Featured Album

WXPN Radio

The premier guide for new and significant artists in rock, blues, and folk - including NPR-syndicated World Cafe ®

Listen Xpo

24/7 Musical discovery. A unique mix of emerging and heritage blues, rock, world, folk, and alt-country artists.

Singer Songwriter Radio

Featuring classics from heritage troubadours to new musicians and bands in the singer-songwriter tradition.

Folk Radio

Folk music radio streaming on the web; Americana, Roots Music, recordings, and stories from folk's best.
Listen Live

Josh Ritter - Hello Starling - Signature Sound

An understated gem, Josh Ritter’s second album Hello Starling is an album not to be missed this year.

First listens to this Idaho-born singer-songwriter will reveal touchstones as familiar as Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, even Tim Hardin.
Since his come-uppance at the legendary Boston folk club Club Passim, Josh has been the rage of the folk scene including recognition from Joan Baez who covered Ritter’s song “Wings” on her latest album; a recent Best New Male Singer-Songwriter award at the Boston Music Awards; and a stunningly acclaimed debut at the 2002 Newport Folk Festival.

However putting the young Ritter in the folksinger category does him an injustice. He’s a singer-songwriter with a gentle touch, a unique yet familiar sense of melody, and a way with lyrics that puts him in a category of a young Paul Simon or John Prine. And often recalls Cat Stevens on his classic “Tea For Tillerman.”

Hello Starling is a collection of 11 songs recorded in 14 days in a barn in France, and recorded on much of Curtis Mayfield’s vintage recording gear. The album is disarmingly honest and simple, yet finds its strength in Ritter’s confidence, highly literate stories, and well crafted song structures. The upbeat tunes like “Kathleen,” “Snow Is Gone,” and “Man Burning,” show Ritter’s potential for greatness like Bruce Springsteen on his album “Tunnel of Love.” And on the most pensive tracks, like “Baby That’s Not All,” “Bone of Song,” and “You Don’t Make It Easy Babe,” Ritter reveals songs as colorful as blood on the tracks and as wise as the songwriting icons he has been compared to.

Written by Bruce Warren

Visit Artist's Official Site

Buy it now at our CD Store

Check out our other Featured Albums of the Week

Help Support WXPN

The Swollen Fox is celebrating its 3-year anniversary at PhilaMOCA on 7/11

The Swollen Fox has announced a special 3-year anniversary concert at PhilaMOCA on July 11th with TJ Kong & the Atomic Bomb, Swift...Read More

Watch Tin Bird Choir perform WXPN’s lunchtime buskers’ series at The Porch at 30th Street...

The Chester County-based folk group Tin Bird Choir performed in a stripped down two-piece configuration for this weeks’...Read More

Contest: Win a pair of tickets to see Patty Griffin at The Kimmel Center on June 6th

Grammy-winning and critically revered American folk performer Patty Griffin makes a Philadelphia appearance next month, headlining...Read More

Listen to Grande Marshall’s Daytrotter session

This tasty new set tripped down the Daytrotter wire today; backed by a DJ and a handy cache of moody, evocative beats, up-and-coming...Read More

Listen to a new Edward Sharpe and The Magnetic Zeros song, “Better Days” (playing XPoNential Music Festival in...

Photo by Joseph Schell Photography https://www.facebook.com/pages/Joseph-Schell-Photography/106691849363906 Edward Sharpe and the...Read More