Valerie June

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Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Workin' Woman Blues 00:00 Tools
Wanna Be On Your Mind 00:00 Tools
Somebody To Love 00:00 Tools
ASTRAL PLANE 00:00 Tools
The Hour 00:00 Tools
SHAKEDOWN 03:11 Tools
Twined & Twisted 00:00 Tools
You Can't Be Told 00:00 Tools
With You - A Sweet Little Love Song Demo 00:00 Tools
Tennessee Time 00:00 Tools
Trials, Troubles, Tribulations 00:00 Tools
Shotgun 03:11 Tools
You Can’t Be Told 00:00 Tools
LONG LONELY ROAD 00:00 Tools
On My Way 00:00 Tools
TWO HEARTS 00:00 Tools
WITH YOU 00:00 Tools
The Front Door 00:00 Tools
Pushin’ Against a Stone 00:00 Tools
LOVE YOU ONCE MADE 00:00 Tools
Got Soul 00:00 Tools
If And 00:00 Tools
Man Done Wrong 00:00 Tools
SLIP SLIDE ON BY 00:00 Tools
JUST IN TIME 00:00 Tools
On My Way / Somebody To Love (Acoustic Version) 00:00 Tools
Little Wing 02:56 Tools
Somebody To Love - Acoustic Version 00:00 Tools
Rain Dance 00:00 Tools
Cosmic dancer 00:00 Tools
Hey 00:00 Tools
Love Told A Lie 00:00 Tools
Mad About the Girl 00:00 Tools
Love You Once Made - Demo 00:00 Tools
Somebody To Love (Acoustic Version) 00:00 Tools
The Drifter 00:00 Tools
Happy Or Lonesome 00:00 Tools
This World Is Not My Home 00:00 Tools
The No Draws Blues 00:00 Tools
Meanin' & Sayin' 00:00 Tools
Parting Words 00:00 Tools
Sure to Fall 00:00 Tools
Strong 00:00 Tools
Heart On A String 00:00 Tools
Phoenix 00:00 Tools
Dust of the Dirty Rambler 00:00 Tools
Workin' Woman Blues - Live From Blacks 00:00 Tools
Twas Twined & Twisted 00:00 Tools
Spinnin' 00:00 Tools
Home 00:00 Tools
The Crawdad Song 00:00 Tools
Bye & Bye 00:00 Tools
Watch It All Burn 00:00 Tools
Twined Twisted 00:00 Tools
Colors 00:00 Tools
If You Love & Let Go 00:00 Tools
call my name 00:00 Tools
Keep The Bar Open 00:00 Tools
Let It Snow 00:00 Tools
Winter Wonderland 00:00 Tools
Love Lost 00:00 Tools
Lay Low 00:00 Tools
The Story Of Peggy Lee 00:00 Tools
On My Way / Somebody To Love 00:00 Tools
Workin' Woman Blues (Live From Blacks) 00:00 Tools
Man Done Wrong - Live At KCRW 00:00 Tools
Got Soul - Live At KCRW 00:00 Tools
Two Hearts - Live At KCRW 00:00 Tools
Shakedown - Live At KCRW 00:00 Tools
Intro - Live At KCRW 00:00 Tools
banter II - Live At KCRW 00:00 Tools
banter I - Live At KCRW 00:00 Tools
Slip Slide On By - Live At KCRW 00:00 Tools
Workin Woman Blues 00:00 Tools
Astral Plane - Live At KCRW 00:00 Tools
Workin’ Woman Blues 00:00 Tools
banter IV - Live At KCRW 00:00 Tools
With You - Live At KCRW 00:00 Tools
Raindance 00:00 Tools
banter III - Live At KCRW 00:00 Tools
If And - Live At KCRW 00:00 Tools
Interview with Jason Bentley - Live At KCRW 00:00 Tools
Shake Down 00:00 Tools
I Shall Not Be Blue 00:00 Tools
On My Way/Somebody To Love (Acoustic Version) 00:00 Tools
You Cant Be Told 00:00 Tools
Love You Once Made (Demo) 00:00 Tools
Twas, Twined and Twisted 00:00 Tools
Full Performance (Live on KEXP) 00:00 Tools
Wildwood Flower 00:00 Tools
Take the Break 00:00 Tools
On My Way Back Home 00:00 Tools
Pushin Against A Stone 00:00 Tools
Somebody To Love (Acoustic) 00:00 Tools
Twined and Twisted - Folk / Singer-Songwriter Album 00:00 Tools
No Draws Blues 00:00 Tools
Meanin' Sayin' 00:00 Tools
Meanin' And Sayin' 00:00 Tools
Meanin’ & Sayin’ 00:00 Tools
Intro 00:00 Tools
You CanÿFFFFB4t Be Told 00:00 Tools
NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert 00:00 Tools
Wanna Be On Your Mind (Edit) 00:00 Tools
It Wasn’t God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels 00:00 Tools
Tennesse Time 00:00 Tools
Pushing Against A Stone 00:00 Tools
Bye Bye 00:00 Tools
Twas Twined And Twisted 00:00 Tools
Rain Dain 00:00 Tools
Storng 00:00 Tools
The No Draw Blues 00:00 Tools
Twas Twined Twisted 00:00 Tools
If You Love Let Go 00:00 Tools
Twined & Twisted (Live) 00:00 Tools
Love You Once Mad 00:00 Tools
Raindance (Live) 00:00 Tools
Somebody To Love (Acoustic Version/Bonus Track) 00:00 Tools
banter I 00:00 Tools
Meanin’ & Sayin’ 00:00 Tools
Man Done Wrong (Live At KCRW) 00:00 Tools
banter II 00:00 Tools
You Can't Be Told (live) 00:00 Tools
Two Hearts (Live At KCRW) 00:00 Tools
If And (Live At KCRW) 00:00 Tools
It Wasn’t God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels 00:00 Tools
Working Woman Blues 00:00 Tools
Slip Slide On By (Live At KCRW) 00:00 Tools
banter IV 00:00 Tools
Shakedown (Live At KCRW) 00:00 Tools
Pushin' Against a Stone (Live) 00:00 Tools
