Barriers to Right

  Forest Live 2025

  The Commoners Live

  Montreux British Dedication

  Joanna Shaw Taylor UK Tour

  Within Temptation Ukraine Film

  Gaza - Too Little, Too Late

  Robert Jon & The Wreck Live

  Mike Peters Remembered

  Elliot Minor Live Manchester

  The Swell Season LP & Tour

  Robert Jon & The Wreck ‘24 Tour

  EARTH DAY 2025

  Montreux Lineup 2025

  The Omen (Has Arrived)

  Divine Comedy Back in ‘25!

  DOWNLOAD 2025

  The Damn Truth UK Tour

  David Gray’s New LP & Tour

  On Freelance Photography

  Trump’s Winning Ways…?

  Martha Wainwright’s Debut LP

  Roger Waters on Amused To Death

  Trump, Drunk On Power

  Apartheid and Beyond…

  David Ford Live in ‘25

  My Favourite Records

  In Dreams…

  Coheed & Cambria New LP & Tour

  Young Knives New LP & UK Tour

  Elliot Minor Back In 2025

  Emily Barker LP & 2025 UK Tour

  Political Inhumanity

  Record Reviews

  Ani DiFranco 2025 Tour

  “Let Right Be Done”

  Farah Nabulsi Filmmaker

  G3 Reunion Live LP in ‘25

  IS THIS IT?

  Larkin Poe Live in ‘25 + New LP

  Laura Marling New Record Out Now

  Rise Against 2025 Tour

  Rag ‘N’ Bone Man New LP & Tour

  The Middle East Crisis

  Ezra Collective New LP & Tour

  Leif Vollebekk New, Great LP

  Stick In The Wheel Returns

  SO, WHAT’S CHANGED?

  “They’re American Planes…”

  Olive Tree By Olive Tree…

  Ani Di Franco In Conversation

  Gemma Hayes Returns

  Remembering Thomas Hoepker

  Joe Bonamassa Live in 25

  On Misinformation

  Joan As Police Woman LP

  Politics - Who To Trust?

  The 76 Year Catastrophe

  Black Country Communion Back!

  Within Temptation Live Recordings

  Beth Gibbons New Solo LP

  Politics Is Failing

  Ani DiFranco New LP

  Pink Floyd’s Animals Remix

  SHIT FLOATS

  Seasick Steve Alive & Kickin’

  “My country, right or wrong…”

  Heart Announce Live Tours

  Anais Mitchell HADESTOWN Returns

  The Photographer’s Selection

  Gaza Nightmare Continues

  Princess Goes COME OF AGE

  Philip ‘Seth’ Campbell Live

  This Troubled World

  Dark Side Of The Moon 50th

  The More I Hear The Less I Know

  Great Albums: Fresh New Life

  Hozier’s New Album

  Nicole Atkins Jim Sclavunos Live

  SBT (Sarabeth Tucek) Live

  I’m As Angry As Hell!

  Magnum - A Year in Ukraine

  Alessandra Sanguinetti Interview

  The Damn Truth Live

  Newton Faulkner Live

  The Handsome Family Live

  The State We’re In Pt II

  Eric Gales Live

  The Cavalry Never Arrived

  Chvrches Live

  Andrés Peña Flamenco Star Live

  Paul Draper Live

  A Fly-Free Zone

  Liverpool Jazz Festival

  The Charlatans Live

  UK Democracy Threatened

  Rag’n'Bone Man Live

  Sea Girls Live

  Martha Wainwright Live

  Politics is Failing

  Lucy Kruger TRANSIT TAPES

  Joe Bonamassa Live!

  Rodrigo Y Gabriela Interview

  Music & Brexit

  Happy New Year?

  On Barbra Streisand

  The State We’re In…

  Welcome Back! But To What?

  What Have We Done?

  A RISK TOO FAR

  Photojournalism Hero

  Samantha Fish Live

  Gill Landry Live in Chester

  Noah Gundersen Live

  David Gilmour’s Interview

  Snow Patrol Live in Manchester

  New Model Army Live

  Shakespears Sister Live

  Lamb Live in Manchester

  The Struts Live

  Sting & Shaggy Live

  David Gray Live in Liverpool

  John Lennon Interview


Alison Krauss & Union Station Live

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ALISON KRAUSS AND UNION STATION

Alison Krauss’ most recent triumph, the certified-platinum Raising Sand, her 2007 collaboration with Robert Plant and producer T Bone Burnett, notched up a total of six Grammy® Awards, including Album of the Year and Song of the Year, bringing her unsurpassed total to 26. That mesmerizing modern-day masterpiece sets the stage for another stunner: Paper Airplane, the artist’s first album of all-new recordings in partnership with her remarkably skillful and renowned band Union Station since 2004’s Lonely Runs Both Ways.

