to Brittlebank Park on Sat. March 23. Partnering with Charleston Parks Conservancy and The Bridge at 105.5, the fest will bring seven bands, food trucks, local vendors, and six local rescue groups together to raise money for furry friends in need.

“I have been hosting dog events for several years and have always included live music,” says Brian Foster, the owner of Lowcountry Dog Magazine. "Music and dogs are my biggest passions. The idea to do a dog-friendly music festival came to me last year, and with 2019 being the 50th anniversary of the original Woodstock Festival, WOOFSTOCK: A Lowcountry Dog Music Festival was born.”

The lineup for WOOFSTOCK: A Lowcountry Dog Music Festival includes Tyler Ramsey (formerly of Band of Horses), Tyler Boone, Gaslight Street, Greg West, Hans Wenzel & the 86ers, Finnegan Bell, and Sunflowers & Sin. Festival funds will benefit the Charleston Parks Conservancy, Valiant: Animal Rescue & Relief, Pet Helpers, Eunoia Rescue, Bullies 2 the Rescue, Water’s Edge Great Dane Rescue, and Greyhound Pets of America.

What we’re really wondering is: can we bring our dogs? Yes, leashed pups are welcome. In fact, the festival will feature dog agility demos, dog training demos, and other activities for pups, kids, and adults.

Gates open at 11 a.m.

Early bird tickets are $18 — once sold out, the price goes up to $26. Kids under 12 are free. Reserve your ticket at lowcountrydog.com/woofstock.

Tyler Ramsey To Join Strand of Oaks This Spring

 
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Tyler Ramsey will join Strand of Oaks on the road this April for five shows up and down the East Coast. Tyler will be opening these shows with a special solo set. Tickets for all dates are on sale now.

April 10 @ FM Kirby Center in Wilkes-Barre, PA | TICKETS
April 11 @ U Street Music Hall in Washington, DC | TICKETS
April 12 @ Motorco in Durham, NC | TICKETS
April 13 @ The Earl in Atlanta, GA | TICKETS
April 14 @ Saturn in Birmingham, AL | TICKETS

Winter 2019 Duo Tour with Carl Broemel

 
 

Tyler Ramsey will join Carl Broemel (My Morning Jacket) for the Winter 2019 Duo Tour - a run of intimate shows that will see the two guitarists together onstage accompanying each other on a mix of both their own material, as well as some special covers. Tickets for the tour are on sale now. Hope to see you at a show!

February 19 @ The Burl in Lexington, KY | Tickets*
February 20 @ The Bishop in Bloomington, IN | Tickets*
February 21 @ Raccoon Motel in Davenport, IA | Tickets*
February 22 @ Space in Evanston, IL | Tickets*
February 24 @ Mac’s Bar in Lansing, MI | Tickets*
February 25 @ Rumba Cafe in Columbus, OH | Tickets*
February 26 @ Ludlow Garage in Cincinnati, OH | Tickets*

Oxford American’s 2018 North Carolina Music Issue Celebration

 
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The Oxford American magazine’s celebration of its twentieth annual Southern Music issue, this year featuring North Carolina, will be held Monday, November 26 – Saturday, December 1, 2018. This weeklong celebration, co-presented by Hillsborough, North Carolina-based Yep Roc Records, and designed in partnership with North Carolina-native singer-songwriter Tift Merritt, will be comprised of music events featuring a Statewide Singing Circle and literary readings highlighting stories from the issue.

These events are made possible with the support of co-presenting sponsors North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources + North Carolina Arts Council and North Carolina Humanities Council. Additional major partners include Visit North Carolina, ArtsGreensboro, Bob Nocek Presents, Maxx Music, Isis Music Hall, Pinhook, Letters Bookshop, Free Range Brewing, and Malaprop’s Bookstore & Café.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2018 - STATEWIDE SINGING CIRCLE
Isis Music Hall - Asheville, North Carolina, 8:30pm

Presented in partnership with Isis Music Hall, join us for a Statewide Singing Circle featuring Tift Merritt, poet Nickole Brown, Pat Mother Blues Cohen, Mike Guggino, Amanda Anne Platt, Jimmy Landry, Michael Libramento, Tyler Ramsey, Graham Sharp, Shannon Whitworth, Woody Platt, and other surprise guests.