banter II (Live At KCRW) 00:00 Tools
Workin' Woman Blues (AB Session) 00:00 Tools
Tennessee Time (Live) 00:00 Tools
Astral Plane (Live At KCRW) 00:00 Tools
Got Soul (Live At KCRW) 00:00 Tools
If You Love And Let Go 00:00 Tools
Happy or Lonesome (Carter Family cover) 00:00 Tools
Banter I (Live At KCRW) 00:00 Tools
Trials Troubles Tribulations 00:00 Tools
You Can´t Be Told 00:00 Tools
banter IV (Live At KCRW) 00:00 Tools
wanna be on your mind - edit 00:00 Tools
Somebody Tto Love 00:00 Tools
With You (Live At KCRW) 00:00 Tools
banter III 00:00 Tools
Interview with Jason Bentley (Live At KCRW) 00:00 Tools
On My Way / Somebody to Love [acoustic version] 00:00 Tools
You Can T Be Told 00:00 Tools
The Order Of Time 00:00 Tools
What's in My Bag? 00:00 Tools
Pushin’ Against a Stone 00:00 Tools
On My Way/Somebody to Love [Acoustic Version] 00:00 Tools
Banter III (Live at KCRW) 00:00 Tools
Astral Plane & Man Done Wrong | A Take Away Show 00:00 Tools
Interview with Jason Bentley 00:00 Tools
Pushin Against A Stone (Radio Edit) 00:00 Tools
You Can’t Be Told 00:00 Tools
Workin Woman Blues (live From Blacks) 00:00 Tools
Intro (Live At KCRW) 00:00 Tools
Shotgun ('Pushin' Against A Stone', 2013) 00:00 Tools
Bring It On Home To Me 00:00 Tools
Shakedown (IJsbreker) 00:00 Tools
Raindance (Live on KEXP @Pickathon) 00:00 Tools
Rollin' and Tumblin' 00:00 Tools
Shackle Bound 00:00 Tools
Sure To Fall (In Love With You) 00:00 Tools
"Twined and Twisted" - Folk / Singer-Songwriter Album 00:00 Tools
Workin'Woman Blues 00:00 Tools
Workin’ Woman Blues 00:00 Tools
Pushin' Against a Stone - Radio Edit 00:00 Tools
Pushinâ Against A Stone 00:00 Tools
Valerie June 00:00 Tools
Raindance (Live on KEXP) 00:00 Tools
It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels 00:00 Tools
You Can't Be Told (Official Music Video) 00:00 Tools
Ardent Presents 00:00 Tools
Give Me Water 00:00 Tools
Pushin' against a stone (Radio edit) 00:00 Tools
Twined & Twisted (Live on KEXP) 00:00 Tools
Somebody To Love (Live on KEXP) 00:00 Tools
Tennessee Time (6 Music Session, 17 May 2013) 00:00 Tools
Twined And Twisted (6 Music Session, 17 May 2013) 00:00 Tools
Pushin' Against a Stone Teaser 00:00 Tools
You Can't Be Told 00:00 Tools
Pushin‚ Against A Stone 00:00 Tools
Workin' Woman Blues EP - Workin' Woman Blues 00:00 Tools
You Can't Be Told (Acoustic) (Live on 89.3 The Current) 00:00 Tools
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Valerie June (born Valerie June Hockett in 1982) is an American singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist from Memphis, Tennessee. She began recording and performing in 2001, initially with her then-husband in the duo Bella Sun. In her solo work her sound encompasses a mixture of folk, blues, gospel, soul, country, Appalachian and bluegrass. If June had been a roots artist in America 80 years ago, and she often sings as if she was, she might have been a principle influence on today's myriad retro troubadours, hers a stunningly emotive amalgamation of blues, folk, gospel, soul, Appalachian and bluegrass (including irresistible banjo). She exists, however, today, an artist as modern as an iPod Shuffle, a musician for the generation which carries the entire history of recorded music so casually inside its phone. Like a potent distillation bubbling on a Prohibition-era porch, Valerie June makes self-styled “organic moonshine roots music”, music for the porch parties of today, a party where she strums her guitar, plucks her banjo, opens her mouth and delta-blues-country stridently sashays out, a stunning peal somewhere between Dolly Parton and Billie Holiday. Or is it more Wanda Jackson and Shirley Goodman, you know, from Shirley & Co, who sang Shame Shame Shame so disco friskily in 1974? Valerie June does this to you: reaches inside your musical brain and shakes it, unleashing ghosts, emotions and memories, all fluttering like countless musical flakes inside the snowglobe of your mind. A self-taught musician, singer and song-writer from small-town Humboldt, Tennessee (population 8,000), she honed her astonishing sound in the vibrant Memphis atmosphere, her spectrum of influences the history of music itself: Elizabeth Cotten, Leadbelly, The Carter Family, Whitney Houston, Van Morrison, Dolly Parton, Roscoe Holcomb, Woody Guthrie, Nico, Junior Kimbrough, Nina Simone, Bob Dylan, The Beatles, Nick Drake, Leonard Cohen, Joni