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Public Relations  ~ Artist Management

2975 Emerson Way Altadena, CA 91001

Contact:  Kim Grant Kim@KGMusicPress.com

T:  626-755-9022

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

TIM BENNETT TO RELEASE THE VIEW FROM HERE AUGUST 11, 2017

The Independent Artist’s 3rd Album to Date is Filled with

Exuberantly Hook-Filled Country Rock

Huntington Beach, CA May 2017—In January of 2014, Tim Bennett was the lead singer and main songwriter of a band called, Whistler’s Father who began recording an album called, Highly Irregular (released Aug 2015).  “I was unfamiliar with Americana as a music genre,” he explains.  “That album was what I came to think Americana was all about; country, blues, folk, bluegrass and a little bit of rock.”

 

Since then, Bennett has gone on to record two solo albums,  Inevitable Discovery (2016) and now The View From Here which will release this summer, 2017. Straddling country rock, The View From Here employs the same musicians that Bennett met while working with Whistler’s Father.  “That project took a year and a half,” said Bennett.  “What I got from that experience was a great place to record, Custom Taylored Studios in Fountain Valley, CA, and a great group of session musicians that I fondly refer to as ‘The Demolitionists’. These guys were pitched to me as today’s ‘Wrecking Crew’ and they have certainly lived up to that comparison.”

 

Recording in January and February, 2017 Bennett wanted more uptempo and mid-tempo songs for The View From Here.  As a result, the album has a few more songs that rock than his previous endeavors but never lets go of it’s country roots.  10 original songs and one Bob Dylan cover, The View From Here kicks it off with “As Long As You’re Buying”,  a straightforward country song about drowning your sorrows after losing a job you really didn’t like in the first place.  “ I decided to test my voice with this song,” admits Bennett.  “I sang it in E instead of the original key, C.  It put a little more urgency into the vocal and took it out of that wry country terrain and elevated it to a barnburner.”

 

“There Was Nothing I Could Do” is reminiscent of a classic country heartache ballad.  The song is hauntingly sparse with just Bennett on acoustic guitar and Ernie Nunez on upright bass with Matt Brislawn coming in with a mournful fiddle solo.  Bennett sings all three of the vocal parts of the song.  The rhythmic and upbeat, “Hot Town” began with Bennett banging out a chord progression on his acoustic guitar one night.  “My wife came in and asked what I was playing and I told her, ‘I don’t know yet.’ I was thinking about how folks get crazy from the heat.”   With Rick White on guitar and Hal Ratliff on keyboards, Bennett and the band tear it up on this one.

 

“A Dangerous Man” is a true rocker complete with guitar solo while “Awakened By My Breaking Heart” slows it down with Bennett again on acoustic and Nunez on bass.  Bennett a self-taught harmonica player gets to “blow a pretty good harmonica solo on this one.”  The last song on the record is the appropriately named, “The End Of The Line”.  “Trains, trains, trains,” said Bennett.  “There are lots of songs about trains in every musical genre and this one is mine.” 

 

Highly Irregular (Whistler’s Father) received global airplay and hit both the Roots Music Chart and Americana chart when it was released.  The band was selected as the Folk Alley “Open Mic Featured Artist” and the BBC’s Marie Crichton noted the album had “A mean bit of harmonica”.  Bennett’s 1st solo record, Inevitable Discovery received great praise as well with ISA Radio France’s Mike Penard declaring that, “His personal Americana brings an original touch.”  

 

“There was no musical genre called Americana when I was a kid” says Tim.  “Americana music has evolved from music cast off by other mainstream genres for not fitting their particular mold.  I’ve been told by the musicians that I’ve worked with that I don’t follow conventional music choices.  I hear things differently but it still works.” 

 

The View From Here establishes Bennett’s place in the Americana genre and sees the artist hitting his stride.

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