Home Sweet Hotel - Blues Matters UK

"On Home Sweet Hotel the singer-songwriter Amelia White has put together a set of ten originals, that are full of regret, longing, and the feelings that life on the road can bring about. With a voice that sonically sounds like a mixture of Chrissie Hynde, and Emmylou Harris, and a band that fuses musicianship with swagger, this is an album for anyone who likes the more grown up side of country. Although the album is brilliantly produced, with polished playing, there is still enough grit in the mix to give these songs a life, both on the stage, and in the studio.The guitars of the title track, Love Cures, and Leaving in My Blood owe something to the wide open sound of the Eagles, whilst both Road Not Taken, and Melissa are gentle ballads with some aching harmony vocals, and a soundscape that brings to mind early Everly Brothers, and Rainbow Over the East Side is one of those songs with haunting pedal steel guitars and vocals that you think you have heard before. Dogs Bark is a rocking song, with everything in the right place, and is the type of song that Bonnie Raitt would record, the clean slide guitar being particularly strong part. This is a fine release, with enough interest, character, and musical variety to reward repeated listening."

-Ben McNair

Amelia White
Home Sweet Hotel - Maverick Magazine

HOME SWEET HOTEL

White-Wolf Records

 (4 / 5)

Gritty and melodic set from Nashville singer-songwriter

Amelia White’s voice has the craggy, jagged grit and pain of Lucinda Williams at her best but it also has a sweetness that Ms Williams doesn’t possess. Allied to White’s gift for melody, some mighty fine playing from her musicians and songs that can go toe to toe with anyone and you have an album that, even this early, is going to be one of the best of the year.

White has been making music for 15 years or so and this is her eighth outing (at least, it’s a bit vague). Her experience of life on the road described in the title track, encapsulates her greatness. A subject that’s been done to death and one rife with clichés, it’s basically a complete no-no for a writer. But, over some fuzzy guitar and a hooky tune White avoids the pitfalls, avoids the self-pity and makes something new. ‘It can bring you down, it can bring you round’ she sings, a sentiment that’s universal. It’s the same story with Rainbow Over The East Side, which is about Nashville but could be anybody’s hometown. Elsewhere, the sultry Right Back To My Arms has echoes of classic country a la Patsy Cline and the lashing of gossips in Dogs Bark raises a smile.

Every song opens with a melody that gets you from the off, every tune drives the words into the consciousness. The musical pace is steady, there’s no rocking out, no funereal dirges, things never drag or race by, they’re just… right. A great start to the year.

Jeremy Searle

Click here for the original review.

Amelia White
Amelia White : Home Sweet Hotel - The Rocking Magpie

Amelia White
Home Sweet Hotel
self-release

Superb Set of Lonely Country Love Songs.

I was smitten with Amelia White’s previous album Old Postcards; and three bars into the sultry opening song on her latest disc; Dangerous Angel, I felt that same tingle in my tummy and my knees go wobbly again.
There’s something darkly sexy about the way Amelia delivers the words in this ‘world weary’ love song that tugged at my heartstrings in a way very little else has managed in recent months.
The title track Home Sweet Hotel follows; and Amelia’s voice sounds just as sultry and sad; as she tells a story only a songwriter who lives her life on the road could pen; and is exactly the type of reflective Country Rock that I’ve loved for over thirty years.
On her previous album I likened Amelia to Lucinda fronting Fleetwood Mac; well she’s ditched that backing band and picked up the Heartbreakers (in spirit) for songs like that previous one, Love Cures and later Right Back to My Arms.
Each of these songs has just the right amount of cool Southern Rocking impertinence to boost the singers expressively tired vocals; and make each song ultra-special.
All of those things also apply to Leaving in My Blood; but with added Twang too! The shadow of Lucinda and possibly a young Chrissie Hinde is cast over this song and a couple of others too; but Amelia’s distinctive voice is hers and hers alone – she sure don’t copy anyone!
By the time I first arrived at Rainbow Over The East-Side my senses had already taken a real battering; and this song very nearly pushed me over the edge towards real tears (I don’t recommend listening at 3am on headphones after taking strong painkillers!) and subsequently; I’ve had to take a deep breath before listening to the singers voice soar like a Dove on this sensational story/song every time.
In an album full of sad songs; The Road Not Taken; a co-write with Reckless Johnny Wales and the legendary guitarist Sergio Webb, who adds some seriously ‘cool guitar licks’ is a heartbreaker par-excellence. The story is pure sadness in Technicolour; and the type of Country song that Country fans claim isn’t written any more. Seriously, when you hear it you will become an Amelia White Evangelist and force feed it; and the rest of the album, to friends, family and lovers alike.
Home Sweet Hotel closes with another darkly bonnie song; Six Feet Down as it’s slow; dirge like melody is the perfect way to end an album that. hopefully will be a game-changer for one of East Nashville’s finest singer-songwriters.

