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PRESS RELEASE

Caroline Herring's Lantana Reestablishes Singer as Preeminent Storyteller
Austin Music Award Winner for Best New Artist Returns with Album that Re-images the Gothic South

Nashville, Tenn.—Caroline Herring confidently returns to the forefront of the American roots music scene with her new album Lantana, due March 4th, 2008 on Signature Sounds Records. The Mississippi-born, Atlantabased singer/songwriter took the producing helm for the first time on the new record, co-producing with longtime collaborator Rich Brotherton (Robert Earl Keen).

Intimate, powerful and honest, Lantana is a masterpiece of understated intensity and in many ways an artistic rebirth for Herring. After making a name for herself in Mississippi as band member and co-founder of the now renowned Thacker Mountain Radio music series, Herring moved to Austin, TX. Herring quickly took the town by storm, releasing the critically acclaimed debut album, Twilight. She won Best New Artist at both the 2002 SXSW Austin Music Awards and also from the Austin American Statesman. Herring soon after released an equally impressive follow-up, Wellspring.

Though Herring had established herself as an authentic, original voice, Herring paused to focus on marriage and motherhood as she continued to tour and play festivals nationally and internationally. The insights she gained over these few years are profoundly apparent in the songs of Lantana. Herring's songs represent the experiences of women who have not only faced the challenges inherent in a rural South childhood, but also the heartrending and often complex experiences of adult women who feel pressured to choose between tradition and career ambitions. The songs show that the results can be both awe-inspiring and sometimes even devastating.

"I just got to the point where I knew I had to write songs again," Herring says of re-launching her career. "Music is my life-blood, even as the career of the singer/songwriter is most unusual, especially in the South where the jobs of women are often mother first, wife second. There's a line in one of my songs about a woman who lives in a backroom and begins to disappear. I didn't want that to be me."

With a new batch of songs in hand, she returned to Austin to record Lantana with Rich Brotherton, who had produced Wellspring. The album is made up entirely of Herring originals, save her artful interpretation of two traditional songs. Because Herring had the chance to sit with the songs for a while, she developed clear ideas about the overall feel of the album. Lantana is clearly grounded in the acoustic traditional sounds of her early work. With Brotherton behind the soundboard, his and Herring's collaboration made for a quiet masterpiece.

In many ways Lantana is Herring's re-imaging of the Gothic South, with a rich alto voice that soothes the listener even as she addresses difficult subjects. Herring has a journalist's eye for detail, a poet's sense of scale and language, and a life-long Southerner's understanding of the issues that shape the culture below the Mason Dixon line. Herring tackles poignant themes of womanhood in "Fair and Tender Ladies", "Stone Cold World" and "Song For Fay." Herring also expertly throws her hat in the ring of the long-standing murder ballad tradition, this time representing Susan Smith in the song "Paper Gown." Herring's commitment to uncovering the truth in her songs led fellow artist Dar Williams to call Herring "the elusive real thing."

There is no artifice on Lantana. It's an album full of delights, lyrically and musically. And just like Caroline Herring, her new album is the real thing.


BIOGRAPHY

Caroline Herring digs deep—deep into the rich soil of American roots music for her sound, and deep into the recesses of her own consciousness for her themes. The musically understated, psychologically intense songs of this Atlanta-based Mississippi native ponder the eternal verities while probing the complex nature of contemporary existence; she delivers them in a fine-grained alto replete with the residue of hard-earned insight.

On Lantana, her beautiful and eloquent third album (Signature Sounds), Herring fills the listener’s heart with hope one moment and sends a chill down the spine the next. This pivotal album, which documents a personal and artistic crossroads for its author, cements her status as a truth teller, and no matter how bitter or disturbing the story leading to the truth may be, she approaches it clear-eyed and straight-on, getting down to the nub of it with quiet tenacity. No wonder fellow artist Dar Williams, who co-headlined a European tour with Herring in 2006, described her as “the elusive ‘real thing.’”

Since emerging out of the Austin scene earlier in this decade, Herring has beguiled the critics and accumulated an international following with her provocative outpourings. Her subject matter is firmly grounded in the rural South; “Mississippi’s dense history and the shackles of its past are vividly present in Herring’s songs,” noted Craig Havihurst in the Tennessean. As a onetime folklore scholar Herring also draws on her knowledge of traditional music and culture as a way of contextualizing her personal narrative, thus bringing a dimension of timelessness and universality to the work. “I’ve learned a lot from academics and all the artists I’ve worked with,” she says, “but I do try to write from my own experience, as a poet would approach her work, rather than as an academic. Though I admire all sorts of traditional art forms, I would never call myself a traditional artist.”

