Sam Morrow

  • Just announced
  • Tuesday | 21.07.26
  • 7.30pm
  • Band on the Wall, Manchester

Sam Morrow spent years knocking on doors that wouldn’t budge, walking through ones that led nowhere, and closing others behind him. On his newestrecord, Southern Boogie, he’s slammed the door shut on the Americana palate that defined his previous trilogyof releasesand kicked open a new one. A cross-country move, change of perspective, and fresh outlook on life were catalysts that also steered Morrow to cross the threshold on a new sound.

Make no mistake, that’s exactly what Southern Boogierepresents—raw, Texas-bred southern rock that sounds exactly like what it is: Sam Morrow, confidently evolving.”Doors opening and closing is definitely a constanttheme of the record,” Morrow says. “It’s not only ending of a relationship, and a change of location, but my life was completely changing.”For years, Morrow has made records shaped by a period spent trying to reinvent himself in Californiaand partially inspired by the new neighbors he suddenly found himself surrounded by. His earlier albums —Concrete & Mud, Gettin’ By On Gettin’ Down, and On The Ride Here—earned praise from NPRand Rolling Stonefor their swampy blend of country funk, and roadhouse blues. And while those records were a huge part of his life. They also lined up to a time and place that he was leaving behind. Southern Boogieis what happens when you shed expectations. Recorded mostly live, in Austin, with producer Jonathan Tyler, the sessions were stripped-down and analog: two guitars, bass, keys, drums.

All tube amps. No click track. No safety net.”Jonathan got it before I even explained it,” Morrow says. “We just wanted it to sound gritty and raw. Like a band in a room, because that’s what it is.”The result is unapologetically guitar driven. Straight-ahead southern rock with a Texas backbone —ZZ Top’s grit and groove without trying to sound like anyone but himself.That brand of honesty didn’t come easy. The last few years brought its share of hard resets.

After over a decade in Los Angeles, Morrow felt something pulling him away. It wasn’t just the expense or the grind of touring from the West Coast. It was deeper than that.”I just knew I didn’t want to be there anymore,” Morrow explains. “Both careerwise and personally it felt like a smart move.”Relocating to Nashville gave him clarity. He’s happier now. More grounded. The restless energy that defined his earlier work has given way to something looser, more self-assured.

Artists on stage: 8.00pm
Curfew: 11.00pm
Stage: The Copper Bar
Audience: Standing

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