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Waiting on a Song
Nine-time GRAMMY–winner Dan Auerbach willrelease Waiting On A Song,his second solo album, on June 2 via his new label, Easy Eye Sound. The album is Auerbach’s much anticipated follow-up to 2009’s Keep It Hid and is a love letter to Nashville. As such, he recruited some of Nashville’s most respected players to write and record his latest, including John Prine, Duane Eddy, Jerry Douglas, Pat McLaughlin and Bobby Wood and Gene Chrisman of the Memphis Boys. Auerbach said about working with his musical heroes: “Living in Nashville has definitely changed the way I think about music and the way that I record it. I didn’t have all of these resources before. I am working with some of thegreatest musicians that ever lived.â€
NPR Music premiered sthe video for Waiting On A Song’s first single, “Shine on Meâ€. Watch the video for “Shine on Me†here: http://bit.ly/2ol70Jc
Dan Auerbach moved to Nashville from his native Akron, Ohio in 2010 and with this release, his first solo album in eight years, it is clear that he has made Music City his home. During the summer of 2016, taking a break from the non-stop touring he’d donewith The Black Keys and the Arcs, he finally got acquainted with the city he loves so much, as well as the world-class musicians who live there, and subsequently collaborated with some of Nashville’s heavyweights. Of the process he reveals, “They’d come over, and we’d be in a little room in my house with the door closed, and we’d just write. Monday through Wednesday we’d write, and then Thursday through Sunday we’d record, every week.†Auerbach wrote seven songs withJohn Prine, one of which is the title track of the album. Mark Knopfler’s immediately identifiable guitar elevates “Shine on Me†into an anthem. Iconic guitarist Duane Eddy is featured on“Livin’in Sin†and the cinematic “King of a One Horse Town.â€
Waiting On A Song is the debut release, and marks thelaunch of Easy Eye Sound, Dan Auerbach’s new record label which will feature soon-to-be-announced releases from other artists and is distributed by Auerbach's longtime label Nonesuch Records. The new label is built equally around Auerbach’s Easy Eye Studio in Nashville, where The Black Keys recorded their last two albums, as well as the collection of famous session musicians that have come to call the studio home. Auerbach says, “Sometimes I feel Icreated my own Field of Dreams. I built the studio because I knewsomething was going to happen. I built it to accommodate live musicians playing, and then all ofa sudden the best musicians in Nashville show up, and it’s happening.â€