It's Always You
Alley Stoetzel
Performed By
Alley Stoetzel
Album UPC
884501786591
CD Baby Track ID
9888820
Label
Lunar Notes Music
Released
2012-08-28
BPM
121
Rated
0
ISRC
ushm81283409
Year
2012
Spotify Plays
15
Writers
Writer
Alley Stoetzel
Pub Co
Soul Alley Music — Bmi
Composer
Alley Stoetzel
ClearanceFacebook Sync License,Traditional Sync,YouTube Sync ServiceOne Stop
Rights Controlled
Master and Publishing Grant
Rights
One-Stop: Master + 100% Pub Grant
Original/Cover/Public Domain
original
Country
United States - Mass. - Boston
Description
Credits:
Alley Stoetzel: Lead and background vocals; piano; Jimmy Ryan: Mandolin; mandocello; background vocals; Duke Levine: Electric and acoustic guitars; baritone guitar; dobro; lap steel; David Westner: Drums; bass; acoustic guitar; percussion
Alley Stoetzel: Lead and background vocals; piano; Jimmy Ryan: Mandolin; mandocello; background vocals; Duke Levine: Electric and acoustic guitars; baritone guitar; dobro; lap steel; David Westner: Drums; bass; acoustic guitar; percussion
Notes
Berklee-trained singer Alley Stoetzel returns to her roots with this debut EP, a heavenly slice of Americana. As she grew up in Andover, Mass., Alley was drawn to the rootsy music of artists such as Joan Baez, Bob Dylan, Johnny Cash and the Grateful Dead, but she also felt the tug of personal heroes Sam Cooke and Aretha Franklin, so she set out on a career as a popular performer of soul and blues in Boston-area clubs.
At the urging of a new manager, who had heard the high lonesome beauty of her voice beneath the soul, Alley began to re-explore the genre that better allows the nuances of her vocals to shine. It turns out to have been a magical reawakening.
The springboard to this record was one guest spot with the renowned Jimmy Ryan and Duke Levine, as Jimmy’s band Hayride, at a local club. Her performance of “Long Black Veil” that night brought down the house and so impressed the players, that they, too, paused to applaud. Less than five weeks later — with no other rehearsals besides two scratch sessions with Jimmy — the crew settled into Woolly Mammoth Sound Studios and in just two days astonishingly breezed through the six songs on this EP, most done on the first take.
The magic was felt by everyone — especially Alley. The renewal of her early musical love ignited like a brushfire in a field of tumbleweed, and the rest is — or soon will be — history. Whether she’s yodeling like Patsy Cline, channeling her inner Alison Krauss or crooning like Carlene Carter, it is delightfully clear that this full-circle return to her roots was meant to be for young Alley Stoetzel.
One the great benefits of this transformation is the platform it provides for her original songs. Much of her songwriting has been done solo with her at her piano, a departure from the high-energy brassiness of her soul and R&B performances. It remained largely a secret, known only to those friends and fans with whom she had shared homemade recordings on YouTube. The acoustic format of this new band became the perfect canvas for Alley’s originals, the first two of which are highlights of this record.
Those pearls and the diversity of her covers — from Hank Williams to Appalachian-style Rihanna — shows that Alley has a bright future on the Americana scene. Consider this the appetizer.
Enjoy!
At the urging of a new manager, who had heard the high lonesome beauty of her voice beneath the soul, Alley began to re-explore the genre that better allows the nuances of her vocals to shine. It turns out to have been a magical reawakening.
The springboard to this record was one guest spot with the renowned Jimmy Ryan and Duke Levine, as Jimmy’s band Hayride, at a local club. Her performance of “Long Black Veil” that night brought down the house and so impressed the players, that they, too, paused to applaud. Less than five weeks later — with no other rehearsals besides two scratch sessions with Jimmy — the crew settled into Woolly Mammoth Sound Studios and in just two days astonishingly breezed through the six songs on this EP, most done on the first take.
The magic was felt by everyone — especially Alley. The renewal of her early musical love ignited like a brushfire in a field of tumbleweed, and the rest is — or soon will be — history. Whether she’s yodeling like Patsy Cline, channeling her inner Alison Krauss or crooning like Carlene Carter, it is delightfully clear that this full-circle return to her roots was meant to be for young Alley Stoetzel.
One the great benefits of this transformation is the platform it provides for her original songs. Much of her songwriting has been done solo with her at her piano, a departure from the high-energy brassiness of her soul and R&B performances. It remained largely a secret, known only to those friends and fans with whom she had shared homemade recordings on YouTube. The acoustic format of this new band became the perfect canvas for Alley’s originals, the first two of which are highlights of this record.
Those pearls and the diversity of her covers — from Hank Williams to Appalachian-style Rihanna — shows that Alley has a bright future on the Americana scene. Consider this the appetizer.
Enjoy!
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