Alex Cameron has always been a great storyteller, finding his ways into the depths of the places where not many others are looking, and Oxy Music continues on that trajectory. It’s filled with stories of people who fall outside the system and exist in the grey areas of life.
Absence makes the heart grow fonder, and Saskatchewan-born singer-songwriter Colter Wall learned the feeling well after spending so much time on the road. “Wherever I wander, wherever I stray/The rustle of the wheat fields starts calling my name,” he sings on “Plain to See Plainsman,” his rich baritone echoing the song’s strolling bassline. His sophomore album spins that homesickness into tribute. Produced by Nashville’s Dave Cobb, and featuring harmonica from Willie Nelson’s longtime collaborator Mickey Raphael and pedal steel guitar from Lloyd Green, Songs of the Plains situates the Canadian troubadour alongside Southern brethren like Jason Isbell, Sturgill Simpson, and Chris Stapleton. As Wall tells it, Western isn’t a direction so much as a state of mind.
Lloyd Singer n'est qu'un chef comptable au FBI, pas un agent de terrain ! Impliqué malgré lui dans une sordide affaire, il va pourtant tout tenter pour sauver une jeune femme et sa petite fille d'un terrible réseau de prostitution. Et son engagement sera total… Avec ce redoutable scénario, Luc Brunschwig va au-delà de la simple prise de conscience, car la dimension humaine de ses personnages est particulièrement vivante : faite de méandres, d'hésitations et de remords.