All tagged Justin Wells

Festival Review- Highlights from AmericanaFest 2023

My memory does not serve me when trying to determine how many artists I saw at last year’s festival, but this year definitely felt like more. My roster for this year checked in at nearly 60 sets. Not all sets were witnessed from start to finish and many were short sets at industry parties. Nonetheless, with a lineup of this magnitude, there were a massive number of artists I made a point to see.

Favorite Albums of 2020

Last year seemed like a banner year for releases, but the buzz for 2020 albums, tours and festivals had everyone thrilled for what was to come. No one imagined that all of that would come to a screeching halt in Mid-March when a global pandemic struck. A devastating blow to the performing arts community among so many other small businesses, the education system and the healthcare community. Many musicians had just released or were nearing release dates for their music, but were left unable to tour in support of it. Some chose to delay their releases and others forged on and released albums, EPs and singles anyway. I have a great deal of respect for those that took a gamble and provided us with one of the most important things to help get us through this difficult period. The power of music has continued to bring us together when we can’t join each other like we normally would. Thankfully, social media has allowed the artists to perform livestreams or even just promote their art. It’s allowed the fans to share music and continue to discuss and analyze it. Here at the Amp, we’ve made our own individual lists of our favorite three albums this year to share with our readers. We hope that you’ve listened to some of these amazing artists and their albums, but if not, we hope that you’ll at least give them a listen and perhaps find some new favorites.

Justin Wells: The United State

Everyone’s life story is a little unique. We are all given different opportunities and chances. We all make decisions differently and handle those outcomes in our own way. But one commonality everyone shares is the human experience. The cycle of life is inevitable. We are all in it just the same; doing it the best we can. We are in the middle of a global pandemic and even though we are all handling it differently, the fact remains that we are all affected by it. The need for empathy, understanding and patience is great right now. I have seen a lot of good happening in the world to benefit our fellow man, but I have also seen a great deal of hate and violence lately. Now, more than ever, is an important time to realize we are all in this together and although our stories are not all alike, we are all going through a unifying experience. That’s the reason Justin Wells has given us this meaningful collection of songs right now. We are and need to be The United State – a state of unity.

Sometimes I feel like songwriters have this sixth sense or some level of enlightenment that allows them to know before we do, when we are going to need a song or songs to pull us through something. That’s how I feel about this album. It’s as though Justin Wells knew we would need a bright light in the dark we were unknowingly about to enter this year. He said that his first instinct after the entertainment industry shut down was to wait to tour in support of the album. Many artists put off releasing their albums because of this fact and he considered that himself. However, he knew that this album needed to be released and heard at this very moment, no matter what the industry’s situation was. I think he chose wisely.

Although a few singles have already been released throughout the summer, this is an album best digested as a whole. It takes you through the journey of life and all the stages necessary to complete it; the highs, the lows and everything in between. The album opens with the ethereal pedal steel of J. Tom Hnatow, meant to symbolize the beginning of life in the womb and how a child knows the voice of its mother before birth. The significance of the title, “You’ll Never Know, Dear, How Much I Love You,” comes from Justin singing “You Are My Sunshine” to his mother when he was a kid. The outro of the album is symbolic of whatever happens or doesn’t happen after life. I asked Justin where the title “Farewell, Mr. Hooper” came from:

“Mr. Hooper is Mr. Harold Hooper, a character on Sesame Street in the early 80’s. The actor passed away, and the writers went back and forth on how to write the character out of the show, with care and consideration for the children that were their audience. An option was to write the character as having moved away, or something along those lines. Ultimately, they went with writing it parallel to the truth, that Mr. Hooper had died. Big Bird struggles with the concept, and the adults walk him through it. This let the show address death-as-a-part-of-life as a concept to children, rather than letting it be this mysterious, frightful thing. The title of that episode was ‘Farewell, Mr. Hooper.’”

The first full track and lead off single, “The Screaming Song,” is a powerful one. It’s a thoughtful prose on the throes and wonderment of being born into this wild world. There is no other experience like it, for the birther or the being birthed. I am sure it is with good reason that a child cannot recall that memory or that the mother experiences an extremely high level of endorphins during the process, yet what an experience it must be to be born.


Music In the Upside Down: Justin Wells

We thought it prudent to get the perspective of the state of the music industry and those it employs from one of the most expressive and poignant songwriters we know of, Justin Wells. You may be familiar with this Kentucky-based artist from his critically acclaimed debut album, Dawn in the Distance, or from the buzz about his highly anticipated upcoming album, The United State. Justin graciously answered some curiosities about how people in his position are faring during the pandemic.