
| Special Show for MTV's The Buried Life & TWLOHA on Friday 8/6! August 5, 2010 | ||
| Mat Kearney will perform a free show at Hill Theater in Rochester, Minnesota, on Friday August 6th for MTV's The Buried Life and To Write Love On Her Arms. Details below. For more information click here. Hill Theater at Rochester Community and Technical College 851 30th Ave SE Rochester, MN 55904 Event is FREE / Open to All Ages. Doors at 7:15 / Event at 8:00 Join us for a very special night!! | ||
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| Mat Kearney to play Nashville's historic Ryman Auditorium July 21, 2010 | ||
| On October 13th, Mat Kearney returns to Nashville to play the historic Ryman Auditorium with Michael Franti. Since opening it's doors in 1892, some of the biggest acts in music have graced this stage and Mat is honored to join that list. | ||
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| Mat Kearney Announces Summer Acoustic Tour! May 12, 2010 | ||
| Mat Kearney is spending this summer getting back to his roots and doing a road trip style tour with just a guitar, some friends, and his trusty van. Check out the dates in his tour section to see if he's coming to your town. | ||
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| Mat Kearney & Ingrid Michaelson Co-Headline Tour Starts Tomorrow! March 8, 2010 | ||
| Mat Kearney is hitting the road with Ingrid Michaelson for their co-headlining tour kicking off tomorrow in Lancaster, PA at the Chameleon! Check out the dates in the tour section to see if they're coming to your town, and make sure to visit the tour blog for future updates! | ||
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| 'Live at the Fillmore San Francisco' Available Now on iTunes! February 23, 2010 | ||
Available now only on iTunes!![]() The show was recorded November 5th, 2009, just a few months after the release of his second full-length studio album. This concert features "Closer To Love," the hit debut single from City of Black & White, along with fan favorites like "Undeniable," "Nothing Left to Lose" and "All I Need." Live at the Fillmore San Francisco serves as a symbol of Mat Kearney's visceral impact as a live performer and the awe-inspiring connection he has with his fans. | ||
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| Mat Performing at "Help Haiti Live" Benefit Concert February 18, 2010 | ||
| On February 27th Mat will be performing at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville as part of the "Help Haiti Live" Benefit Concert. This event will benefit Compassion International's Haiti disaster relief fund. For more information and to purchase tickets please visit www.ryman.com. | ||
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| September 2010 | ||
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| October 2010 | ||
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When you record the type of smart, catchy songs Mat Kearney cut for his 2006 album Nothing Left to Lose, you end up spending a lot of time on the road. And after that album’s title track throttled up the charts, that’s exactly what Kearney did. Three years later, he returns with City of Black & White, an album informed by the traveling, performing and adventuring the Oregon-born, Nashville-based singer did while supporting his breakthrough album. An open-hearted album of self-discovery, City of Black & White is a chronicle of the people he met and missed during that journey. Musically, it’s an upping of the ante, laced with hooks and rhythms that are meant to sneak up on you quietly and quickly, en route to winning your love.
If Nothing Left to Lose sent Kearney on a marathon tour—during which he opened treks for the likes of John Mayer, Sheryl Crow, and The Fray, in between his own headline stints—it also built up to an eventual happy return to Nashville, his home for the past eight years. And City of Black & White definitely reflects that, as it’s marked by the pride and happiness that comes with spending five years trying to make it, and then finally getting there.
“At its core, this record is about community—finding it and losing it,” he says. “There’s definitely the theme of this traveling/sojourner/vagabond kind of guy landing in the midst of people that he loves, and who love him—guy/girl, musician, old people, all of that. It feels as if the traveling sojourner of Nothing Left to Lose has found a home, a group of companions, and a love. Many of the songs deal with what happens after that—after someone digs roots, allows himself to fall in love, to clasp arms with a brother, to dig in through high moments as well as the painful ones. It speaks of vulnerability more than distance—a place where someone can be pinned down to perseverance and heartbreak.”
Co-produced by Kearney and Nothing Left to Lose helmsman Robert Marvin, and recorded last year at Blackbird Studios in Nashville—where Jack White and Martina McBride and even Nicole Kidman were working in neighboring rooms—the album finds Kearney going for a bigger sound—and getting it.
“It actually ended up sounding bigger than I expected; big in a late-‘80s/epic kind of way. I knew that I wanted the whole record to feel good when I put it on. I wanted the drums and bass to demand something of your body, I wanted the songs to come to life when I played them live. I had been listening to a lot of Sam Cooke and I wanted the rhythm sections to make your head bob before you could decide if you liked the songs…I literally approached every song like I wanted it to feel good.”
The whole first half of City of Black & White, specifically, was written in that manner—to carry a Motown sort of heartbeat. “I was also listening to a lot of early U2 and Tom Petty, and songwriters like Randy Newman to try to figure out how they could be so concise and profound at the same time. If the last record was more stream-of-consciousness with lots of words and images, City of Black & White feels intentional and refined, attempting to be classic as well as grandiose. I didn’t want to hold anything back.”
City of Black & White also features Kearney playing a lot more electric guitar on record than he has in the past. In addition to acoustic and electric guitars, he plays “a lot of keys, sleepy ‘70s piano, weird synth, this weird glockenspiel, and the bells with a screwdriver—because I couldn’t find anything else to play ‘em with.”
A quintessential late-bloomer to music, Kearney didn’t write his first song until midway through college. Raised by hippie parents in Oregon, he was charmed early on by music, smitten with albums like Michael Jackson’s Thriller and Paul Simon’s Graceland. But it wasn’t until the summer between his junior and senior year at California State University Chico that his musical life began. Splitting for Nashville, he slept on a friend’s couch for what seemed like an eternity, before cutting the learn-as-you-go debut album Bullet in 2004. Three years later, and thanks in large part to VH1—which kept “Nothing Left to Lose” in rotation for 45 consecutive weeks, before sending Kearney out as the headliner of the channel’s first You Oughta Know tour—he was playing Madison Square Garden and appearing on The Late Show With David Letterman. “Nothing Left to Lose,” “Undeniable” and “Breathe In Breathe Out” all cracked the Top 40.
“It still feels surreal every night,” says Kearney. “I feel like I may be fooling someone, like the audience is going to one day prove to be all cardboard cutouts or something. I’m so grateful and honored to be doing what I’m doing.”
www.matkearney.com
www.columbiarecords.com
www.awarerecords.com

Management
A-Squared Management
624 Davis St., 2nd Floor
Evanston, IL 60201
847.424.2000
awareinfo@awaremusic.com
Booking:
CAA
3310 West End Ave., 5th Fl.
Nashville, TN 37203
615.383.8787
www.caatouring.com

