Amelia White
Amelia White Conjures Tales from the Road - No Depression

Gritty like Lucinda Williams and expressive like Amy Rigby, Amelia White is a true storyteller/songwriter. Her new record Home Sweet Hotel is a dark, unglamorous slice of Americana. White’s voice is smoky and soulful, warm and deep, and her songs listen like entries from her diary on the road.

Title track “Home Sweet Hotel” is a nuanced portrait on a lonely artist, untethered from her roots. “Can’t remember how the dog smiles / but I can sing a hundred sad songs,” she sings, capturing that feeling of being in work mode and unable to conjure up anything familiar. White vividly describes the taste of road food, the smell of being on the road, and the isolation that comes from spending so much time with yourself and the strangers for whom you perform every night. The loss of identity that comes from long stretches away from home hit hard and unfold in a poignant and beautiful way. In fact, White even began writing the songs on the record from a Days Inn.

There’s a bluesy, almost Cajun feel to some of White’s instrumental arrangements, but many of her melodies and choruses are true ear candy pop-rock. “Love Cures” is a sweetly satisfying ode to the power of the heart and its tune is sure to stick around. “Dangerous Angels” is menacing and moody, with a driving rock and roll pace. “Rainbow Over the East Side” is an atmospheric tribute to a beloved city, and “Dogs Bark” draws you in from the first few alluring guitar licks before unfolding into a gospel-tinged Southern gothic treat.

Like most singer-songwriters, White spends a significant amount of time traveling and playing to small rooms to make a living. It’s not a pretty lifestyle, but White beautifies it with her raw, authentic lyrics and gorgeously lived-in pipes. Listening to Hotel may leave you feeling like you want to buy her a beer and then sit and drink it with her so she can share her tales from the road. But if she doesn’t come through a city near you, buy yourself one and give this record a good listen.

By Maeri Ferguson

http://nodepression.com/album-review/amelia-white-conjures-tales-road-home-sweet-hotel

Amelia White
Amelia White: Home Sweet Hotel - American Songwriter

Despite the consistent quality of her work, it’s hard to imagine Amelia White topping Home Sweet Hotel.

Amelia White
Home Sweet Hotel
(White Wolf)
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

East Nashville — by way of Boston and Seattle — singer-songwriter Amelia White has no shortage of road miles on her odometer over the past 15 years. She’s done it the hard way, releasing six previous albums on a variety of indie imprints and hitting the endless highway, winning over audiences one club, bar or opening slot at a time. She has landed a handful of tracks on TV shows and gotten uniformly positive reviews but the gold ring has so far eluded her. That may change with Home Sweet Hotel.

While there is no such thing as a bad or substandard Amelia White release, it’s clear she has gradually honed her songwriting and, especially, her vocal skills. But White has gradually refined her voice to take elements of Marianne Faithfull’s edgy growl, Lucinda Williams’ southern drawl and Sam Phillips’ dark, jazz tinged croon and combine them into something instantly recognizable. Likewise, her songwriting has become tighter with arrangements that fuse country, folk, pop and even some blues for a sumptuous American gumbo that’s often similar to a mashup of Rosanne Cash and Tom Petty at his most rustic. It also helps having drummer/producer Marco Giovino (Buddy Miller) to tweak these songs into fighting shape. 

