Tag Amy Poehler’s Smart Girls

Check out Nora Jane’s interview and feature on Amy Poehler’s Smart Girls!

“Nora Jane is entirely and unequivocally herself, and wants to encourage you to do the same, ‘…spend time doing whatever it is that makes you feel like there are sparks bouncing around your sternum,’ she says.  In other words, pull a “Struthers”, follow your heart, and never look back.”

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NPR’s Songs We Love

Nora Jane Struthers is guided by fire. …  Struthers has poured more and more emotion into her songwriting, coming up with some of the most quietly powerful narratives within the new wave of Americana artists.”

NPR’s Fresh Air With Terry Gross

NPR’s Ken Tucker, Pop Music Critic for Fresh Air with Terry Gross, reviewed Wake on Fresh Air’s March 4, 2015 show, praising the album’s “rock ‘n’ roll force and forthrightness,” calling ‘Wake‘ an “awakening about who [Nora Jane] is, what she wants to do, and how she wants to sound” and saying she lives up to being named after Nora Charles and Jane Austen.

Among the highlights is an examination of “Let Go,” which Ken Tucker calls “an anthem of self-definition” and says is “about the roles women play throughout their lives to fulfill certain expectations [with] Struthers pushing back… you wouldn’t expect anything less from a rock ‘n’ roller.” In his post-broadcast Tweet, Fresh Air’s Ken Tucker called the album “excellent, alert, and sharp-tongued.”

American Songwriter

“Nora Jane’s best [album] to date. . ..  Struthers’ third record is brimming and bursting with life, with lessons learned and love discovered.  With its immediately comforting blend of ’90s alt country, roadhouse blues, rootsy power pop, and straightforward honky-tonk, the album sounds, at various points, like early Neko Case, the Jayhawks, and, most strikingly, Kathleen Edwards. . ..  She’s crafted a carefully considered 11-song sequence that presents one of the most unabashedly celebratory suites of songs about being newly in love (“When I Wake,” “Mistake,” “Lovin’ You”) in recent memory, only to spend most of side-two in a state of hungover reckoning (“The Wire,” “Let Go.”), interrogating the easy, conclusive joy of fresh romance.

Amy Poehler’s Smart Girls at the Party

“Nora Jane is entirely and unequivocally herself, and wants to encourage you to do the same, “…spend time doing whatever it is that makes you feel like there are sparks bouncing around your sternum,’ she says.  In other words, pull a “Struthers”, follow your heart, and never look back.”

Chicago Sun-Times

“Wake” [is] a collection of songs that adds more momentum to her profile as a rising star on the Americana scene.

Nashville Scene

(Reviewing “Let Go”) — “The song, a roots-y anthem of empowerment, explores the reasons behind the choices women make throughout their lives — standing up taller to fit in with the boys, listening to the “right” kinds of music, etc. — while ultimately recognizing it’s all bullshit and the real power comes from shrugging off those expectations. With any luck, this cut will kick the tired bro-country genre a step closer to its grave.”

(Reviewing “Wake”) — Struthers has undergone one of the more fascinating transformations in contemporary roots music.  [Struthers is a] fiercely intelligent, put-together, independent woman .. ..” 

Elmore Magazine

“With their Americana and bluegrass roots and several songs (dare I say) worthy of top 40 country airplay, my prediction is that this may be the breakout band of 2015.  If Nora Jane Struthers & the Party Line is coming to your town, I suggest you catch them, because the party has indeed started.”

Boston Globe

“[Wake] brings to full fruition what her preceding record hinted at, a move from the acoustic-bluegrassy mix where she started to a more electric, diverse, aggressive brand of music. The change suits her well.”

Rolling Stone Country

(Stephen L. Betts, Reviewing “Let Go”) — “Just as her intensely energetic live performances connect audiences to the intricate tales woven through her lyrics, the ever-widening scope of Nora Jane Struthers’ musicality means that placing a neat, easy label on the genre she best represents is virtually impossible. … Whether the musical background is steeped in old-time folk or bluegrass, as much of her previous work have been, or, like Wake, boasts a more evolved blend of roots and rock with plenty of fiddle and steel guitar, Struthers’ lyrical vulnerability is matched by her growing confidence as a performer.”

AllMusic

Wake, the upcoming new album from Nora Jane Struthers, is a confident collection of songs that shows the singer and songwriter putting a modern spin on traditional Americana sounds.”

No Depression

“…the lyrical vulnerability comes straight from Struthers’ profound musical well, which has only gotten deeper in the two years since Carnival.”

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Falling in love is as good a reason as any other to let loose creatively, and it seems to have freed Struthers to put more of herself, and more of a wide-open heart’s feelings, into her latest collection of strong roots- and country-rock songs.

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