The story of Sara Radle’s music career is one that began in San Antonio, Texas in the late 90’s but she is probably most known for being the reason The Rentals reunited in 2005.
In 1996, at the age of seventeen, she began carving out a name
for herself in the Texas music scene with punk-pop trio Lucy Loves Schroeder
and her own solo project. Eight years later, ex-Weezer bassist Matt Sharp
played a show with her in Dallas, and very soon after, he asked her to relocate
to Los Angeles, CA in 2005 to re-form The Rentals. Radle and Sharp
re-built the band from the ground up, wrote some songs together, recorded the
group’s Last Little Life EP, and toured the world. Fans were sad
to see Radle leave The Rentals in 2008, when she soon after joined Los
Angeles-based indie-rock band Walking Sleep.
NEW MP3: Sara Radle - "The Pins"
With her upcoming fifth solo record, Same Sun Shines,
Radle displays her full versatility as a musician by playing every instrument
on the record, including guitars, drums, piano, and violin. She also
entered new territory by engineering and mixing the record’s collection of ten
infectious pop songs herself. “I’ve never officially released something
I’ve recorded myself, so I was a bit nervous going into it,” says Radle.
“But after fumbling around a bit, I found my way and I’m so happy with how it
turned out. It was fun to figure out how to capture the songs the way
they sounded in my head.” She jokes, “I guess I really created my
ultimate control-freak fantasy with the way I made this record.”
Same Sun Shines continues Radle’s diary-entry lyrical style,
using a mix of honesty, heart, humor, and bite to tell stories of love, loss,
relationships, and even death. From intimate moments with scaled down
instrumentation, to fully orchestrated arrangements that have you questioning
how one person was able to make a recording that sounds as full as a room of musicians
playing together, every song on Same Sun Shines reflects Radle’s unique
signature style that mixes rock, 50’s and 60’s pop, Americana, punk, and
classic country. The latter is apparent on her cover of "Mamas Don’t
Let Your Babies Grow Up To Be Cowboys", a song made famous by Waylon
Jennings and Willie Nelson. The Same Sun Shines version features
big guitars and driving drums, and Radle in a duet with legendary indie
singer/songwriter Mary Lou Lord. “I’ve been a fan of hers for
years,” says Radle. “I wanted to sing this song as a duet with another
woman, because I think it takes on such a great, bitter tone from a female
perspective. I asked Mary Lou if she would sing on it, and I was
delightfully surprised she agreed. Words cannot express how happy and
proud I am to have her on my record.”
With the promising result that has become Same Sun Shines,
Radle has a lot to be proud of these days. She is excited to take her new
songs on the road and play some U.S. tour dates starting in February
2012. Please visit her website for current dates.
Artist - Sara Radle
Album - Same Sun Shines
US Release Date - February 21, 2012
Label - S/R
Tracklist:
Album - Same Sun Shines
US Release Date - February 21, 2012
Label - S/R
Tracklist:
01. Last
02. Little One
03. The Pins
04. Can't Go On
05. Still Here
06. Mamas Don't Let Your Babies Grow Up To Be
Cowboys (duet featuring Mary Lou Lord)
07. The Game
08. My Beloved
09. There's A Change
10. Bye For Now
10. Bye For Now
“[Sara] displays an affection for folk-flavored power-pop
and girl-group stylings with orchestral sweep, and, as diarist/storyteller,
Radle falls somewhere between Jenny Lewis and Juliana Hatfield.”
- Buzzbands.LA
“The mix of folk, rustica, and otherwise with pop work
well to ensure Radle’s Four intertwines the episodic and personal with fairly
bright and sunny results no matter the subject.” - Parasites &
Sycophants
“Four is a showcase for her clear, pretty voice on pop
songs with lush string arrangements and a hint of ‘60s girl-group panache...
Rilo Kiley fans will find plenty to love here.”
- Listen, Damnit
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