

Wasting Time (Recorded Live at the Stax Museum of American Soul Music)Ĩ. Reminiscent of 2010’s solo album ‘In Memory of Loss’, the slide guitar and warm, gentle vocal glide around each other, demonstrating Rateliff’s innate ability to make the space left in a song just as vital as the music.Ĥ. Rateliff’s inimitable vocal roars over an irresistible, classic soul groove which is complimented with joyous brass, building into an unforgettable chorus.Īmongst the upbeat anthems, all marked with Rateliff’s winning combination of soul and classic Americana, is ‘Just To Talk To You’, a stripped back, blues gem of a track. This summer has seen the band playing festivals across the world, at which lead single ‘Out On The Weekend’ has fast become a live favourite. To add to this, their eponymous debut album has now sold 650,000 copies worldwide. The news comes shortly after Rateliff and the band shared the first single from their new five-track EP, What If I, out June 2 via Stax.Following the release of their acclaimed 2021 album The.
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A sold out show at the 9500 capacity Red Rocks Arena in their hometown of Denver, Colorado, TV appearances on Jimmy Fallon, The Late Show with Stephen Colbert., TFI Friday, Later With Jools Holland amongst others has ensured the meteoric rise of one of the most exciting live bands around. Featuring a combination of new tracks and live favourites, the 8 track collection marks the end of what has been a phenomenal 18 months for the Night Sweats. So this is a joyful celebration of the band’s influences, with its mix of soul and folk and Americana being a real blast.Global soul sensations, Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats are set to release a new EP on 21st October. Last year, Rateliff released his first solo album since forming the Night Sweats and it was also a minor hit, with Rateliff also appearing on Saturday Night Live as a musical guest, a shocking career turnaround for a guy who was pretty down on his luck, career-wise, back in 2013.
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The Colorado bands latest album is full of well-turned retro moves and reaches for a deeper meaning. The first two Nathaniel Rateliff and the Night Sweats albums (released in 20, were hits, with the debut album going Gold in the United States. Nathaniel Rateliff’s Throwbacks Wear Well on ‘The Future’. Rateliff was a solo artist doing mostly folk rock (and even before he want solo, his previous band, Born in the Flood, was ALSO a folk rock band) seeing not a whole lot of commercial success when he formed a side project in 2013 called The Night Sweets, embracing an old school R&B soulful flavor, as well, and this sort of shot in the dark project turned out to be a surprise hit. You’d have to pray forever and if you don’t believeĪnd Ratecliff hits that “seen” with the most Bob Dylan-esque inflection you can ever imagine and it is then obvious that this album is meant to be an homage to the artistic influences of Rateliff and his band. Right off the bat on this album’s title track, “The Future,” Rateliff makes it clear what kind of album this is going to be. So please, if you think there’s a good rap, r&B or straight pop album coming out in November or December or whenever, please let me know and I’ll make a point of listening to it.Īnyhow, as to the album I’m talking about today, Nathaniel Rateliff and the Night Sweats’ The Future. Are perhaps some albums NOT coming out on Fridays? Even looking at next week, some of the ones with the most buzz about them a pop rock band, a folk rocker, a sort of classic rocker and an indie rock band. I just have not been seeing them as options on the site I use to show when new albums are coming out ( Uproxx). I do, in fact, enjoy folk rock and folk pop a lot, but I’m honestly not trying to avoid doing other genres. I’ll perhaps expand into older albums, as well, but for now, I want to really show how every week there’s typically at least one good new album released.Īs an aside, this is the third week of me doing this, and so far, I’ve done one folk pop album and two folk rock albums. This might not be a weekly thing, but I’ll try to do them as often as I can.

This is “This Album Is Good,” a feature where I’ll try to spotlight a good new album every album release week (which I believe is Friday nowadays). Today we look at the new album by Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats, The Future.
