Red Sky July release new single from forthcoming 2025 album‘Stones and Brambles’Released October 4th 2024 on Shadowbirds
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here: https://slinky.to/StonesAndBrambles
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October
4, 2024 - Red Sky July release the second single, ‘Stones and
Brambles’ (tagged FOLK), from their upcoming, fourth album (due for release
in February 2025). A gentle love song over a finger-picking guitar arpeggio,
‘Stones and Brambles’ is deeply personal, written by Shelly Poole in the
aftermath of guitarist – and her husband - Ally McErlaine’s brain haemorrhage.
“This
is a song originally written on a little holiday in the Highlands. Travelling
to Scotland was quite a feat and Ally couldn’t walk properly but we were
determined to try to do what we loved, including being outside and enjoying
nature. Everything, even simple things like walking over stones and brambles,
was a disaster waiting to happen but I needed to pretend we were ok for a
while. It’s a happy heartfelt lyric but it somehow feels a bit sad.” says
Shelly.
Against
the odds, and all medical predictions, Ally made a full recovery, returning to
tour with Texas and forming Red Sky July with Shelly as a ‘soul food’
side-project. Following the release of their acclaimed music, the project
spiralled and their achievements were recognised at the Scottish Music Awards
where they were presented with a prestigious Tartan Clef Award. Red Sky July
have toured extensively including sets at Glastonbury, Isle of Wight, T in the
Park and C2C: Country to Country and appeared as special guests of the
likes of Sheryl Crow, Steve Earle, 10CC, Tom Jones and Jools Holland.
Now
15 years since the band formed and eight since their last, lauded album, Red
Sky July have returned with a folkier fresh direction since the arrival of
singer Haley Glennie-Smith, known for her work on soundtracks including Stephen
Woolley’s Stoned, Todd Haynes’ I’m Not There and Alfonso Cuarón’s
Gravity and as the solo vocalist of Planet Earth in Concert.
‘Misty
Morning’, the first single from the new album, conjured a pastoral landscape
bathed in the hazy rays of a summer dawn, its textures, melody and sensual
harmonies recalling The Staves, the age-old alchemy of Stevie Nicks and the
magical mysticism of Cocteau Twins.
I
just think they’re wonderful - Baylen Leonard,
Absolute Radio Country
Just
exquisite!
- Bernie
Keith, BBC Radio Nottinghamshire
“Our
aim was to shake up the perception of what folk music means,” says Shelly. “When
recording the new album we challenged the instrumentation involved in the folk
and Americana genres and used a lot of delays and electronic drones to create a
much more cinematic sound. We also layered up some ‘found sound’ that we
recorded in Scotland, Ireland, America, Spain and everywhere else on our
travels. We made synth drones out of them, which became the bedrock of the
album, sound-wise.”
Having
first found global fame in the ‘90s with her sister in Alisha’s Attic – the
platinum-sellers toured with INXS and Bon Jovi and were mainstays of the Lilith
Fair movement promoting women in pop – Shelly went on to work with Janet
Jackson, Westlife, Mark Ronson and Massive Attack. She is one of Britan’s most
in-demand songwriters for other artists as well as film and TV soundtracks.
Red
Sky July’s first three albums were fronted by Charity Hair, whose Southern
States twang and fiddle playing gave the group a distinct country sound. When
she left pre-pandemic to return to the States, Shelly looked up her old friend
Haley and discovered that she lived just up the road.
“I
hadn’t seen her in over a decade, but I still had her number and, incredibly,
it still worked,”
laughs Shelly. “She could have been anywhere in the world, but she was
living ten minutes from us in North London. We met up the same day and she
agreed to join the band. It couldn’t have been more serendipitous.”
What
appeared to be easy took a tricky turn when the trio scrapped their first album
and then the pandemic hit. “Actually we scrapped two albums,” says Ally.
“The second written in lockdown. I think we were trying too hard. I had been
due out on Texas’ 30th anniversary tour, but twice it was cancelled.
Everything was up in the air and perhaps we felt under pressure to write.”
Third
time around, things flowed. “Once we decided to have no rules and no
boundaries, we found our new sound,” says Shelly. “Ally and I are so
used to working to strict remits on soundtracks and adverts. We had to ditch
that mentality and just go with our guts.
“What
we hit on as a trio feels so special. There are bits of all our backgrounds,
melded together, but with more electronics than we’ve used in the past. It’s
organic and different, and it sums up our past few years. It’s been a long time
coming, but worth the wait.”
Previous
acclaim for Red Sky July includes:
“A
timeless blend of vocals & intricate twang” – Q
“A
seductive, exuberant mix of voices” - Evening Standard
“Touching
lyrics and beautiful melodies” - BBC Radio 2
“Could
grace any multi-selling Nashville release” - Daily Express
“Pleasantly
slick musicianship, fine female harmonies” - The Guardian
“A
joyous blend of indie and country” - Daily Record
LIVE
DATE:
Wednesday
23 October 2024 - Green Note, London (106 Parkway NW1 7AN) **
SOLD OUT ** Event
CONNECT with Red Sky July:
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