The ethereal strum of “Rainbow Over The East Side” with its yearning vocal and crying fiddle and the darker, earthy love song “Right Back to My Arms” display the maturity and subtlety of White’s singing, while the backing keeps the sound edgy yet commercial enough for more mainstream tastes. Selections like the subdued blues rock title track and the reflective Byrds-styled “Leaving in My Blood” reveal the traveling that has been a staple of White’s life and is implied by the album’s title. The funky “Dogs Bark” pushes boundaries utilizing a drum loop to drive its swampy groove. The easily melodic “Love Cures” seems to have the right balance to be the hit that has so far eluded White. 

Despite the consistent quality of her work—2006’s Black Doves remains a high water mark — it’s hard to imagine Amelia White topping Home Sweet Hotel, an album that, if it connects with a wider audience, should provide a respite from the love/hate relationship she has with the road that has been her second home.

By Hal Horowitz

http://americansongwriter.com/2016/02/159258/

Amelia White
GREAT REVIEW FROM MUSIC CITY ROOTS SHOW - BY CRAIG HAVIGHURST

Amelia White is musical comfort food for me, coming from that classic place between singer/songwriter, jangle pop and country that comes for the beating heart of the Americana format. I’ve been a fan for years. Her voice is plaintive and real, and her songs each have some fascinating crystalline shape that invites close attention and touch. I loved the brisk snappy mood of opener “Daddy Run” and the half desperate, tempted to the breaking point quality of “Dangerous Angel.” Really sharp was a new song with the really very funny and true observation about the ubiquity of gossip: “dogs bark; people talk.” She brought a razor sharp band that included not just one banging country-plus guitarist (Sergio Webb) but another (John Jackson) who dazzled on frets and slide respectively.

Amelia White
MUSIC CITY ROOTS PRE-SHOW RAVE WRITE-UP ABOUT AMELIA WHITE AND BAND

From the “long overdue” file we’ll hear from East Nashville “writer, song-singer” Amelia White, whom I discovered during my days of official discovery duty at The Tennessean. Along about 2002 came a disc called Blue Souvenirs that featured a mix of keening country pathos, urban savvy and resonant songwriting. The composition, texture and singing made me think of Lucinda Williams with better diction and range. Amelia was new to Nashville then (following development years in Boston), and I’d soon meet her in the swirl of the neighborhood and music scene. She proved to be a super-cool, positive person and a tuned-in artist who had a lot more in her than just one debut album. Her 2006 project Black Doves won her tons of acclaim and new opportunities. Her most recent project is the impressive and personal Old Postcard. A recent No Depression writeup said that “she puts her heart out for all to experience and loves to connect with her audiences.”

I asked her what’s up these days, and she wrote back that the major themes of now include a new publishing deal that focuses on her TV show placements (her songs have been on Justified and other shows), plus some songs of hers being recorded by others like Anne McCue and Wild Ponies. And she’s readying a new studio album called Home Sweet Hotel for a winter release. “It is dark, moody and rocking, and explores the tug between life on the road, and life at home,” she said. “I look forward to touring the USA and overseas behind it- and know it’s going to open some doors, and keep me chasing the crazy muse that drives me.”

Amelia White
NO DEPRESSION RAVES ABOUT AMELIA WHITE AT ALTERNATE ROOT'S EXTENDED PLAY THEATRE

I first saw Amelia White and Sergio Webb almost a year ago when the East Nashvillians came to The Extended Play Sessions for the first time, so I knew that their return visit would be fabulous.

This time, they brought the Blue Souvenirs with them for a live show that was being recorded, which added immeasurably to the show.

I cannot claim to have penned the phrase "writer-songsinger" but it describes Amelia perfectly. She is a songwriter first and in fact mentioned that she had to become a good singer in order to give her songs the performances they deserve.

She played in Boston's underground (i.e., the T) before moving to Nashville about 13 years ago and the move has clearly agreed with her. Surveying her four most recent albums, the music gets tighter yet freer with each release. She has a new album, Home Sweet Hotel, due in early winter and plans to run a crowdfunding campaign around it.

Sergio Webb, meanwhile, is an in-demand session guitarist who performs with many of Nashville's best. White and Webb perform together frequently and have developed a musical chemistry that works. He is one of the most expressive guitarists I have ever seen, despite his unassuming demeanor offstage. When the band was introduced as "Amelia White with Sergio Webb and the Blue Souvenirs," he clarified that he is a Blue Souvenir. 