Herring co-produced Lantana with Rich Brotherton (Robert Earl Keen), who helmed its predecessor, 2003’s Wellspring, at Brotherton’s home studio in Austin. The album contains eight solely written originals, along with “Midnight on the Water,” whose melody comes from an old Texas fiddle tune, and the traditional lullaby “All the Pretty Little Horses.”

Lantana’s thematic bookends are “Stone Cold World” and “Song for Fay” (the latter inspired by a Larry Brown novel and included on a tribute album to the late author). Herring located the imagery she employs through the course of the opening “Stone Cold World” during a trip to the remote, rocky eastern edge of Canada. “Newfoundland is a rock—there’s no vegetation on it,” she explains, “and that is a metaphor for learning to exist outside myself, learning how to be married, to be in a new place, to be in the midst of changes in my career and in all of life. It’s about what sacrifice means.” She describes the closing “Song for Fay” as “a journey song about figuring out how to be a woman, and navigating that, and still getting up in the morning and looking towards heaven.”

Lantana’s thematic bookends are “Stone Cold World” and “Song for Fay” (the latter inspired by a Larry Brown novel and included on a tribute album to the late author). Herring located the imagery she employs through the course of the opening “Stone Cold World” during a trip to the remote, rocky eastern edge of Canada. “Newfoundland is a rock—there’s no vegetation on it,” she explains, “and that is a metaphor for learning to exist outside myself, learning how to be married, to be in a new place, to be in the midst of changes in my career and in all of life. It’s about what sacrifice means.” She describes the closing “Song for Fay” as “a journey song about figuring out how to be a woman, and navigating that, and still getting up in the morning and looking towards heaven.”

In “Fair and Tender Ladies,” Herring subverts the female-as-delicate-flower theme of the traditional song of the same title as she celebrates the courage of three women from her native Mississippi—a poet, a nun, and an anti-lynching activist. The song “Paper Gown” is about Susan Smith, the 23-year-old South Carolina woman who drowned her sons. Herring examines the roots of that unfathomable act, relating this contemporary horror story as “the ultimate Southern Gothic tale. It makes a good murder ballad, but it’s an important story.” No, this is not easy-listening music.

The album title, she explains, refers to “a wild-looking, flowering plant that grows like crazy around here. Lantana flowers attract butterflies, and it’s common to see lots of them hovering around a big lantana plant. The image is in my song ‘Lover Girl,’ in the lines: ‘Longing for a place to know/Where branches reach, lantana grow/And butterflies take their poses.’ So it’s about finding a place to call home and making it home.”

Herring embarked on her musical path while a student at Ole Miss in Oxford, where she played with The Sincere Ramblers, a local band who purveyed old-time country, country blues and bluegrass. Some of the most renowned figures in roots music-artists like Gillian Welch, Blue Mountain, The Bottle Rockets and bluegrass legend Peter Rowan-came to Oxford to appear on the Thacker Mountain Radio Show, a literary and musical hour co-created by Herring that was broadcast out of a secondhand bookstore; it still airs on Mississippi Public Radio. These visitors to this cultural oasis in the deep South were taken with the purity and honesty in Herring's voice, and they gave her the early encouragement she needed. Eventually, she found the confidence to begin writing her own folk- and country-leaning songs, though she wasn't yet ready to play them for anyone but herself.

That changed when Herring moved to Austin in 1999 after being accepted into a prestigious doctoral program in American studies at the University of Texas, lured as well by the city's vibrant musical community. In short order, the stars aligned for the aspiring singer-songwriter. She played her first gig just two months after hitting town, thanks to Rowan, who keeps a second home nearby, and soon thereafter she recorded a demo with Billy Bright and Bryn Davies, whom she'd met through Rowan. That led to a weekly happy-hour gig at Stubb's Bar-B-Q, where she learned to front a band while honing her material. Herring became the first artist signed to the songwriter-friendly Blue Corn Music, which released her debut album, Twilight, in October 2001.

The reviews were glowing-"Austin has a captivating new singer-songwriter," announced Michael Corcoran in the American-Statesman-and Twilight became a local hit after Austin station KGSR-FM started playing it. The next January, the American Statesman named her Best New Artist; two months later, during South by Southwest, she received the same honor at the Austin Music Awards. However, by the time Blue Corn released the Brotherton-produced Wellspring, in August 2003, Herring was living in Atlanta with her new husband, who'd taken an academic job there. "Leaving Austin, I struggled," she acknowledges, "because it was a great umbrella to be under, and I was really quite new at any sort of success. It's been a slow build since that time establishing myself away from there."

