Whiskey N' Rye | |
---|---|
Origin | Seattle, Washington, United States |
Genres | Roots rock, blues rock |
Years active | 2013–present |
Labels | Echo Boom Records |
Members | Philip Lindholm Carson Dent Alex Atwood Marco Longo Greg Pascale |
Website | Official website |
Whiskey N' Rye is an American roots rock band out of Seattle, Washington, United States, [1] known for its explosive live show. [2] The band was formed in 2013 by singer/songwriter Philip Lindholm, and has since released two albums to critical acclaim. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]
Whiskey N' Rye's first album was the eponymously titled album Whiskey N' Rye, released on March 28, 2014. The album featured the single "Bootlegger," which was picked up on AAA radio across the country. The band was thereafter invited to perform on Blues To Do television, [7] [8] at the House of Blues in Hollywood, and do an in-studio with Bob Rivers on Seattle's 95.7 KJR-FM. [9] These performances led to Whiskey N' Rye's music appearing across popular television shows, including The Real World and Keeping up with the Kardashians . [10]
Blue Cheer was an American rock band that initially performed and recorded in the late 1960s and early 1970s and was sporadically active until 2009. Based in San Francisco, Blue Cheer played in a psychedelic blues rock or acid rock style. They are also credited as being some of the earliest pioneers of heavy metal, with their cover of "Summertime Blues" sometimes cited as the first in the genre. They have also been noted as influential in the development of genres as disparate as punk rock, stoner rock, doom metal, experimental rock, and grunge.
Carlos Humberto Santana Barragán is an American guitarist, best known as a founding member of the rock band Santana. Born and raised in Mexico where he developed his musical background, he rose to fame in the late 1960s and early 1970s in the United States with Santana, which pioneered a fusion of rock and roll and Latin American jazz. Its sound featured his melodic, blues-based lines set against Latin American and African rhythms played on percussion instruments not generally heard in rock, such as timbales and congas. He experienced a resurgence of popularity and critical acclaim in the late 1990s.
Southern rock is a subgenre of rock music and a genre of Americana. It developed in the Southern United States from rock and roll, country music, and blues and is focused generally on electric guitars and vocals. Author Scott B. Bomar speculates the term "Southern rock" may have been coined in 1972 by Mo Slotin, writing for Atlanta's underground paper, The Great Speckled Bird, in a review of an Allman Brothers Band concert.
Norman Jeffrey Healey was a Canadian blues, rock and jazz guitarist, singer and songwriter who attained popularity in the 1980s and 1990s. He reached No. 5 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart with "Angel Eyes" and reached the Top 10 in Canada with the songs "I Think I Love You Too Much" and "How Long Can a Man Be Strong".
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Philip Michael Lindholm is an American writer, singer-songwriter, academic and Air Force veteran from Seattle, Washington, United States. He is best known as the author of Latter-day Dissent and for playing the lead role in the BBC's murder mystery Who Murdered Warren Taylor, presenting ITV1's The Grail Trail: In Pursuit of the Da Vinci Code, creating and researching ITV1's The Muslim Jesus, and as the lead singer-songwriter for Whiskey N' Rye. In 2019, Lindholm gave a TEDx talk entitled "The Secret to a Meaningful Life."
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Matthew Davidson is an American guitarist, singer and songwriter originally from Shreveport, Louisiana and now based in Nashville, Tennessee. He is currently touring with Conner Smith after touring for five years with Travis Denning. He has performed at the Grand Ole Opry, on Today with Hoda and Jenna, and on Broadway in downtown Nashville at venues such as Dierks Whiskey Row, The Stage, Legends Corner, Second Fiddle, Jason Aldean's, and Tootsie's. He graduated in 2020 from Belmont University with a Bachelor of Music in Commercial Guitar.