The players - Jerry Douglas (Dobro, lap steel, vocals), Dan Tyminski (guitar, mandolin, lead vocal), Ron Block (banjo, guitar) and Barry Bales (bass, vocals), with Krauss on lead vocal and fiddle—are five distinct personalities who come together to form something truly unique as a band. Each bandmate has his own bustling career, but when these singular musicians come together, they’re an airtight unit devoted to the process of making music together. Indeed, their connection is so close and deep that they’ve come to think of each other as family.

Produced by Krauss and Union Station, with studio legend Mike Shipley engineering and mixing, Paper Airplane contains 11 songs of poignancy and austere beauty, chosen with the impeccable taste and unerring intuition that have characterized her entire body of work, delivered by this world-class unit with an immediacy that goes beyond mere virtuosity.

Throughout her remarkable career, which spans a quarter century, though she’s only 39, Krauss has remained grounded and real. Deeply introspective as an artist, she’s commensurately outgoing and spontaneous in conversation—both sides of her character evidencing a life-embracing humanity. In her work, Krauss has managed to consistently locate the fertile common ground between traditional modes and topical themes. On Paper Airplane, she and the band somehow managed to plumb the depths of Krauss’ own psyche while also capturing the zeitgeist, so that this portrait of the artist doubles as a portrait of America as a whole at a crucial moment in its history.

The process that led to Paper Airplane had its own particular set of circumstances, at one point bringing the sessions to a dead stop when, for just the second time in her life, Krauss was hammered by a bout of migraine headaches. “There have been records that were tough to make, but this one took the cake,” she says with a rueful laugh. “At one point, Dan said, ‘I don’t really know what to do unless you’re jumping up and down because you love something or you hate it.’ I make judgments based on how something makes me feel, and because I wasn’t physically well, everything was kind of gray and nothing sounded right. So after we recorded a bunch of things, we took a long break, because it just wasn’t working.”

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For the crucial missing piece, Krauss turned to her longtime go-to guy, songwriter Robert Lee Castleman. When she called him, Castleman lamented that he was in a dry spell and feeling uninspired, but he asked her to come over and sit with him and tell him about what was going on in her life. When Krauss walked in the door, he told her he had a melody. “What are you going to do now?” she asked him. “Wait,” he answered. “It’ll probably be here by midnight.” Krauss stayed just long enough to make grilled cheese sandwiches and tell him what was going through her mind. A few hours later, Castleman called. “I got it,” he said. “What’s it called?” she asked. “’Paper Airplane,’” he answered.

“All I did was encourage him and share what was going on within myself,” Krauss recalls of that memorable afternoon. “But I can’t take credit for his gift. I had no hand in writing it—that was all Robert.”

Castleman hit the bull’s-eye, evidenced by the fact that “Paper Airplane” serves as the new album’s title song as well as its opening track. What did this newly minted song express that was so right in terms of what she wanted to say?

“It represents a trial—like a trying time that has an end,” she explains. “And that’s what everything was to me on this record, including the Dustbowl tune [the Tyminski-sung “Dustbowl Children,” written by Peter Rowan]. It’s all about a span of time that’s a trial. We didn’t pick that as a theme; we found out what the theme was afterward. I was just following what was appealing, but wasn’t conscious of what it was that was speaking to me. I don’t have any preconceived notions; I don’t know till it hits me. ”

Similar friendly persuasion on Krauss’ part yielded the grown-up lullaby “Lie Awake” from her brother Viktor and lyricist Angel Snow. She also urged her friend and longtime musical colleague Sidney Cox, of Louisiana’s Cox Family, to complete the seafaring saga he was working on, “Bonita and Bill Butler,” about his ancestors’ voyage to America, which captivated her, even in its unfinished state. She just knew it would be a natural fit with Tyminski’s muscular, evocative voice.

