Archive for the 'Bands' Category
2006’s most played artist at CHR radio (R&R), Sanctus Real readies its first album in nearly two years, We Need Each Other, releasing on Sparrow Records Feb. 12. Playing new songs from the album, as well as fan favorites spanning it’s four acclaimed national studio releases, Sanctus Real launches a 35-city major market tour with Third Day in February. Modern Rock Album of the Year Dove Award winner Sanctus Real, popularly known for its captivating live performances, also headlines a 16-day tour that begins in January and leads up to the release of the new album.
Working with the band to help manage its ever-growing schedule is Red Light Management (www.redlightmanagement.com), which also manages Third Day and such acclaimed artists as Dave Matthews Band, Alanis Morissette, Switchfoot and Underoath.
“Red Light Management insists on working with and developing the best of the best – Sanctus Real is a prime example of that,” says Red Light Management’s Shawn McSpadden. “My team and I have been thrilled to walk with them through the recording of this new record and expect this next season with them to be their most successful to-date. With our roster broadening into the Contemporary Christian genre over the past several years, we feel Sanctus Real are the poster band for why this genre continues to be one of the most successful in the changing climate of the music industry.”
We Need Each Other follows Sanctus Real’s most successful album to date, The Face of Love, which gathered numerous accolades and continued a string of radio hits, including the No. 1 songs, “I’m Not Alright” and “Don’t Give Up.” While The Face of Love was inspired by real-life heartache and rediscovered joy, the band’s fourth studio release, We Need Each Other, marks a completion of that healing process and is a call for unity.
“There’s a longing for something bigger than oneself, a band, a song or a crowd of concertgoers,” says Sanctus Real frontman Matt Hammitt. “We need to come together as the body of Christ, unifying to see God’s work done through us. There’s so much simple truth in the statement, ‘we need each other.’ We can accomplish so much more if we stand together as one.”
With five No. 1 songs at radio, that “simple truth” is resonating with radio listeners as the first single and title track from We Need Each Other has already become Sanctus Real’s 12th Top 5 hit, and is No. 2 and climbing on the R&R Christian CHR chart. “We Need Each Other” is also the band’s mantra that permeates the new album.
In that spirit, Sanctus Real, for the first time, invited musicians outside of the band to make special appearances on the new album. With The Face of Love producer, Chris Stevens (tobyMac, Shawn McDonald), back at the production helm, Hammitt is joined by vocalist Katie Herzig on the nostalgic “Half Our Lives,” showing the range and reflection of a band that is maturing as songwriters. EMI CMG Label Group President Peter York reveals his hidden talents with the screaming bluesy lead guitar licks on the album’s opening track, “Turn On The Lights.”
“Peter ‘tore it up’ in the studio and it turned out great!” exclaims Sanctus Real guitarist Chris Rohman. “It’s a highlight on the album.” “We had never heard him play, but had heard that he is this amazing guitar player. And he is!” echoes Sanctus Real’s newest band member, guitarist Pete Prevost.
Since Toledo, OH-based Sanctus Real broke on the national scene in 2002, the band has also looked for opportunities to partner with charitable organizations. They have supported Food for the
Pictured (l-r) at a recording studio in Franklin, TN are: Peter York, EMI CMG Label Group president; Chris Rohman, Sanctus Real; Chris Stevens, producer; Pete Prevost, Sanctus Real; Mike Snider, Third Coast Artist Agency; Matt Hammitt and Dan Gartley, Sanctus Real; Shawn McsSpadden, Red Light Management; Chris York, EMI CMG A&R; and Kat Davis, Red Light Management.
Hungry and Compassion International on tours, and have most recently joined forces with African Leadership after realizing the incredible need in Africa.
For all the latest Sanctus Real news, including tour updates, go to www.sanctusreal.com, www.myspace.com/sanctusreal, and www.emicmg.com.
I first heard the song Apologize from OneRepublic on the " Todays Show " they are a n American band from Colorado that have gained a lot of attention through their first song that they have put out called " Apologize " and when you listen to it, you can see why its become so popular so quickly. It is catchy and has a real deep feel to the song. Musically its simple yet arent all the best songs like that?