In Atlanta, Herring bore two children, a daughter now nearing her fourth birthday and a son still shy of his first. Family life put her musical career on hold for a time, but the need to create kept tugging at the young wife and mother. "I tried to figure out my life in terms of all of that," she says, "and also figure out how to reassert myself. I was able to sink in a little bit with my new babies and write again about whatever I wanted to write about. I just got to the point where I knew I had to do it. Music was my life, and I had songs I felt were good, and I had the support of my family."

The resourceful and dedicated Herring managed to juggle motherhood, writing songs, performing locally, playing some festivals, touring Europe and taking on a long-term project that involved accumulating a database of traditional artists for the State of Georgia. "I was able to do it on my own time, with a 2-year-old in the car if need be," she says, "and it allowed me to the chance to make another record." When a window of opportunity opened, she brought her new batch of songs to Austin, taking the role of co-producer for the first time as she crafted Lantana with Brotherton.

"I finally got my CD to Jim Olsen at Signature Sounds three weeks before I had my son," she says. "It's never what I would've chosen, but it's how things ended up. And so, I've navigated all this either extremely pregnant or with a little baby." She can laugh about it now that she's managed to pull it off.

"More than anything else," says Herring, "I'm excited-I really am. I'm interested to see what the future holds and grateful that I get to be doing this. I've learned how much I love it, how committed I am to it." She pauses for a moment to reflect. "'I'm no tourist'-that's one of the lines in the bridge of 'Stone Cold World.' And that's the truth. This is for real."


DISCOGRAPHY

Lantana
2008
Signature Sounds

Wellspring
2003
Blue Corn Music

Twilight
2001
Blue Corn Music


REVIEWS

PRAISE FOR LANTANA

PASTE: “Paper Gown…has to be the best example of a songwriter getting inside the head of an unsympathetic real-life protagonist since Steve Earle's "John Walker's Blues."…Herring effortlessly plumbs the emotional depths of her songs with her evocative alto. Her delivery, along with Rich Brotherton's pitch-perfect production, makes this song cycle resonant in more ways than a simple, rootsy singer/songwriter album ought to. [full article]

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NO DEPRESSION: “Insightful, evocative writing is the common denominator of Lantana, a compelling acoustic album rooted in the complexities of women’s lives, especially women of the South.” [full article]

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AUSTIN CHRONICLE: “Crafted with timeless elegance and graceful confidence, Caroline Herring's Lantana is the best modern Southern Gothic since Lucinda Williams' Sweet Old World.” [full article]

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DIRTY LINEN: "Herring's vocals are clear and lovely, evoking the classic voices of Baez, Collins, and Mitchell, yet grounded in the country dirt of Gillian Welch, Lucinda Williams, and Eliza Gilkyson." [full article]

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AUSTIN-AMERICAN STATESMAN: (four stars) “Herring flawlessly reports the grisly material. Presented with corresponding degrees of damnation and empathy, her watertight assessment of the 1994 American tragedy would be a crowning achievement for most artists. On “Lantana” — an embarrassment of riches drawing the straightest line between tradition and transition this side of Adrienne Young — it only rates halfway up the chart." [full article]

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USA TODAY: “...Concept album of sorts about the South, with a highlight being a song from the projected viewpoint of Susan Smith, who drowned her two sons.”

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ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTION: "There's an inherent sadness in [Herring’s] voice that conveys pain and regret with a sharpness that cuts to the bone." [full article]

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AUSTIN MUSIC CITY: “The bottom line here is this, if you want to hear a brilliant artist that will move you in a way you haven't been moved, who has an uncanny talent to totally and effortlessly immerse you in the sound of her voice, this is it…[Lantana] is also the first nominee for AMC's Album Of The Year…see for yourself what a real-life, emerging, contemporary talent sounds like.” [full article]

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MORE MAGAZINE: “Lovely vibrato and poetic lyrics…” [full article]

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OP-ED NEWS: "Unlike many Americana singer-songwriters who hide behind the banners of true iconic artists like The Carter Family, [and] Emmylou Harris,...Caroline Herring grabs their standards and rides like Joan d'Arc through the images of the southland--firmly planting her flag in the red dirt of the Mississippi Delta." [full article]

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ASHEVILLE CITIZEN-TIMES: “With a style similar to Guy Clark and a voice that echoes of Joan Baez, this gal is pure storytelling sweetness…”

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ALL MUSIC GUIDE: “Herring's vocal is so delicate it almost breaks; instead she just breaks your heart… The women Herring writes about are all ordinary, and extraordinary, in the ways we all are, but Herring's ability to illuminate their hearts and souls is something truly special.” [full article]

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FOLKWAX: "…collection of gothic and melancholic portraits that draw inspiration from actual events as well as the literary word, a marriage of fact and fiction."

