News & Press

  • Laura Heaberlin featured on new Hank Midnight EP

    Laura Heaberlin is featured on “River Song” and “Tilting” off of Hank Midnight’s new album “Arps and Hilltops”. Check out

  • New Music from Kimaya Diggs: Everything Is Not Lost

    Just as we were on the verge of hopelessness, Kimaya Diggs releases summer bop, “Everything Is Not Lost”! Stream or buy wherever your stream and buy!

  • Cricket Blue releases Corn King Video

    Cricket Blue (including our Laura Heaberlin) celebrated their 10 year band anniversary with an epic 13 minute long, fully-orchestrated song “Corn King”

  • Rachel Sumner's Music Video for New Single "3000 Miles"

    Wanderlust and desert dust are the cornerstones of "3000 Miles" - the final single before the 10-song album Heartless Things comes out on May 10th.

  • Sadie Gustafson-Zook releases stripped down album, "Where I Wanna Be"

    On Sadie’s most recent album “Where I Wanna Be” (May, 2024), Sadie takes the listener along on an intimate analog-recorded journey as she decides where to call home.

  • Brittany Ann Tranbaugh & Sadie Gustafson-Zook take on the Midwest with a May co-bill tour

    Come see Brittany and Sadie play solo sets and some hot hot covers during their tour of the Midwest, including shows in Chicago, Milwaukee, Madison, Minneapolis, Ann Arbor, and more!

  • Liv Greene to open for Sarah Jarosz on "Polaroid Lovers Tour"

    Liv Greene will be opening for Sarah Jarosz on her upcoming 2024 spring tour titled “Polaroid Lovers.” Greene will be the supporting act for shows in Texas, New Mexico, and Missouri.

  • Vermont folk musician Laura Heaberlin made a surprise appearance on the December 18 episode of "The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon."

    Heaberlin, one-half of the Burlington-based indie folk duo Cricket Blue, was selected from the audience to participate in a segment called “Battle of the Instant Songwriters.”

  • Kimaya Diggs builds bridges playing at county jail

    “Every now and then I get invited to play music at the county jail. Sometimes my audience is a self-selecting group that meets in the jail library. Sometimes I play in a unit. I always feel weird about playing in a living unit because it's a literally captive audience -- I'm entering someone else's living space and taking over all the airwaves whether they want me there or not.” Read more at Kimaya’s instagram.

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