Kim Richey Date: May 16, 2026 Time:8:00 PM Ticket Price: $30 advance
/ $35 day of show Kim Richey's Website Bio: In January 2024, Kim
Richey found herself in Mexico, gazing out at a sea of people singing
along to “I’m Alright,” one of her classic tracks. The three
folks on stage with the veteran, Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter
were also raising their voices in harmony. To her right sat Brandi
Carlile, to her left, Mary Chapin Carpenter, and Brandy Clark. The
formidable foursome was participating in a songwriter’s round only
half-jokingly dubbed “Titans of Americana” at Carlile’s
female-forward Girls Just Wanna Weekend festival on the Riviera Maya
in Mexico. “That was nuts looking out and seeing everybody
arm-waving and singing along,” says Richey, still both incredulous
and cheered by the memory of performing with that supergroup and later
appearing alongside other Girls Just Wanna Weekend-ers Annie Lennox,
Lucius, Allison Russell, and Sarah McLachlan among others. “It was
just like, ‘wow’!” The good news for fans of this particular
Titan is there was soon to be a whole new batch of songs to sing along
with and arm wave to with the release of her 10th studio
album Every New Beginning in May 2024. The album features 10
tracks, written, or co-written by Richey with a coterie of characters,
over the course of several years, and produced by critically lauded
multi-instrumentalist and producer Doug Lancio (Patty Griffin, John
Hiatt). It was recorded at Skinny Elephant studio in Nashville with
engineer Dylan Alldredge in August 2023 with musical assistance from
longtime collaborators like Dan Mitchell and Neilson Hubbard — who
produced Richey’s 2013 album Thorn in My Heart — and newer
friends like Nashville neighbor Aaron Lee Tasjan, who lends his
irrepressibly sparkly musicality to the proceedings. Every New
Beginning manages to continue the throughline of Richey’s nearly
30-year career while simultaneously adding a new chapter. The songs
represent the full spectrum of the Ohio native’s gifts as both a
revered songwriter who can leap from melancholy to mirthful in a
single couplet — whose songs have been recorded by the likes of
Brooks and Dunn, Patty Loveless, and Mary Chapin Carpenter — and
owner of one of music’s truly celestial voices. That voice, which
Brandi Carlile has cited as formative in crafting her own style, is a
widely sought after harmony instrument and has been featured on scores
of albums including Jason Isbell’s acclaimed Southeastern, Trisha
Yearwood’s Everybody Knows, Heartbreaker by Ryan Adams, Reba
McEntire’s Starting Over, and Has Been by Capt. Kirk himself
William Shatner, among many others. Richey’s music continues to
loiter at the Americana intersection of country, folk, pop, and rock
conjuring everything from Lucinda’s humanity, the Beatles shimmer,
Tom Petty’s effervescent stomp and Joni Mitchell’s laser-sharp
lyrical craft. Given that Richey’s previous release was
2020’s Long Way Back… the Songs of Glimmer, an intimate
reimagining of her acclaimed 1999 album, Every New Beginning is an
apt title for the new album. It sprang from something Richey heard
in the 2023 documentary King Coal. “It was really great,” she
says of the meditative examination of the cultural legacy of the coal
industry. “A little girl narrates the film, and it starts out with a
funeral procession, and she says, ‘My dad used to say every new
beginning starts with an end.’ And I was like, ‘I’ll have that.
Thank you very much.’ And now it’s the name of my record and what
this record means to me.” For now, Richey only knows a few things
for sure. One is it feels good to be considered a Titan — when peers
like Carpenter, spiritual heirs like Carlile and Clark, and vocal
acolytes like Isbell, among many others, sing her praises, she says,
“It’s really nice. You can’t beat it, really.” The other is
that with Every New Beginning Richey is still striving for the same
goal she had at the beginning of her own musical life: “Whenever I
write a song, the thing that I enjoy the most is when someone hears a
song or a line and says, ‘That’s how I feel.’” As long as
the music is connecting, there is no end.
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15/12/2025 Last update