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GONE COUNTRY MAGAZINE: “The thing about Herring that is the most enduring aspect of her music is that she takes chances lyrically that a lot of people wouldn't do in this day and age. She touches on difficult subject matter that many people shy away from, but I say it is about time that someone sings about the real side of living life. When you listen to "Lantana," listen to each track closely as no two are the same.”

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AMERICANA ROOTS: “Hearing Caroline sing is uplifting, for her artistry is about directness not artifice of technique. Her voice is comforting, of the earth, yet carries you skywards by turns. Her sure-footed resolving melodies ease the listener to take in her words, often tackling harsh reality.”[full article]

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FOLK ALLEY: "Herring is not hesitant to uncover any story, even the ones most of us avoid. She would make a good reporter, except she has too much music in her. That's our good fortune."[full article]

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DELTA MAGAZINE: "This album is a testament not only to her ability as a musician, but also as a storyteller who happens to set her tales, woeful and happy, to music.” [full article]

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BIRMINGHAM MAGAZINE: "More than its folky, subtly-shaded tunes or her striking alto, Caroline Herring’s Lantana stands out because of its literate lyrics.”

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NORTHAMPTON VALLEY ADVOCATE: "Herring sings for grown-ups who know that an honest take on life isn't always pretty...toss in memorable melodic hooks and some long overdue Country feminism, and Lantana is a head-turning effort." [full article]

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HARTFORD COURANT: "Caroline Herring has quietly carved her own country-folk niche, with minimalist, bluegrass-inflected sound and homespun sophistication."[full article]

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TIMES WEST VIRGINIAN: "Every song here offers something special, something insightful and something musically impressive."[full article]

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MIDWEST RECORD: “Southern gothic scoped into the present and filtered through taking a few years off to raise the young ‘uns make this the set you didn’t think Herring even thought she had in her…this is one of those class by itself recordings that make the artist move onto that next plain where they are frequently referred to in hushed tones…Herring is going to take you through the fun house mirror to the other side as this transplanted Austinite serves up audio you think you’ve only heard in dreams.”

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WEST CHESTER DAILY LOCAL: “At time poignant, at times melancholic, always tender and introspective, Caroline Herring's beautifully realized Lantana is an album-length meditation on the metaphysics of self-realization and the real world of parenting, growing, and growing up. It's a record that burrows into the soul and knocks around in there, demanding more than easy answers to big questions about survival.” [full article]

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COUNTRY STANDARD TIME: Though she doesn't appear to be aiming for inspirational, Herring's strength, hope and sincerity are uplifting. It won't be the soundtrack for your next party, but for many women, it may be the soundtrack of your life.”[full article]

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SWAMPLAND: "Like the flower for which it is named, Lantana is more than it seems. When the lantana flowers, butterflies swarm. It is magic, simple as that." [full article]

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Daily Freeman: "One of the most pure collections to come across my desk this year, Herring has an uncommon depth and grace. Don't miss this one."[full article]

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THE SUNDAY PAPER: "It’s a pure, heartfelt, honest and even retro album from a woman obviously unconcerned with commercial popularity. Lantana might have been released to greater acclaim 40 years ago, but it heralds a return to a classic sound that never goes out of style."

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COVER LAY DOWN: "…this album is haunting and beautiful, combining strong songwriting with solid, effective production and stunning vocal delivery."

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HERE COMES THE FLOOD: "She has a sharp eye for what lies beneath all the love and tenderness that seems the be subject matter of her songs if you don't listen closely enough."

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BIRTHPLACE OF AMERICAN MUSIC: "Herring has a journalist's eye for detail, a poet's sense of scale and language, and a life-long Southerner's understanding of the issues that shape the culture below the Mason Dixon line."

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RODEO ATTITUDE: "When an album like Lantana starts to play, and a voice like Caroline Herring's fills the room, you just know you're hearing something that's more than special."

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FISH RECORDS: "Lantana is a powerful, intimate low-key masterpiece."[full article]

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FREIGHT TRAIN BOOGIE: "…when a release gets this good, words have a tendency to become superfluous."[full article]


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FULL PRESS KIT

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(Includes biography, press release for Lantana and Lantana, song by song)

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