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Nathaniel rateliff album cover
Nathaniel rateliff album cover




nathaniel rateliff album cover

“Other people were doing similar stuff at the time, which I was bummed about because we had made the record a year before it came out,” he says. Rateliff says he was initially worried that he’d been seen as an interloper. But I heard it and said, ‘This is really good,’ and a lot of people obviously thought that as well.”Īn early live show in Denver revealed the new material’s potential, and the first Night Sweats album - produced by Swift, who had worked as a musician with the Shins and the Black Keys - landed on Stax, the legendary soul label revived by Concord Music. “He told me he wanted to do this soul band on the side, just for fun,” says James Barone, who’s drummed for Beach House and Tennis and co-produced And It’s Still Alright with Rateliff and Night Sweats drummer Patrick Meese. The material that followed aimed self-consciously for a Southern-soul sound, and before long he had put together the horn-driven Night Sweats. But his new label, Rounder, passed on releasing the follow-up to Memory, and Rateliff was stalled once again.Īt the encouragement of a friend who suggested he cut a single, Rateliff pulled out his guitar one night in 2013 and wrote a song called “Trying So Hard Not to Know.” With it he arrived at a new musical avenue - what he called a merger of the Band and Sam and Dave. Born in the Flood was on the verge of a contract with the metal-oriented Roadrunner label when Rateliff opted instead to make a solo, ballad-heavy record, In Memory of Loss (leading to the breakup of Born in the Flood). Neither band gained much national traction.

nathaniel rateliff album cover

Missouri-born, he moved to Denver in 1998 and was eventually paying his dues with not one but two bands: the alt-rock–ish Born in the Flood and the more acoustic-based the Wheel. It wasn’t even a decade ago when Rateliff was playing unplugged singer-songwriter gigs with far fewer people in the crowd than at the sold-out Beacon Theatre. “If it bombs, maybe I’ll go into ‘Merry Christmas to You.’” “It makes it sound like I’ve got multiple-personality disorder.”Īnd now, starting tonight, he’ll be stage-testing that other side of his musical psyche. When I was younger, I was like, ‘Am I pretending to be somebody else? Is the voice I’m using actually my voice? Or is this a character?’ But it turns out, it’s all still me.” He laughs. “Sometimes I don’t want to be the other one. So who’s the real Rateliff - the torn, sensitive balladeer or the white-soul stomper? “Sometimes I’m definitely the Night Sweats character and sometimes I’m this guy, you know,” he says, a laptop and guitar nearby. It’s nice to be able to just write songs because you’d like the idea of writing songs and being able to work through your own shit.” He always just did what he wanted to do in a world where everything needs to be some sort of commodity for the industry. “That’s what I really love about Harry Nilsson. “I was always drawn to do a record that maybe no one’s going to love, but you do it because it’s important to you,” says Rateliff, who these days looks like a slightly more groomed version of his bearded-woodsman self. What’s nowhere to be heard here is the boisterous energy of the Night Sweats. But the band’s 2015 debut appealed to an audience looking for alternatives to pop, hip-hop, and EDM, and sold more than half a million copies their 2018 follow-up, Tearing at the Seams, did nearly as well.

nathaniel rateliff album cover

The market for a Midwestern soul band fronted by a beefy, behatted guy who looked like Garth Hudson’s son barely seemed to exist at the beginning of the 2010s. One of the most unlikely success stories of the decade that just ended was that of Rateliff and his band, the Night Sweats. “He was like, ‘Can’t wait to see all you guys,’” Rateliff says in his hotel room a few hours before the show. But it was a member of Yola’s band who made Rateliff realize what he had gotten himself into. He’s not rattled by the Christmas-themed benefit or the starry bill, which includes Mavis Staples, Mumford and Sons, and Yola. It rarely happens, but a few hours before he’s set to walk onstage at New York’s Beacon Theatre in early December, Nathaniel Rateliff is getting a little nervous.






Nathaniel rateliff album cover