Sep 08 2008

New Joshua Radin!

Published by Lo at 12:07 pm under Breaking News, Free Stuff, New Music, Tours

I don’t know about you guys, but I loooooves me some Josh Radin.  And his long-awaited sophomore album is out tomorrow (digitally at least - bleh, I’d wait for the real thing if I were you)!  I’ve head the album in full, and I promise and assure you, it’s every bit as good as (and, IMHO, better than!) anything JR’s done in the past. Check out all the info below and download the mp3.

Digital Release 9.9.08

In Stores 9.30.08

First Single “I’d Rather Be With You”

http://redmusic.com/streams/radin_irbwy.mp3

Track Listing

1)  One of Those Days

2)  I’d Rather Be With You

3)  Sky featuring Meiko

4)  Friend Like You

5)  Brand New Day

6)  They Bring Me To You

7)  Vegetable Car

8)  Free Of Me

9)  You Got Growin Up To Do

10)  We Are Okay

11)  No Envy No Fear

www.myspace.com/joshuaradin

On tour this October, supporting Missy Higgins!

Fri/Oct-3 Rochester NY • The Club @ Water Street Music Hall
Sun/ Oct -5 Pittsburgh PA • Diesel
Tue/ Oct -7 Columbus OH • The Basement
Sun/ Oct -12 Ann Arbor MI • Blind Pig
Mon/ Oct -13 Champaign IL • Canopy Club
Tue/ Oct -14 Omaha NE • The Waiting Room
Sun/ Oct -19 Columbia MO
The Blue Note
Mon/ Oct -20 Tulsa OK
Cain’s Side Room
Mon/ Oct -27 Boulder CO
Fox Theatre
Tue/ Oct -28 Denver CO
Bluebird Theater
Wed/ Oct -29 Salt Lake City UT
Club Sound
Thu/ Oct -30 Pocatello ID
Icon
Sat/Nov-1 Vancouver BC
Commodore Ballroom
Sun/ Nov -2 Victoria BC
Element Nightclub
Mon/ Nov -3 Portland OR
Crystal Ballroom
Tue/ Nov -4 Eugene OR
WOW Hall
Wed/ Nov -5 Seattle WA
Neumo’s
Fri/ Nov -7  Chico CA
El Rey
Sat/ Nov -8  Reno NV
Grand Sierra Theatre
Sun/ Nov -9  Anaheim CA
House of Blues
Mon/ Nov -10 Solana Beach CA
Belly Up Ttavern
Wed/ Nov -12 Santa Barbara CA
Soho

Joshua Radin Releases Sophomore Album on Mom & Pop Music

The times in which we live are confusing, chaotic and complex, but the things that have always been important in life are still important, and those are the subjects Joshua Radin addresses on his second album, Simple Times. These songs, he says, are about “falling in and out of love. Making friendships, having friendships fall apart. Experiencing different parts of the world, seeing other cultures and getting a better perspective on how we live in our country. Everything that people generally go through.”

The means he employs to deliver those ideas to the world is also pretty simple: He picks up a guitar and sings his heart out.

“It’s a personal account of my life through music,” says Cleveland-born Radin. “They’re all true and honest songs. When I meet people after shows, sometimes they think they know me because of a certain song—and in a sense they do, because I write about what’s going on in my life. It is scary making yourself vulnerable like that to a bunch of people you don’t know, but it’s also very therapeutic.”

“I was always trying to find some medium to express myself,” says Radin, who had previously studied art and spent six years writing screenplays. “When I started writing songs, I thought, ‘This is as honest as I can be: getting onstage with my guitar and my voice and singing for people.’”

Radin proved an extraordinarily quick study. A friend gave a demo featuring his very first composition, “Winter,” to a TV producer—who promptly used it to score a scene of the sitcom Scrubs in early 2004. Other Hollywood types found his music just as evocative, and soon various Radin songs were being heard in other TV shows (Grey’s Anatomy, Brothers and Sisters, American Idol, One Tree Hill, So You Think You Can Dance, Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip, Eli Stone), as well as movies (The Nanny Diaries, The Last Kiss, Catch and Release) and ads.

Having captured the public’s attention, Radin set about keeping it with the release of his debut album in 2006. We Were Here drew critical acclaim and passionate listener response, establishing him as an artist in the tradition of greats like Nick Drake and Elliott Smith—confessional folk-pop craftsmen who could say more with a whisper than most can with a scream.

Still, We Were Here presented the first batch of songs Radin ever wrote. Simple Times is drawn from a much deeper well. “These last two years I spent writing and writing and writing,” he says. “I did feel this pressure on myself to top the first record.”

To help him do that, Radin enlisted highly regarded producer Rob Schnapf (Elliott Smith, Beck). “I still wanted to keep an intimate sound, but I also knew I had to grow as an artist,” Radin says. “So I opened myself up to Rob’s production, and he had a lot of great ideas. We both had a really clear vision of what we wanted.”

Radin spent seven weeks at L.A.’s legendary Sunset Sound studio working with a cast of musicians including Patty Griffin, who dropped in to sing the exquisite harmony on “You Got Growin’ Up to Do.”

The completed Simple Times offers the next step in the evolution of an artist whose talent is flourishing, whose skills have grown and whose vision is broader than ever before.

“I feel like right about now I’m starting to hit my stride, which is cool,” he says. “With this record I feel like I can come out and say, ‘OK, I’m a fully formed artist now.’ I just hope that other people like it as much as I like it.”

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