Arum Rae Shares “Country Road” Featuring Production From The Lumineers’ Wesley Schultz

*The Following Press Release Was Issued By Big Hassle Media*

ARUM RAE SHARES “COUNTRY ROAD” FEATURING PRODUCTION FROM THE LUMINEERS’ WESLEY SCHULTZ 

BYRON ISAACS OF THE LUMINEERS COMPLETES THE TRACK WITH HIS UPRIGHT BASS

LISTEN HERE

NEW ALBUM LOOSE ENDS COMING IN 2023 MAINLY PRODUCED BY WESLEY SCHULTZ 

BYRON ISAACS, JAMES FELICE AND DAVID BARON OF SUN MOUNTAIN STUDIOS ALSO FEATURED
Wisconsin-based singer/songwriter Arum Rae releases the Wesley Schultz-produced track “Country Road” off of her upcoming album Loose Ends. Listen to it here.

On “Country Road,” Arum muses on the sublime sense of peace she finds in traveling to her family’s farm in Virginia, sharply contrasting her soft and soulful vocals with Schultz’s jagged guitar work. “We felt like we needed a character to take us home at the end of the song, so Byron played this drawn-out, distorted line on his upright bass,” she recalls. “It felt like an animal sound, so we called it ‘the moose.’”

Listen here

Arum Rae is the rare artist capable of conveying entire worlds of feeling with the subtlest movement of her voice. On her new album ‘Loose Ends,’ mainly produced by Wesley Schultz of The Lumineers, the Wisconsin-based singer/songwriter shares a batch of songs rooted in stories of loss and hope and transformation, each delivered with exquisite nuance. Centered on the quietly powerful vocal presence she’s shown in sharing stages with the likes of Willie Nelson, Rodriguez, B.B. King and Gary Clark Jr., the result is an immediately transportive body of work, at once meditative and endlessly mesmerizing.

The follow-up to 2017’s Sub RosaLoose Ends first took shape as Arum and Schultz swapped song ideas and voice memos in the early stages of lockdown. Although they’d planned to record in Schultz’s basement in Colorado, the two collaborators ultimately headed to Sun Mountain Studios in Woodstock, where studio owner David Baron joined Schultz in co-producing the album and musicians like James Felice of The Felice Brothers and Lumineers bassist Byron Isaacs helped to sculpt its stark, yet luminously detailed sound (in addition, Baron adorned several songs with his graceful piano work, an element he’s brought to past recordings with artists like Bat for Lashes and Jade Bird). “When we started recording, my intention was to trim everything down to the core, to keep it very lo-fi and acoustic,” says Arum. “As we began working, we felt that some of the songs should be taken to the next level, which is what brought us to Woodstock. But even with everything we added, it’s still very much minimalistic—we were both protective of the raw emotion and character of the songs.”

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BIO:

Listing such singular vocalists as Etta James, Tom Waits and Erykah Badu among her longtime touchstones, Arum first discovered her love of singing as a little girl in Colorado and later immersed herself in songwriting while studying at Berklee College of Music. Over the years, she’s explored a vast range of musical styles (blues, soul, Americana, garage rock), imbuing her songs with an unfettered honesty she partly attributes to the free-flowing quality of her writing process. “I first fell in love with putting words together after reading “The Artist’s Way” by Julia Cameron and making a habit of writing morning pages,” says Arum. “It’s something I still keep up with now and usually by the third page of stream-of-consciousness writing, something creative will come through, sometimes, even in rhyme.”

In looking back on the making of ‘Loose Ends,’ Arum speaks to the charmed nature of her collaboration with Schultz and their fellow musicians. “I’ve been fortunate to work with some great people in my life, but it’s crucial to work with someone you really connect with,” she says. In sharing the album with the world, she hopes that her audience might find a sense of solace and expansion. “A lot of this album is about release; it’s describing the hard times but to me the overall theme is hope,” she says. “No matter what, I want everyone to find their own perception of the songs—with everything I do, I always just want to bring people closer to themselves.”

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