The other Blue Souvenirs are Marco Giovino (drums, vocals), Russell Chudnofsky (guitar, vocals), and Richard Gates (bass), all based in the Boston area. I hope to see them -- together or separately -- again soon.

White's songs are clearly steeped in the country music tradition, yet I think that even people who say they hate country music would like them. She puts her heart out for all to experience and loves to connect with her audiences.

This was, I believe, the first time they had all performed as a group, or possibly the first time in a long time. They sounded wonderful, although most of the songs required a second recording because they were not happy with the first. This was the beauty -- for the performer -- of this not being a true concert. The band are perfectionists who wanted the songs to sound as good as possible, and I think the retakes stemmed from the fact that they do not perform together on a regular basis. To the audience, though, they sounded great the first time!

It would be worth your while to delve into Amelia White's music, and especially to see her live. She does not play in the Boston area a lot, but she does tour with Webb. Who knows, perhaps they'll add the rest of the Blue Souvenirs in the future. Regardless, this was a terrific night of very high-quality music from some incredibly talented, nice musicians.

This review was originally published on Suze Reviews the BluesClick here to see photos of this fantastic show.

Amelia White
WALTER EGAN AND THE NEW BOWLING BAG

Just a night as usual on the road. pull in around 8 pm,,, having driven 8 hours.

Had to get half way to gig. Sergio drank a beer or two in the car (shhh) and we almost had to call the coast guard going through an hour long downpour with some tornado warning lingering…

bad weather from Tx heading east. It cleared up. 

we are heading to Silver Spring, MD. to play a show with Mr. Walter “Magnet and Steel” Egan, one step closer to my Stevie Nick’s obsession. Damn.

The Days in is clean if musty and right across the street is Pizza and an asian Hibachi Grill with a broken neon sign-maybe not!

But next door, a goodwill, and a Kroger OH YES. 

9pm now, and putting on my pink and purple fancy PJ pants, and feasting on cheap pinot grigio, 

hummus, carrots and crackers, I am about to settle in for Dateline? 

A knock on the door and there’s Sergio having bought me a new /used bowling bag

with the bowling ball intact- he’s been shopping, and I’m the recipient.

We shall make a grand entrance tomorrow night at Dave Galinski’s SLIGO CAFE 

and Walter Egan is sure to open up his inner secrets about Stevie…

Amelia White
Lucky

I took a friend early this morning to outpatient surgery. That was enough to remind me that on a gorgeous day in May I am lucky to be here, and alive.

Later this afternoon, the plumbing in my home was making alien noises—blurps and gurgles. Turns out a root in the yard had blocked the main line. Once again, a surgery of sorts and the bill did not kill.  And for the second time I felt gratitude and was reminded of my luck.

 

This Evening I Stood within the wooden walls of the Cash-Carter Cabin where I heard a band that I’m peripherally acquainted with called Talking Like June. They were solid as a rock, fronted by and an amazing woman with pipes. Part blue-eyed soul, part neo country; they performed a few at the intimate listening party for their upcoming album. I enjoyed the music and being in the company of a mix of artists and music biz folks. My agent had invited me and I couldn’t believe I was standing in the pine cabin that Johnny Cash had used for his fishing and hunting hangout. I touched the old piano that his hands had loved. I got a chill up my spine. For all that I don’t have, I have so much.

 

I moved to East Nashville 14 years ago this summer, I had a new album with me entitled Blue Souvenirs that I had just recorded and mixed in Boston. To make a long story short, the reason I was able to make this album was a straight out gift.  On my last night living in Seattle (where I had run away to quit music), I played in a smoky dive bar with my band. At the end of the night, a fan of mine asked me to sit down with her for a moment. She had a strange glow in her eyes. She told me to hold on tight, as she pulled out her checkbook and wrote me a check for ten thousand dollars. She had been given a huge settlement from her job, and she thought I, as an artist, could put the money to good use. And that was that. 

 

So many other strokes of luck have come my way in the past 14 years. There have also been some hard times, and some barely “hanging on” times. But I did, and I do, and I’ve now made five albums here in Nashville. I have songs that great artists I respect have put on their albums, and hundreds that I’ve co-written. Over the years, more and more of them turn up on albums that people will listen to while they drive in their cars, cook dinner, or what have you. I have a wonderful bunch of friends who get me, and that’s not always easy. I have love, and a home by the railroad track. As I write this I’m feeling luckier and luckier!