Its amazing to see how the power of the internet and its ability for news to spread fast, especially through myspace and facebook.
Their song has been remixed and released not only on their new album which is called " Dreaming Out Loud " which you can pick up for $13 on amazon but they are featured on Timberland ( not justin timberlake ) but Timothy Mosley who performs a lot with Justin.
There are currently 2 different videos out online with this song there is the latest one by the band and the timberland in the studio that is their official one, then their is another one that I came across im not sure if its made by the band but if its not its pretty darn good quality video.. You can watch both below.
Web Sites.
The Official OneRepublic website
The PureVolume OneRepublic
The One Republic Myspace
While I like the song.. Remember its never to late to apologize lol.. but hey it makes a great song.
Apologize Video
Here is the Timberland Apologize Feat One Republic - Official Video
Apologize Lyrics
I’m holding on your rope,
Got me ten feet off the ground
I’m hearin what you say but I just can’t make a sound
You tell me that you need me
Then you go and cut me down, but wait
You tell me that you’re sorry
Didn’t think I’d turn around, and say…
It’s too late to apologize, it’s too late
I said it’s too late to apologize, it’s too late
I’d take another chance, take a fall
Take a shot for you
And I need you like a heart needs a beat
But it’s nothin new
I loved you with a fire red-
Now it’s turning blue, and you say…
"Sorry" like the angel heaven let me think was you
But I’m afraid…
It’s too late to apologize, it’s too late
I said it’s too late to apologize, it’s too late
Bridge (guitar/piano)
It’s too late to apologize, it’s too late
I said it’s too late to apologize, it’s too late
It’s too late to apologize, yeah
I said it’s too late to apologize, yeah-
I’m holdin on your rope, got me ten feet off the ground…
Jonezetta is a four piece band that have one album out currently I heard them on the radio singing their song " Communicate " thought they were pretty good, they are similar to the killers, have a rock, funk, groove going on.
Biography
Remember when music was fun but clever? When you didn’t have to dumb it down to dance to it? Much like neo-new wave giants The Killers, Franz Ferdinand and The Faint, Jonezetta is here to rejuvenate a pop landscape that has forgotten you can have fun and brains, too. And all without taking yourself too seriously.
When Jonezetta frontman Robert Chisolm shouts out, “Wake Up!” during “Burn It Down,” it’s an exhortation as much to the musical masses as the audience in front of him. Isolation breeds artistry, and like The Smiths or The Cure, the Jonezetta story begins with creative people bursting through the seams of an otherwise stuffy environment.
Video
Clinton, Mississippi is a very tiny town. If you’re a young boy, you either play sports, go hunting, or both. “We come from small families within a sheltered town and our parents made it obvious that we were to go to school for twelve years and then to go for four more years,” Chisolm deadpans. “The idea of not going to college and trying to pursue music was never a reasonable one in our heads.”
Jonezetta began as a lark. Even their name was birthed off the cuff. It was designed to combine two words that don’t go together but sound cool (like Radiohead, Coldplay, or Starsailor) but as Chisolm admits, “all of the good words were taken.” It wasn’t until they took a long hard listen at the demos they were creating purely for their own amusement that Jonezetta realized how incredibly special their band could be. “When we met [co-manager] Ryan Rado and the guys in the band As Cities Burn, they really gave us hope that pursuing music simply because its something we love is not a bad thing,” says Chisolm, who credits the pair with bringing Jonezetta to Tooth & Nail’s attention.
Cue a bidding war that involved several major labels and one of the biggest deals for a new artist in The Nail’s history. Jonezetta has quickly amassed a slew of believers in the music industry and across the rock and pop underground. And the mainstream is next.
Like the rich blues embedded in the soil around them, Jonezetta’s Tooth & Nail debut is full of mood and atmosphere, with hooks that slice through the fog the way song titles like “Hot Machete” would suggest. And from here, with a coveted slot on the 2006 Tooth & Nail tour ahead of them, Jonezetta’s goals remain as modest as ever. “We want to be the first band to sell a billion records,” laughs Chisolm. “We want to play every continent in the world. And then, we want to meet Prince.”
“People take themselves too seriously. Music today has become such a downer,” he adds thoughtfully. “We encourage kids to enjoy themselves.”
