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Nothing Is Okay

The Everybodyfields

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Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download songs from The Everybodyfields

  Name Artist Time Price  
1 Aeroplane The Everybodyfields 3:27 $0.99 View In iTunes
2 Lonley Anywhere The Everybodyfields 5:45 $0.99 View In iTunes
3 Don't Turn Around The Everybodyfields 3:17 $0.99 View In iTunes
4 Leaving Today The Everybodyfields 2:53 $0.99 View In iTunes
5 Be Miner The Everybodyfields 3:40 $0.99 View In iTunes
6 Savior The Everybodyfields 3:17 $0.99 View In iTunes
7 Birthday The Everybodyfields 2:52 $0.99 View In iTunes
8 Wasted Time The Everybodyfields 4:09 $0.99 View In iTunes
9 Everything Is Okay The Everybodyfields 2:37 $0.99 View In iTunes
10 Tuesday The Everybodyfields 3:04 $0.99 View In iTunes
11 Over and Done The Everybodyfields 4:06 $0.99 View In iTunes
12 Out On the Highway The Everybodyfields 13:17 Album Only View In iTunes

Album Review

"Sad songs say so much," sang Elton John in a moment of alliterative clarity and the Everybodyfields take his sentiments to heart. The title of the duo's third release, and first without dobro playing founder David Richey, evokes the melancholy within. The sound concentrates on singer/songwriters Jill Andrews and Sam Quinn's moody, often dark but oddly uplifting country-folk. Occasional fiddle and lap steel enhance the vibe but it's the achingly beautiful tunes that resonate with the subtle authority of a band that has refined its approach. "Lonely Anywhere," a lovely ballad sung by Andrews with teary intensity, is as moving as anything in Emmylou Harris' catalog, and Quinn's harmonizing can't help but add a dollop of Gram Parsons styled dewy sentimentality to the atmosphere. The combination of the two leads you to imagine what Harris and Parsons might have produced if the latter hadn't crashed and burned at such a young age. The glum, often mournful vibe never becomes overwhelming because the strength of the melodies and vocals remains compelling and even deepens over the course of the 45-minute running time. The production is sparse enough to amplify the mood but isn't afraid to use dynamics to build the music to occasional crescendos that make the songs' expressive core even more powerful. The album's title is a play on the track "Everything Is Okay," an epic that is the set's emotionally stirring centerpiece. Clearly everything is not OK at all in the Everybodyfields' world, but that doesn't make the group's music any less thrilling. Surely this isn't for parties, unless it's a pity party, yet there is a calming poignancy generated by the combination of gorgeous harmonies and exquisite songs that is hypnotic and quietly captivating.

Recent Customer Reviews

What Could Have Been
     
by J.W.H.

Do the means justify the end? With all their lyrics about heartache, despair and unreciprocated love, is it any wonder that I just heard the news that Jill and Sam broke up the Everybodyfields? I have no idea what actually took place, but it is a shame. Nothing Is Ok is the Americana answer to Fleetwood Mac’s Rumors. Believe that. While their ambition may not have aimed them quite as high, as Lindsey and Stevie, make no mistake; the jealousy, tension and tenderness, in both works, were deeply felt from the same exact corner of the human experience. Listen to Wasted Time and Everything Is Ok and tell me I am wrong. The music is right on the money throughout this album as well. The lilting melodies are just as melancholy as the lyrics. For the uninitiated it may seem like Sam is a little too “quirky” and Jill is a little to “down to earth” on this album. Like two artists pulling apart from the middle. Yet, that is what made them so good on songs like Leaving Today. It was the vocal interplay from two incredibly diverse voices that made that meeting in the middle so transcendent. Aeroplane hints at an Everybodyfields that could have matured into an even more evolved band. But, alas, we won’t get to find out. In my opinion, there has never been a better album about breakups and breakdowns that Rumors. Nothing Is OK comes pretty darn close. Too bad these guys didn’t stick around long enough to take aim at that masterwork one more time.

Over and Done
     
by ndo79

I think this is the best short lived band I have ever heard. I love everything about the everybodyfields and just wanted to say I am really bummed out that they are calling it quits. I know they will all continue to make great music but I look forward to a reunion.

Appalachian Revival
     
by mountainjunco

Wonderful to see great music coming out of the mountains again. If you like Whiskeytown, you should enjoy these guys. Sam Quinn's voice is sounds a bit like Ryan Adams and Jill Andrews a bit like Kelly Willis. Beautiful lyrics and songwriting, traditional acoustic music. Out on the Highway is my favorite song, so get the whole album and support them. This is right up my alley and glad to have found these guys. I live in montana now, and this album brings my heart back to the smokies.

Biography

Formed: 1999 in Johnson City, TN

Genre: Contemporary Singer/Songwriter

Years Active:

Embracing a sound and style that combines the high lonesome mood of traditional country with the edgy emotional energy of contemporary alt-country, the Everybodyfields are an acoustic-based act from Johnson City, TN, anchored by singers and multi-instrumentalists Jill Andrews and Sam Quinn. Describing...
Full Bio

Customer Ratings

     
31 Ratings

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