He has a big guitar, that big voice and a big presence…yet can shrink a sizable room into a hushed parlour as he tells his tales. A chance to see Andersen perform should not be passed up…

Multi award-winning Canadian soul-blues singer-songwriter and guitarist Matt Andersen releases a brand new studio album ‘Halfway Home By Morning’ on Friday 22nd March 2019 which will be released through True North Records. 

Recorded live off the floor in Southern Ground studio, Nashville with Steve Dawson producing, Halfway Home By Morning showcases all sides of Matt’s sound, from soul and rhythm and blues to folk and Americana. The McCrary Sisters and Amy Helm feature as guest vocalists.

A powerhouse performer with a giant, soul-filled voice and commanding stage presence, Andersen had built a formidable following touring worldwide. UK audiences will have the opportunity to hear new tracks live, plus favourites from his career, when he plays shows in March 2019 in London, Leeds, Glasgow and Nottingham. 

A full list of dates, venues and tickets can be found below. 

Unbridled joy springs eternal from Halfway Home by Morning. Recorded live off the floor in Nashville, Tennessee, celebrated songwriter Matt Andersen’s tenth album collects all the essential elements for a down-home ramble and shoots them through with enough electrifying energy to drive the rock ‘n’ roll faithful to simmer, shimmy, and shake. Over its lucky 13 tracks, he explores every facet of his sound—sweat-soaked soul, incendiary rhythm and blues, heartbroken folk, and gritty Americana—and binds them together with palpable heart, as the band leaves everything they’ve got on the sweet old hardwood of the Southern Ground studio, in the same spot that legends like Neil Young, Emmylou Harris, and Jerry Lee Lewis turned up the volume ‘til it couldn’t go up anymore.

 

Along with the infiltrating buzz of Music City putting its stamp on the record, the studio itself became like a second home for Matt and the band. He and bassist Mike Farrington would routinely kick back with a drink and just listen to the horn section reminisce about the players they’d shared the stage with, and the kitchen took on its typical all-important role as war room, the spot where meals brought the whole crew together to plot next steps. Sometimes it’s tension that shapes a record. But what Halfway Home by Morning offers is soul rejuvenation, looking outward at the anxious state of the world and offering a helping hand, or searching inward to clarify what really matters. And to make a record like that, with warmth and verve, you need to keep your comrades close and feelin’ right. “There really is nothing like listening back in the studio and everybody has the same smile on their face over what we’re hearing,” Matt says. “You can’t fake the vibe of musicians playing together, responding to the choices others are making in that moment.”

 

Of course, fake vibes were never a threat to Matt. The native New Brunswicker has proven time and time again, on stages everywhere from clubs to theatres, that he’s the genuine article. And Halfway Home by Morning is as honest and compromise free as anything he’s ever done. It stands apart, though, injected with that feelgood swagger that comes from everyone making a racket in the same room. “What Would Your Mama Say?” opens things up on with a slithering groove, introducing us to the velvet smooth backing vocals of The McCrary Sisters. Amy Helm joins the party to slow burn the place down on “Something to Lose,” a righteously tender duet that explores the long, scarred, and loving history of a relationship. “Gasoline” blazes appropriately with horn blasts and tambourine shuffle, as Matt urges all good people of the world: “Let’s start living and forgiving like we’re running out of time.” The acoustic bounce of “Long Rider” belies its road dog lament, pumping ragged soul like they’ve got just enough in the tank to get home. “Been My Last” is a devotional for the ages, with pedal steel sweeping in to burst your heart. And things finish on a relatively sparse, but overwhelmingly poignant note: “Quarter on the Ground (A Song For Uncle Joe)” recalls a conversation between Matt’s mother and uncle, as the latter wishes he could hear Joe’s voice over the phone just one more time. 

It should come as no surprise that such a commanding performer, set loose on tape, has built a record that’ll make you dance uncontrollably, weep unashamedly, and fill up any dark spots in your soul with a blast of sonic light. Nearly two decades into his career, still armed with his signature room-shaking, heart-quaking voice, Halfway Home by Morning is the sound of an artist doing what he was born to do—laying his soul bare using the music that can’t help but run through him. And doing it with more jubilation than he ever has before.

 

Producer: Steve Dawson

Recording studio and engineers: Recorded by Sheldon Zaharko with assistance from Preston White at Southern Ground Nashville (Nashville, TN)

Additional recording by Steve Dawson at The Henhouse Studio (Nashville, TN)

Mixing Studios and engineers: Mixed by Sheldon Zaharko at Zed Productions (Vancouver, BC) & Steve Dawson at The Henhouse Studio (Nashville, TN)

Mastering Studio and engineer: Mastered by Kim Rosen at Knack Mastering (Ringwood, NJ)

 

Musician Credits:

Matt Andersen – acoustic and electric guitars, vocals

Steve Dawson – acoustic and electric guitars, pump organ, pedal steel, mandotar

Mike Farrington – bass

Jay Bellerose – drums & percussion

Chris Gestrin – hammond organ, wurlitzer, piano, mellotron

Amy Helm – vocals on Something to Lose

Ann, Regina & Alfreda McCrary (The McCrary Sisters) – vocals

Jim Hoke – saxophones

Charles Rose – trombone

Steve Hermann – trumpet

Horns arranged by Jim Hoke with Charles Rose and Steve Hermann

Amongst his many awards, Matt has won multiple Maple Blues Awards, two European Blues Awards, a Juno and Canadian Independent Music Award and was the first Canadian to take home top honours in the solo/duo category at the International Blues Challenge in Memphis. He has amassed 10 million views on YouTube and in addition to headlining major festivals, clubs and theatres, has shared and toured with Bo Diddley, Buddy Guy, Gregg Allman, Tedeschi Trucks Band, Randy Bachman, Little Feat, Jonny Lang, Serena Ryder and more.

 

Pete Sargeant 

(Many thanks to Claire Horton at Claire Horton PR for help with this announcement)

Feature Image Photo Credit: Laurence Harvey 

You can read our review of Matt Andersen’s live show at The Borderline, London, United Kingdom in May 2017 with a photo gallery by Laurence Harvey here: http://bit.ly/2sUTg9t

You can watch the lyric video for the track ‘Free Man’ in this article. 

Matt Andersen’s new album ‘Halfway Home By Morning’ is released on Friday 22nd March 2019 on True North Records. 

You can pre-order it here: http://bit.ly/2OaIyaH

For more information visit his official website here: http://bit.ly/2CoRJj9

In addition, Matt Andersen will embark on a March 2019 UK Tour which will stop at the following venues:

Friday 22nd March 2019 – Dingwalls, London, United Kingdom http://bit.ly/2phZSwW

Saturday 23rd March 2019  – Brudenell Social Club, Leeds, United Kingdom http://bit.ly/2hA8LPp

Sunday 24th March 2019 – The Blue Arrow, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom http://bit.ly/2OcBJ8M

Monday 25th March 2019 –  Bodega, Nottingham, United Kingdom http://bit.ly/2gMY3rY