 

I have a song about this LUCK that I often end live acoustic shows with. Sometimes when I write a song, it feels as though I set up the future. I think about that when I write dark songs… but they can’t be stopped.  This particular tune is a hidden track on my Black Doves album and declares me lucky; so, therefore I am, within reason. I’m still waiting for that one big gong in this crazy trip of musical passion otherwise known as a “career”. Meanwhile, I’m gonna mow the lawn, and stop and smell the roses.

Amelia White
CONTRIBRUIN, BELMONT UNIVERSITY ARTS MAG. PROFILE PIECE OF AMELIA WHITE

RAINBOW ON THE EASTSIDE By MELISSA WOLF

        The stage was small and covered with an old oriental rug that surprisingly fit in with the funky décor of the venue.  White string Christmas style lights draped from the old ventilation system in the ceiling that was no longer in use, except to add character to the place.  Local art hung in unusual places and handmade quilts covered the walls to absorb the sound.  In the middle of an East Nashville neighborhood, this old laundromat cleverly turned restaurant/bar/venue – The Family Wash – was laid back and comfortable as opposed to the typical Nashville uptight listening room with a two-drink minimum and an overwhelming pressure to be quiet.  The venue’s wide bar with a curved edge was full of customers consuming beer, wine, and shepherd’s pie on a warm August night in 2007.  Amelia White and the Blue Souvenirs would be the act of the evening; it would be the first of many times that I would become consumed with White’s smart lyrics, catchy melodies, and quirky worn voice.     

            After a delicious shepherd’s pie and pint of Stella Artois, I heard a unique voice coming from the stage: “Checking…checking…la la la la la…sorry for the sound check folks.  We’ll get the show started soon…Ohhh…Black doves flying against the fire lit moon, you’ll be gone too soon/ Black Doves flying…” Amelia White was wearing tight green pants and heeled boots with a fitted long-sleeved button down western-style shirt.  A mud flap girl was appliquéd to the shoulders of her thin but sturdy frame, and her thick fiery short hair was styled with gel to achieve an effortless, messy look.   She’s striking and has a tough exterior upon first impression; but the “tough girl” appearance is due more to her contemporary stage clothes and sharp facial features than it is of her attitude.  When I asked her in a recent interview what her favorite piece of clothing is, she responded, “I’m torn between my - every hour is happy hour t-shirt and my old gray sweat pants.”  While many performers may have chosen a stage appropriate clothing item that flatters their figure, White’s candid response reflects her genuine character, a quality that is always present.               

            At The Family Wash, as White abruptly turned around to switch out her acoustic guitar for her sleek, hollow-bodied electric guild, she bumped into the microphone stand, almost knocking it off of the stage before the bass player stepped in on its way down.  “Well, I never said I was smooth,” she said with a chuckle.  White has an uncanny knack of making her audiences feel at ease, even during her occasional klutzy moments on stage. 

            On that special summer night, White played most of the songs from her 2006 release, Black Doves.  The title track, written for those left behind in the war – any war, never seems to go out of style.  The song was featured in Neil Young’s collection of “Living With War” tunes on his website.  “It’s bittersweet that “Black Doves” is still one of my most requested songs,” White adds.  The white dove, a symbol for peace and harmony becomes black as a sign of unending war and distress.  The song combines a folk rock style with a vulnerable melody and honest lyrics: “They’re taking you now, and they took you before/ I’m lonely already – what are we fighting for?” Many of White’s poetic lyrics boil down to a simple meaning in the end.  In this case, “Black Doves” forces the listener to go beyond their political opinions and put themselves in the shoes of someone who is waiting for their loved one to return home from war, and the always unanswered question: “What are we fighting for?”  

