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‘CMT Crossroads: Nathaniel Rateliff & Margo Price' premieres March 26
On Friday, March 26, Nathaniel Rateliff teams with Margo Price to make their
CMT Crossroads debut, as
CMT Crossroads: Nathaniel Rateliff & Margo Price premieres on Friday, March 26 at 10 p.m. ET.
In this early look at the show, Price and Rateliff, backed by his longtime band The Night Sweats, join forces on “Say It Louder,” a soaring track from Nathaniel Rateliff & the Night Sweats’ second studio album
Tearing at the Seams, which released in 2018. Rateliff’s swaggering vocals are complemented by Price’s cool, self-assured tones.
Filmed at The Factory in Franklin, just outside of Nashville, the evening finds Price and Rateliff celebrating each other’s music, trading verses and sharing stories and kindred harmonies. The episode marks the first
ColoradoUnited-statesDenverAmericaAmericanKelsea-balleriniJustin-timberlakeNathaniel-rateliff-margoNathaniel-rateliffEllie-chandlerWillie-nelsonJessica-nicholsonWell I’d be loathe to call 2020 a great year, because it was genuinely horrible, but at least it was enlivened by some fantastic music. The tragedy is that, in a year that afforded artists the freedom to write and record at their leisure, the very industry upon which their art relies (concerts, tours, festivals and dance floors) ground to a halt. Legendary venues, bars and nightclubs have closed across the globe and a host of promising musicians, have had to return to their day jobs (presuming that they still exist).
So while it is worth celebrating the outpouring of creativity that the Covid-19 pandemic unleashed, the incredible cost in lives and mental well being should not be forgotten – and nor should the cost to the music industry at large. 2020 might end up being a great year for Spotify and Apple Music, but a terrible one for the flesh and blood musicians behind the algorithms.
NorwayNew-yorkUnited-statesAustraliaBrooklynIllinoisHjelvikMøg-romsdalUnited-kingdomJamaicaManchesterFranceraised that these farm aid bailouts have been heavily c concentrated among midwest farmer and left dairy farmers wanting. what have they said about the way it as buffeted them? >> they've been clear the only way they're getting by as one farmer told us this last week is because of what he called trump dollars. these farmers, if they're breaking even, barely breaking even. a large part of that because of the $2 to bring the price of the soy beans back up to $10. a lot of the farmers we talked to we first met last year when this trade war first began or was under way. they told us they needed a trade deal with china come what was last fall. now the reality is that not only was last year's crop affected
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