Mitchell, Tracey Chapman, Billie Holiday, The Rolling Stones, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Mississippi John Hurt, Gillian Welch, Townes Van Zandt, Elmore James, Skip James, Blind Willie McTell, Memphis Minnie... “Being from Jackson and Humboldt, Tennessee, I was raised one hour from Memphis and two hours from Nashville,” lilts Valerie June, in her sing-song, southern belle way. “It was and still is hard to go anywhere without hearing country and blues music. It always reminds me of home. It's the place in art where the colour lines of the South seem to blend.”Her debut album, though, is that most rare of contemporary concepts: unique. Pushin' Against A Stone, released on Rob da Bank's stellar boutique label Sunday Best, was mostly recorded at The Black Key's Easy Eye studio in Nashville. Produced by Dan Auerbach (The Black Keys) and Kevin Augunas (Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros, Florence & The Machine) it's a sonic postcard from the universe, where the atoms of history live. “I just love old records,” she smiles, a beautiful woman with old-school dreadlocks spiraling out towards freedom. “I like the crackle, the gritty sound. So do a lotta other people! I think we just wanna hear real music. Alongside the modern beat-machine music. For a while it was only moving in a new direction and people started missing the old stuff. I think it's something people long for.” The debut single, Workin’ Woman Blues, is a riot, a brand new bona-fide blues-pop anthem, as if Bobbie Gentry fronted a Stax soul-revue, those mesmerising vocals telling it how it is: “I ain't fit to be no mother, I ain't fit to be no wife, yeah, I been workin' like a man, y'all, I've been working all my life.” Elsewhere, there's the delicate yet rousing triumph of Somebody To Love (featuring the iconic Booker T. Jones), the traditional folk-gospel charm of Trials, Troubles, Tribulations, the spectral, swampy wooziness of Pushin' Against A Stone (The Specials meets Phil Spector) and the dizzy, harmonised, Shangri-La sashay of Wanna Be On Your Mind, Valerie June's voice sounding, somehow, both as old and wise as mother nature and as playfully naïve as a schoolgirl skipping home. Staggeringly, she'd never worked with a producer before, the experience opening her up to infinite new atmospheric possibilities. “It was different,” she says. “ I'd been holding on to a particular image of what I wanted to be as a folk musician, a country musician, a southern roots musician. But when I heard the producers' ideas I thought, 'think bigger'. I looked at the careers of Joni Mitchell, Van Morrison, Joan Baez and they’ve put out all kinds of music over the course of their careers so far. If I wanna put out a punk rock record next week, that's me. It's all coming from me. Even if I have to continue juggling jobs, I am a career artist.” We don't hear so much, these days, from the old-school working class girls, the ones who can't afford the freedom to pursue their most daring dreams. Valerie June, the eldest girl of five kids (who'd often pretend to be the Jackson Five), first learned to sing in church, both a black church and later, a white church, when her family moved to the country. People sang in church, “even when they couldn't sing” and she'd mimic them all, “from homeless people to wealthy people until my own voice just started coming out, a mixture of everyone”. She had her first jobs as a teen, helping her dad, both a promoter for local gospel singers and in the construction business (she'd hang posters in town and then head to the demolition sites). Soon she was constantly singing, writing songs, a freedom-seeking spirit who went travelling as a wandering songbird up and down the American west coast, then the east coast, a gypsy nightingale and holistic craftswoman who'd sing for tips in subway stations and sell her own handmade soap. By the time she moved back to Memphis in 2000, she had a plethora of songs written and finally taught herself guitar and banjo, as neighbourhood eyes were raised. “Black people aren't supposed to play the banjo,” she laughs, “it's seen as country and bluegrass but it's an African instrument. I love it.” Soon, she was testing out her tentative musical skills in Memphis bars and restaurants, “which was more teaching myself in front of people,” she notes. “Memphis is a good town for being