            After that show at The Family Wash, I began to work with Ms. White – booking tours and handling much of the business side of her career.  For a couple of years, I even managed some of her tours; a job that required me to travel with her and make sure that she and her band had everything they needed on the road.  I drove the van, made hotel arrangements, and maintained budget records.  One of my most important jobs, however, was making sure that nobody left equipment behind at venues or hotels.  If it happens, it can be disastrous!  There are so many little pieces of equipment to account for: cords, pedals, microphones, microphone stands, etc.  These items are not easily replaceable while traveling.  One night at a gig in Tulsa, the bass player left his bass in his hotel room!  We didn’t realize it until we were several hours into the drive the next day.  Of course we turned around and went back for it, but we were late for the show and everyone was on edge.  After that, I made a checklist of all equipment/important personal items, and everyone had to check off their items before we were allowed to leave – White still uses that checklist I made for her.  Working with Ms. White was always a pleasure and I learned a lot about the music business first hand.  

            Since the release of Black Doves, White has released three more full-length albums and is currently working on a fourth.  The song, “Motorcycle Dream,” another title track, brings up the teenage angst she experienced from being ‘different’ and at odds with her parents for most of her life.  At a recent gig, she introduced the song to the audience by asking the question: “Who here has ever felt like a freak?”  Feeling like an outcast at the age of seventeen, White borrowed her neighbor’s motorcycle and recalls driving it around without a license as much as possible.  At the time, she lived on Bainbridge Island – a small town off the coast of Seattle.  She didn’t actually write the song until years later when she was going through a hard breakup and losing her home, an experience that took her back to the freedom she felt from riding.  I suspect she thinks of this often.  Again, the song exudes a “tough girl” image with lyrics like: “Turbo engine between my legs, somebody on the back – arms around my waist.”  The toughness can no doubt be argued for, but the song is also about freeing herself from relentless hardships in life, including the music industry.

            The struggle for White, as is most independent artists, is trying to fit artistic music into a commercial world.  As White explains, many mainstream artists are successful because they fit into a particular ‘box’ or genre that record labels feel comfortable promoting.  The creative side often gets ignored if an act has a particular sound that has already proven to be popular.  The label then hires publicists, booking agents, tour managers, a radio promotion team, and a band for touring.  What all of this equals is exposure – and a lot of it.  The same is true for independent artists; it still requires a lot of money to make an album and put it out into the world.   It can be done on a budget, however, and White is rather savvy at finding clever ways to make albums without breaking her bank, or compromising the integrity of the music.  In her latest album, not yet released, she and drummer Marco Giovino – of Robert Plant’s Band of Joy – figured out a way to record the majority of the album live.  This is a rather unusual way to record, but with a group of talented musicians who are all in it for the music, it can create a vibe that is artistically rich and fruitful.

             For White, the tough part comes after the artistic, “Once I’m done making an album, the real hard work begins; now I have to promote it with everything I have and hope that it catches someone’s ear the right way,” she says.  Many independent artists contribute every last dime to their careers, sometimes at the risk of losing their homes or relationships.  Although White lives in a cute brick house with her partner, two dogs and cat in East Nashville, she is no stranger to the “couch-hopping” way of life for the sake of her music career.  Peter Cooper, of the Tennessean, sums up White’s unique style, “she’s a worthy poster child for a genre that tends to differentiate itself from the contemporary country world as much by its DIY ethic as it does by its comparatively rootsy sonics,” he says.

            White was born in Arlington, Virginia in 1968.  She is the youngest of three, and was the most anticipated only girl.  Due to her father’s job in the Navy, she spent much of her upbringing in Seattle, where her songwriting began to take shape. “It was something I had to do; my parents hadn’t planned on their precious girl being artistic, gay, and strong-willed,” she says.     

            When she was ten years old, she saved up her allowance money to buy a guitar from her older brother – a 1968 Martin D-18; she still uses it today.  She takes the guitar out of its sturdy case to show me, and it is beautiful – even to someone who lacks expert knowledge in guitars.  The sides and back are solid mahogany and the neck is worn along the frets from years of playing.  The wood is thin and fragile, which I’m told allows for the full-bodied sound, and the few nicks and dings throughout, only add to the guitar’s character.  One of the sides has a barely noticeable circular indention where her dog, Vita, jabbed her paw through the wood when she got excited one day.  She laughed as she told the story, “Whether I’m the klutz or it’s my dog, I’m lucky to have gotten to know a few great luthiers over the years.”   She was right.  I could barely tell that there had been a hole there.  White has all of her guitars hung up in her music room.  “They’re fine pieces of art,” she says. 

