Los Angeles-based singer Sam Burton has shared a new song + video for “I Don’t Blame You,” taken from his upcoming album ‘Dear Departed’ (out July 14th via Partisan).
Subtle fingerpicking drifts through time and space, ultimately resolving into a cinematic climax of strings, angelic backing vocals, and cymbal crashes – anchored as always by Sam’s velvet-lined vocals. Throughout the song + video, Burton finds beauty in wandering, using the journey itself as a means of self-discovery and rebirth.
Burton says: “This song was one that stuck out to me when I was writing the songs for this record. I felt like I found a hypnotic rhythm that transported me and it felt inspired by the landscape that I was staying in. I started to see imagery in my mind and I tried to capture the spirit of it. This song brings me back to that place in Northern California and makes me see the forest and the rivers. I think it’s so important for a writer to have an inner world they can go back to to reconnect with themselves and this song revealed that place to me.”
Burton has also confirmed a run of UK dates including a performance at End of the Road Festival, full routing below. In the last year Burton has toured with Loving, Jose Gonzalez, Weyes Blood, and Indigo Sparke, and In January he completed a three-week residency at LA club TeeGee. His next UK dates are as follows:
SAM BURTON UK LIVE DATES
31/08/23 – 03/09/23: End of The Road Festival / Dorset / UK
12/09/23 – Gullivers / Manchester / UK
13/09/23 – St Pancras Old Church / London / UK
14/09/23 – Crofters Rights / Bristol / UK
Tickets on sale now
His upcoming album ‘Dear Departed’ was produced by Jonathan Wilson (Angel Olsen, Father John Misty, Margo Price), and recorded at Wilson’s Topanga Canyon studio with some of the best studio players in LA. From the production to the performances to Burton’s core compositions, there’s a timelessness across its ten songs. Together with Wilson, Burton is able to achieve a sound that never descends into retro pastiche, but rather becomes an evocative echo, a dream of the past. Like Sam and his band are crammed onto the corner stage of a smoke-filled bar in a long-lost time. Recalling a modern-day Campbell, Orbison, or Nilsson, the album showcases Burton’s inherent knack for mining pure Laurel Canyon AM gold. In scope, the music finds Burton using a far bigger canvas than on his acclaimed 2020 debut ‘I Can Go With You,’ giving the emotions therein a new sense of urgency and intensity.
“I Don’t Blame You” follows previous album highlights “Long Way Around” and “Maria”.
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