born as an artist. If you make a mistake people are like, 'we heard the good part'. They nurture you. You can take your time.” With a dream to make a studio album and no cash to fund it, “it's hard to think about making a record when you've gotta pay rent”, she went to work full-time, now tunneling her way to freedom like Andy Dufresne in the Shawshank Redemption through daily, determined graft. She took on numerous service jobs: housekeeper, dog-walker, babysitter, vegetarian meal cooker, house sitter and personal assistant to the wealthy. And that was just the morning. “In the afternoon, I'd work in a herb shop, Maggie's Pharm. Then I would go play a gig, just me and my guitar.” She began to musically emerge, playing the Memphis Music & Heritage Festival, the International Folk Alliance Conference, the Cooper-Young Festival, the King Biscuit Blues Festival in Helena, AR, finally making enough money for three lo-fi recordings which she sold as CDs on tour: the raw, acoustic The Way Of The Weeping Willow (recorded in an 1800s farmhouse), the vocally mesmerising Mountain Of Rose Quartz and the haunting Valerie June And The Tennessee Express, a collaboration with Nashville bluegrass troupe The Old Crow Medicine Show (who've toured with Mumford & Sons). “They're very successful at what they do, they loved my music and said 'hey, don't worry about money just come and record a few songs with us'.” In 2009 she was a featured artist on MTV's online series $5 Cover (following the lives of Memphis musicians attempting to make ends meet) and eventually raised $15,000 through crowd-funding website Kickstarter to record a debut album proper. Then, the universe intervened: through word-of-mouth, the manager for producer Kevin Augunas heard Valerie's music, sent it to Augunas, who loved it so much he flew into Memphis the following day. He asked who she'd like to write with and she suggested Dan Auerbach, whose solo work she'd loved (and who had recently moved to Nashville). Valerie, deliberately, had never signed to a record label before, although there had been no shortage of offers from both major and independent US-based labels, and was spotted playing in France by Sunday Best's label partner Sarah Bolshi. “I never signed a label deal because it didn't feel right,” she says. “I need to be with people who not only like this record but my stripped down stuff too. People will tell you, 'you can do whatever you wanna do with our label'. I didn't trust anybody telling me that until I met Sarah! And it's more me, a speciality label.” Pushin' Against A Stone is so-called because that's the story of her life - and the story of her forebears, too. “I feel I've spent my life pushing against a stone,” she says. “And the jobs I've had have been fitting for getting a true feel for how the traditional artists I loved came home after a hard day to sit on the porch and play tunes until bedtime. That’s one reason why they were older before anybody cared. When I first started playing instruments I thought, OK, I'm probably not gonna be the next Beyonce, this is not gonna happen for me until I'm very very old. Like...Seasick Steve! Who I love. And then maybe somebody will come see me play in my shack in Mississippi. That's kinda how it is for many artists who make roots music. So I'm just really happy it's happening now and I'm not up there with my cane.” Good things come to those who wait and Valerie June's time is now, the last year bringing rave reviews at SXSW, a collaboration with Grammy-nominated Fugees producer John Forte (on the hip-hop-blues song Give Me Water) as the word-of-mouth whisper has gradually grown into a collective global holler. This September, one of her friends sent her a Facebook message saying she'd seen a video of her glorious Bestival Performance. “And she said, 'you're gonna be a huge star',” smiles the captivating Valerie June. “A while ago I would've been like, I dunno about being a huge star. But now I'm like, you know what? If I can get a break? I will take it. I deserve it. I have paid my dues! I can't work on Maggie's Pharm no more. If you wanna bring me a coffee, yeah, I'll let you bring it. Because I have been the person bringing the coffee. I don't need any more experience in that. Now, being a queen? M'Kay! I think I can use a little spoiling. Bring it on.” Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.