            As she began to play one of her new songs on that guitar, it was as if nothing else in the world existed.  Her focus was strong, she closed her eyes, and her fingers confidently pressed down on the shiny strings.  She didn’t doubt a single move as her foot tapped loudly on the wood floor.  I could tell that she truly let go of everything; she felt every note and every lyric.  The song is called, “Rainbow on the East Side,” one of her newer tunes that she is so excited about.  As White puts it,  “I’ve made East Nashville my home, and it’s also home to many other talented musicians and songwriters.  Unfortunately, it’s also the side of Nashville that doesn’t make the big bucks.”  As I gathered, “Rainbow on the East Side,” is about the highs and lows of being a songwriter, or any artist for that matter.  “Count the money; it’s old and dirty/ It never seems to stretch as long as the highway/ Shine the melody, dig your fingers in/ Let the sweat and anger hold you there and swirl the high notes round/ It can bring you down, or it can lift you up…up…up.”  As her lyrics imply, the life of an artist can be glamorous one day and down right humbling the next.  Through the years of knowing Ms. White, I’ve learned that there’s a fine line there somewhere; the hard part is finding that line and then staying on it. 

            White’s eccentrically smart lyrics are cleverly crafted and carefully woven into her melodies.  She incorporates imagery and symbolism into her songwriting in a way that is reminiscent of early James Taylor and The Beatles.  Not surprising, these are two of White’s musical influences.  “I spent so much time listening to those early Beatles albums. They wrote songs that are still current, non-linear, and they put melody first.  Their songs were more like mini-movies as opposed to some hokey story,” she told me.  John Jackson, a former guitar player for Bob Dylan and current player for White, had this to say about her songwriting, “You see those people riding around with the dream catchers in the rear view mirrors of their cars—she catches those dreams and writes songs about them.” 

            In 2013, White released her latest full-length album, Old Postcard.  The album’s nostalgic theme evolved after several trips back and forth from East Nashville and Virginia to visit her parents as their health was declining.  They needed help moving into an assisted living suite, where they could have care around the clock.  “Growing up, my parents fought me on just about every aspect of who I was.  Being an artist didn’t agree with my dad’s practical nature, and being a lesbian was hard for both of them to swallow,” she says.   White’s two older brothers did take the practical route in becoming an engineer and a doctor; but this wasn’t the right path for Ms. White.  She left home at age 18 and landed in Boston, where she cut her teeth in the music scene and realized her ambition of being a full-time artist.      

            White’s relationship with her parents has come full circle since the hard times of her youth.  “Reconciling with them hasn’t been an easy endeavor; it has been a process that has taken most of my life. What I know now is that despite their resistance in accepting me for who I am, they have always loved me unconditionally,” she reveals. 

            In the title track, “Old Postcard,” (written with John Hadley), White uses her dense lyrics and beautiful melody to describe her childhood memories and how her relationship with her parents has evolved.  “While helping my parents clean out their house, I was moved by all of the memories that we’ve shared through the years, and how intimate I’ve become with them as time has passed,” White says.  The song begins with the lyrics, “My folks home is an old postcard, concrete Jesus standing in the yard/ I can see the ghost of myself as a kid growing up there,” a nostalgic, haunting image of her youth.  White continues to paint the story, “Somewhere in the middle of a night going by, daddy’s on the phone with a pain pill high/ He would never say, but I can tell he feels bad/ Silence on the line for a moment or two, he says, ‘Why was I calling you?’ I don’t know, but that’s alright dad.”  As White describes, watching your parents grow old and start to decline is difficult.  “It can really soften you up and put things in perspective,” she says.

            White’s parents, both in their late eighties, have been married for over 65 years, and despite their recent decline in health that forced them to move into assisted living, neither are terminally ill and they’re generally in good spirits.  I’ve had the pleasure of meeting White’s parents while touring with her over the years, and they are genuinely delightful people.  Joe White, her father, has a charismatic demeanor and never turns down the opportunity to tell a story with complete enthusiasm, especially around the ladies in their community.  “He’s such a flirt,” White adds.  If superlatives were given at retirement communities, Joe White would certainly be voted most popular.  Margaret White, her mother, struggles with dementia but she, too, stays feisty and never fails to notice her husband’s flirty behavior.  She also never fails to put him in line because of it.  It’s on ongoing joke between the two of them, but the most special thing about White’s parents is the love they continue to have for one another – a love that was born 65 years ago.  It’s what they live for.             

