2013-01-28 19:43:44 -
NASHVILLE, TN -- (Marketwire) -- 01/28/13 -- Those grooving and singing along to
JT Spangler's ( www.jtspangler.com :
ctt.marketwire.com/?release=979021&id=2532187&type=1& .. ) infectious ten-track pop/soul excursion
What's A Little Heartbreak (due out March 2013) and want to ask him about those classic R&B influences and how he got those horns to sound so cool might have a hard time reaching him on his cell.
No worries -- he's probably just chilling in his treehouse, finding fresh new inspiration for his songs and other writing endeavors miles away from civilization. Not a metaphorical treehouse, but the real deal -- an approximately 150 square-foot sustainable housing unit suspended 12 feet high in an elm tree in
Southwest Tennessee.
The
Louisiana-born singer, who moved to
Nashville in
2012 after launching his career in
Los Angeles, is a modern day musical version of
19th Century author and naturalist
Henry David Thoreau. Seeking a quiet, peaceful place to recharge his creative and spiritual batteries, Spangler found his literal and proverbial
"Walden" a few hours outside of
Music City, where he recorded What's a Little Heartbreak with some of Nashville's top session cats including guitarist
Gary Burnette (
Etta James, Taylor Swift, Chris Tomlin) and keyboardist
Tim Lauer (
Brad Paisley, The Band Perry, Brooks & Dunn).
The album, Spangler's first full-length release after establishing himself as a popular recording and touring DIY artist via the EPs
Love Songs For No One (2007),
The Vienna Circle Sessions (2009) and
Songs for the Holidays (2010), was produced by
Stephen Gause, a former top touring tech for Contemporary Christian greats like
Michael W. Smith and
Steven Curtis Chapman who has produced, mixed, and engineered for hundreds of country artists and singer songwriters. Gause's studio credits include
Kathy Mattea, Nathan Angelo and
Derek Stroker.
Growing up in a musical family in
Hammond, Louisiana, just across
Lake Pontchartrain from
New Orleans, he didn't hear the typical zydeco or jazz associated with the region -- but he was a huge fan of
Motown, Stevie Wonder, Michael Jackson and '90s pop/soul stars
Brian McKnight, Boyz II Men and
Babyface. Another obvious influence on his first acoustic recordings is
James Taylor.
Image Available:
www2.marketwire.com/mw/frame_mw?attachid=2212670 :
www2.marketwire.com/mw/frame_mw?attachid=2212670
Contact:
Chrissy Sutphin
LUCK Media & Marketing
818-232-4175