Concert in your area for Indie & Alt, Country, Folk & Blues, and Pop.
Though Isakov was born in Johannesburg, South Africa, he moved to the United States at a very young age and spent the majority of his childhood growing up in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He got an early start in the music industry and started touring with a band when he was only 16. Later in his career Isakov moved to Colorado and started producing solo material. He drew inspirations from a diverse range of artists including delta-blues revivalist/ jazz aficionado Kelly Joe Phelps, evocative poet and acclaimed folk artist Leonard Cohen, and heartland rock sensation Bruce Springsteen.
Isakov takes musical ideas from a variety of sources, both musically and experiential; however he never comes off sounding redundant or like a simulation of one of his musical idols. He has honed in on a sound uniquely his own. It is weathered, spacious and filled with transformative moods. His music can create an atmosphere in the same vein as pioneering delta blues musician’s like Son House and it can just as likely channel in the slowcore minimalism of artists like Mark Kozelek.
Isakov has released six full-length studio albums including That Sea the Gambler (2007), This Empty Northern Hemisphere (2009), The Weatherman (2013), Gregory Alan Isakov with the Colorado Symphony (2016), Evening Machines (2018), which was nominated for a Grammy award for Best Folk Album, and Appaloosa Bones (2023).
Gregory Alan Isakov tours internationally with his band. When not on the road, he runs a small farm in Boulder County, Colorado. The farm provides produce to its CSA members, local restaurants, as well as to a local food bank.
I discovered Gregory Alan Isakov's music five or so years ago and have been hooked ever since! His brand of songwriting evokes the wanderlust so typical of folk, as well as an expansiveness that can transport you to the wide-open, star-speckled sky. There’s something soothing about his voice, something that makes you feel as though he could be speaking directly to you. Although his sound has grown with his latest album, the songs still maintain a certain level of intimacy.
I’d been waiting for ages to see him live, and what a treat it was. Along with his banjo-wielding bandmate, Steve, he somehow made the tiny Privatclub in Berlin feel even cozier than it normally does, giving the German term 'gemütlich' a whole new meaning. They cracked jokes, took requests, and played what Isakov so aptly called “kitchen versions” of a handful of his songs, during which the two of them unplugged their instruments, huddled closely around a single mic, and serenaded us in earnest, closing out what felt like a musical night with friends.
Isakov's third full-length album, The Weatherman, was released a year ago after a four-year pause, but here’s to hoping we won’t have to wait as long for the next one.
Saturday 4th March. The Keep, Guildford. Courtney Marie Andrews. So a complete contrast to my last gig with twenty thousand people in the behemoth that is the O2 on Monday to a tiny pub in Guildford with fifty other hardy souls.
Courtney Marie originally from Phoenix, Arizona and latterly of Seattle is difficult to classify. She sits with one foot in each of the country and folk camps. Her voice seems to drift effortlessly from a Mary Chapin Carpenteresque classic country style through Carole King, Laura Nyro to the modern folk sound of Laura Marling taking in everything that was great about seventies Laurel Canyon. It’s a beautiful instrument, powerful yet understated.
Tonight she is supported by her friend Bryan on pedal steel to give the songs a little more depth as and when she requires. Whilst Courtney has produced several albums it is her current album ‘Honest Life’ that has finally given her the recognition she deserves. Most of the set comes from this along with a couple of newbies and oldies.
‘Table for one’ and ‘Put the fire out’ (which has an uncanny similarity to Steve Earle’s ‘Guitar Town’) stand out for me in a night full of highlights. After an hour it’s all over but such is the size of the venue there is no escape from the crowd and she returns back to the stage for two encores and it’s probably only the British politeness that allows her to finish there as I could have happily listened for another hour.
Special thanks to the pub and promotor who saw her potential early and booked this artist for such a small venue. She won’t be playing pubs this size for much longer as demonstrated by her return trip to these shores in September. One word for the venue though. When it’s a sold out show like tonight it might be an idea to have at least a couple of rows of chairs at the front and then standing behind. As the audience are so close, unless you are literally right in front you cannot see the artist at all especially someone as tiny as Courtney. A minor grip though on a magical evening.
Keep on folk country rockin’ y’all.