SHEMEKIA COPELAND'S OUTSKIRTS OF LOVE
SET FOR SEPTEMBER 11
RELEASE
Shemekia’s a ball-of-fire
vocalist with a voice that’s part Memphis, part Chicago and all woman…
devastatingly powerful. She’s a great singer, period.
--Chicago Sun-Times
Shemekia captures the
timelessness of the blues while spinning it forward with remarkable maturity.
--USA Today
Alligator Records has set a
September 11 street date for Outskirts
Of Love, the genre-smashing new release from trailblazing
vocalist Shemekia Copeland. With a voice that is
alternately sultry, assertive and roaring, Shemekia’s wide-open vision of
contemporary blues, roots and soul music showcases the evolution of a
passionate artist with a modern musical and lyrical approach. Whether she’s
belting out a raucous blues-rocker, firing up a blistering soul-shouter,
bringing the spirit to a gospel-fueled R&B rave-up or digging deep down
into a subtle, country-tinged ballad, Shemekia Copeland sounds like no one
else. The Chicago Tribune
said Copeland delivers "gale force singing and power" with a
"unique, gutsy style, vibrant emotional palette and intuitive grasp of the
music." NPR Music
calls her “fiercely expressive.”
Copeland’s
return to Alligator Records with Outskirts
Of Love (she recorded four albums for the label from 1998
through 2006) finds her at her most charismatic, performing roots rock,
Americana, and blues with power and authority, nuance and shading. Produced by
The Wood Brothers’ Oliver Wood, Outskirts
Of Love is a musical tour-de-force, with Copeland rocking out
on the title track, taking charge in Crossbone
Beach, honoring her father, the late Johnny Clyde Copeland with her
Afrobeat-infused take on his Devil’s
Hand, tackling homelessness on Cardboard
Box and showing off her country swagger on Drivin’ Out Of Nashville.
She puts her stamp on songs made famous by Solomon Burke (I Feel A Sin Coming On),
Jesse Winchester (Isn’t That
So), Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee (The Battle Is Over), Creedence Clearwater
Revival (Long As I Can See
The Light), ZZ Top (Jesus
Just Left Chicago), Albert King (Wrapped
Up In Love Again) and Jessie Mae Hemphill (Lord Help The Poor And Needy).
Friends including Billy F Gibbons, Robert Randolph, Alvin Youngblood Hart, Will
Kimbrough and Pete Finney all add their talent with unbridled enthusiasm. The
result is Copeland’s most decidedly contemporary and musically adventurous
album of her still-evolving career.
When Shemekia first appeared on
the scene at age 18 in 1998 with her groundbreaking debut CD, Turn The Heat Up, she
instantly became a blues superstar. Critics from around the country celebrated
her music as fans of all ages agreed that an unstoppable new talent had
arrived. News outlets from The
New York Times to CNN took note of Copeland's talent, engaging
personality, and true star power. She followed up with 2000's Grammy-nominated Wicked, 2002's Talking To Strangers
(produced by Dr. John) and 2008’s The
Soul Truth (produced by Steve Cropper). In that short period of
time, she earned eight Blues Music Awards, a host of Living Blues Awards
(including the prestigious 2010 Blues Artist Of The Year) and more accolades
from fans, critics and fellow musicians. Two highly successful releases on
Telarc (including 2012's Grammy-nominated 33 1/3) cemented her reputation as a
singer who, according to NPR's All
Things Considered, "embodies the blues with her powerful vocal
chops and fearless look at social issues." USA Today says, "Copeland is a singer
with fervor and funk, power and range.”
Copeland has performed thousands
of gigs at clubs, festivals and concert halls all over the world and has
appeared on national television, NPR, and in newspapers, films and magazines.
She is a mainstay on countless commercial and non-commercial radio stations.
She's sung with Eric Clapton, Bonnie Raitt, B.B. King, Buddy Guy, Mick Jagger,
Keith Richards, Carlos Santana, James Cotton and many others. She opened for
The Rolling Stones and entertained U.S. troops in Iraq and Kuwait. Jeff Beck
calls her “f*cking amazing.” Santana says, “She’s incandescent…a diamond.” At
the 2011 Chicago Blues Festival, the City of Chicago and the State of Illinois
officially declared Copeland to be “The New Queen Of The Blues.” In 2012, she
performed at the White House for President and Mrs. Obama. Afterward, Jagger
(with whom she sang) sent her a bottle of champagne.
With Outskirts Of Love and
a packed tour schedule, Copeland has her eyes fixed firmly on the future as she
continues to break new musical ground. "I want to keep growing, to be
innovative," she says. “I’m a lifer, singing about things that bother me,
using my music to help people. My dad always said ‘we’re all connected.’ I’m an
old soul marching to the beat of my own drum,” she continues, “And right now
I’m making the most exciting music of my career.”