“Nobody can touch Dan when he’s in his element,” Krauss raves. “He always jokes, ‘I’m an angry soldier, or I’m an angry farmer.’ I was so jacked up on this song of Sidney’s, and thankfully, Dan liked it. It’s beautiful writing, and Dan delivered. I’ve loved his singing forever, but he went to a whole other place on this record.”

She also selected a pair of classics in Jackson Browne’s “My Opening Farewell” (from his self-titled 1972 debut album), which she’d learned from Michael Johnson’s cover version, and Richard Thompson’s “Dimming of the Day” (originally sung by his then-wife Linda on the couple’s 1975 LP Pour Down Like Silver).

“I’d first heard ‘Dimming of the Day’ when T Bone Burnett played it for me three years ago, as we were going through material for Raising Sand, and I said, ‘Oh, I can’t do that’—I just couldn’t go there at the time. But when we were gathering tunes for this album, I felt like I could. The funny thing is, I’d been thinking about it, and Robert Castleman called to tell me he had the most perfect song for me—it was ‘Dimming of the Day.’ And then, Jerry [Douglas] kept talking about this beautiful song he’d heard that we would love, but he couldn’t remember the name of it. When the band and I sat together and listened to ‘Dimming of the Day’, Jerry goes, ‘That’s the song!’ We thought it fit with the rest of the way things were on this record. ” Does it ever.

“The day we cut the song in the studio, and hit the line, ‘When all my will is gone you hold me sway,’ I fell apart and had to stop. I said, ‘It’s so sad.’ And everybody was so sweet—I thought they were gonna laugh and rip me apart. There was this big, long silence, and Barry says, ‘Well, that’s what you get for havin’ a girl in the band.’”

In the end, making Paper Airplane was a revelatory experience for the band. “Whatever formula we thought there was doesn’t exist,” Krauss acknowledges. “It disappeared, especially this last time out. You can’t trust your method; you can’t rely on a method. The only thing you can do is record things that move you—that have a connection with you—and to represent yourself truthfully. Things have to be true that I sing or I can’t do it. Whether I write them or not, they have to be true for me to say it, and for the guys to play it. The only recipe is if it feels true, and true may be incredibly sad. But that’s the part that feels good, because it’s truthful. It might not be true for anybody else, but it is for us. That’s the recipe.”

“I feel like this is the best environment for me,” she says of working within the context of the band. Proof of that simple but telling statement resonates from every note of this musically exquisite, emotionally charged and, above all, utterly truthful album.

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UNION STATION

Ron Block has contributed banjo, guitar, and vocals to Alison Krauss and Union Station since 1991. He has also written 10 AKUS songs, including “In the Palm Of Your Hand” and “A Living Prayer,” which received a 2006 Gospel Music Association Dove award for Bluegrass Song of the Year.  Ron’s songs have been recorded by artists such as Randy Travis, Rhonda Vincent and Michael W. Smith.  Ron has also recorded with Dolly Parton, Brad Paisley, Josh Turner and several other artists throughout his musical career.

Jerry Douglas is a world-renowned Dobro player, and has played with Alison Krauss and Union Station since 1998. His transcendent technique and his passionate musicality has helped him net twelve Grammy Awards, three CMA awards and numerous International Bluegrass Music Association awards including multiple Dobro Player of the Year wins. Jerry has performed with everyone from Phish to Paul Simon to Elvis Costello. Jerry also produced Alison Krauss’ 1990 album, I’ve Got That Old Feeling.

Barry Bales has played bass and contributed harmony vocals to Alison Krauss and Union Station since 1990. He has received 13 Grammy awards, one Country Music Association award, one Academy of Country Music Award, and 11 International Bluegrass Music Association awards, including Bass Player of the Year for 2008. Among others, Barry has recorded and performed with such artists as Merle Haggard, Vince Gill and the Chieftains.

Dan Tyminski has played guitar and mandolin for Alison Krauss and Union Station since 1994. Since then, his solid instrumental skill and burnished, soulful tenor singing have been key components of AKUS. Tyminski has been named “Male Vocalist of the Year” by the International Bluegrass Music Association four times.  Dan is also known for providing the singing voice for George Clooney in the Cohen Brother’s film, Oh Brother, Where Art Thou? His rendition of the Stanley Brother’s classic, I Am A Man of Constant Sorrow continues to resonate with audiences everywhere.

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