Bright Sunny South Explained

Bright Sunny South
Type:studio
Artist:Sam Amidon
Cover:Amidon-bright-sunny-south-2013.jpg
Studio:Snap Recording Studios and Livingston Studios, London
Genre:Folk, pop rock
Label:Nonesuch
Producer:Sam Amidon, Jerry Boys, Thomas Bartlett
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Bright Sunny South is an album by Sam Amidon released May 14, 2013, by Nonesuch Records[1] [2] The album was recorded at Snap Recording Studios and Livington Studios in London.[2] Amidon, his friend Thomas Bartlett (a.k.a. Doveman), and Jerry Boys produced the album. Amidon sings and performs banjo, fiddle, acoustic guitar, and piano on the album. Bartlett performs several instruments, as do Shahzad Ismaily and Chris Vatalaro; Kenny Wheeler performs trumpet on two tracks.

Bright Sunny South includes interpretations of both traditional and contemporary songs, like Tim McGraw’s “My Old Friend” and Mariah Carey’s “Shake It Off," as well as a new take on “Weeping Mary,” a shape-note hymn that his parents, Peter and Mary Alice Amidon, had recorded with the Word of Mouth Chorus for Nonesuch Records on the 1977 album Rivers of Delight: American Folk Hymns from the Sacred Harp Tradition.[2] [3] NPR's Morning Edition host Steve Inskeep describes Bright Sunny South as "a new spin on very traditional American folk music."[4]

Background and recording

Legendary jazz trumpet player Kenny Wheeler appears on two songs on the record, one of his last recorded appearances before his death in 2014.[5]

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bright Sunny South. AllMusic. August 21, 2013.
  2. Web site: Bright Sunny South. August 21, 2013. Nonesuch Records.
  3. Web site: Rivers of Delight: American Folk Hymns from the Sacred Harp Tradition. Nonesuch Records. August 21, 2013.
  4. Web site: Sam Amidon: Reshaping An American Folk Tradition. NPR. August 21, 2013 . May 17, 2013.
  5. Web site: Kenny Wheeler, contemporary jazz musician, dies aged 84. Martin. Williams. 18 September 2014. 10 July 2017. The Guardian.