            Much of White’s music career was spent in the northeast, but since moving to Nashville 14 years ago, she has come to associate it as home.  “When I first moved to Nashville, a friend of mine said ‘Welcome to the songwriters’ ghetto,’” she says.  White never forgot that and 13 years later, after she truly understood what it meant, she wrote a song called, “Ghetto.”  The video for “Ghetto,” from the album Old Postcard premiered on USA Today, and features several of White’s friends, musicians or otherwise – including myself, jamming at her house and hanging out on her back deck.  Friend and fellow Nashville musician, Anne McCue, who also made an appearance in the video for “Ghetto,” says that White is, “cut from the same cloth as Leonard Cohen.”  Again, White’s lyrics describe the hard life of a musician, “I drive for miles to sing the blues; go on little bird fly somewhere new/ Times are tough here in the ghetto – times are tough in this ghetto.”  In the video, as the train growls through the backyard while good friends carry on conversations, share inspiring tunes, and enjoy each other’s company, White is reminded of the sense of community and support she has in East Nashville.  This is the songwriters’ ghetto and it’s why Amelia White agrees to her part of the hard bargain.  She only sees the “Rainbow on the Eastside.”  

Amelia White
CMT EDGE PREMIER'S BIG BLUE SUN, OFF OLD POSTCARD...

CMT writes:   White fills out her lonely imagery with chilly harmonies and a weaving, staggering guitar melody. As birds warn of the coming daylight and six church bells mark the end of night’s safety, the protagonist wishes for a chance to start over and get back to people who care.

“I would hope we can all relate to that wish,” she says. “To just be back to the innocence of a child, taken care of by the blanketing love of a mother.”  Read More.... and listen to the track---http://www.cmtedge.com/2013/12/04/amelia-white-anticipates-a-big-blue-sun

Amelia White
RIVERFRONT TIMES SAINT LOUIS MO. PRAISES AMELIA'S OLD POSTCARD

Even with the country-music establishment’s recognition — if not full-on embrace — of left-of-center songwriters Brandy Clark and Kacey Musgraves, Amelia White isn’t holding her breath. She has too many exceptional songs to write (her “Black Doves” remains one of the most poignant antiwar hymns in the Americana vernacular) and is too confident a voice to hold anything back. The Nashvillian’s forthcoming album Old Postcard features a plush, sometimes gospel-lifted sound and recalls the kind of records Lucinda Williams used to make. And it should make a name for White with anyone who cares about three chords, melody and the truth.  Roy Kasten

Amelia White
HOME AND OUT OF WACK

It’s Late October, and I’m home from being on the road,, singing my songs /peddling my old fashioned wares.

Time is always out of wack after a tour. Up early today, but tired as hell.

The dog/ cats I call my family are eager to have company in our mutual awake-ness. My sweet Melissa is still asleep… steady and warm. Always miss her when away, and the reunion Is always big.

Looking through email- so much to get ON this week… and suddenly I’m aware of the loud and visual power of the train coming by. If you know me, you know I live on the train track. If you don’t know me, well… my back yard is a train yard greenway.  There is something about the sounds of a train: It is saxophone in present and  vintage history mixed.

Ollie the Chihuahua snuggles at my side and yes,  time is out of wack,. I love it…It unsettles me but it stimulates. Who cares about the boundaries society puts in place. ??? I’m up at 4a.m writing ,and that’s just the right thing.

When people die it really messes with time…suddenly you are living in your memory film, riding along  with mixed and vivid emotions. I remember being on the beach with this guy in LA, I remember a funeral, standing outside in dark, icy weather. I remember I cooked a meal for this woman, the mother of my lover. I remember the look in her lake - blue eyes when she greeted me at the door. She was amazing. Most of all in this silly life of mine, I hold onto the memories that made me feel electric, one way or another.

Sometimes it seems the reality of life is s in black and white. The past, our dreams, and our wishes for the future  are in color.  In the present it is up to us to mix this up so we are not bored, and walking the earth out of touch, and almost dead

I prefer bittersweet life- over sweet death.

Amelia White