Track Premiere: Brandywine from Amanda Fields

Amanda Fields is an up-and-coming singer/songwriter in Nashville, making a name for herself in the city’s vibrant community of young bluegrass artists. Though she is living now in Music City, we claim her back in the Blue Ridge region of Virginia as well, where Fields learned her love of the music as a girl.

Today she has released a debut single from her next album, a fast moving track called Brandywine which we are delighted to premiere at Bluegrass Today.

Amanda tells us a bit about the song, which she wrote with Sam Torode.

Brandywine is a special song to me. It tackles one of the heaviest aspects of life — which is death. Bluegrass has never shied away from the topic of death, and this is my exploration of it, sung from the perspective of the bereaved. As unwelcome as it is, there is nothing more life-affirming than death, and nothing more love-affirming than loss. Lyrically, I think that’s what Brandywine shows.

In genuine bluegrass nature, though, this sad story is set to the lively sounds of the banjo (Cory Walker), resophonic guitar (Rob Ickes), fiddle (Christian Ward), lead guitar (Jake Stargel), mandolin (Jarrod Walker), and bass (Dennis Crouch). I played rhythm guitar and sang on it.”

Brandywine is available now for download at iTunes. Radio programmers can get the single at AirPlay Direct.

Debut single from Amanda Fields

Amanda Fields has released a debut single from her upcoming EP, a lovelorn ballad she wrote with former AKUS bassist John Pennell called Sad Eyed Blue Ridge Girl.

Based now in Nashville, Amanda can lay claim to the Blue Ridge Girl moniker, as she was raised in the mountains of Virginia, and calls Wise County home. The sad eyes you’ll have to decide for yourself.

She is finishing up her EP of all original material now at Sidekick Sound Studios in Nashville, with Mark Thornton engineering. The single features her on guitar and vocals, with assistance from Dustin Benson on guitar, Tim Crouch on mandolin and fiddle, and John Pennell on bass.

 

The completed EP is expected by the middle of December, but Sad Eyed Blue Ridge Girl is available now for sale online. Radio programmers can download the track from Airplay Direct.

You can find out more about Amanda on her web site or Facebook page.

© Bluegrass Today [year]
powered by AhSo

Exit mobile version