
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Adia Victoria hails from Spartanburg, South Carolina, informally known as “The Upstate” just a few miles down Highway 9 from the trucks hurtling along Interstate 85 between Charlotte, North Carolina and Atlanta, Georgia to the south. This geographical background heavily informs her music, which is often referred to as “gothic blues” and takes inspiration from Black blues artists like Robert Johnson, Skip James, John Lee Hooker, Junior Kimbrough, and RL Burnside.
For Live on KEXP, Troy Nelson maps her physical journey from South Carolina to New York to Atlanta as well as her musical journey from early loves The Strokes and The Black Keys to ending up working with founding member of another well-known “The” band, Aaron Dessner, on her latest full-length, 2019’s ‘Silences.' Telling Dessner she wanted the record to sound like, “Billie Holiday got lost in a Radiohead song,” the album is a dense and expansive expression of the blues in the hands of a creatively independent woman of color unafraid to explore.
Recorded 03/12/2019.
Watch the full Live on KEXP session on YouTube
Support the show: https://www.kexp.org/donate
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
By KEXP4.5
343343 ratings
Adia Victoria hails from Spartanburg, South Carolina, informally known as “The Upstate” just a few miles down Highway 9 from the trucks hurtling along Interstate 85 between Charlotte, North Carolina and Atlanta, Georgia to the south. This geographical background heavily informs her music, which is often referred to as “gothic blues” and takes inspiration from Black blues artists like Robert Johnson, Skip James, John Lee Hooker, Junior Kimbrough, and RL Burnside.
For Live on KEXP, Troy Nelson maps her physical journey from South Carolina to New York to Atlanta as well as her musical journey from early loves The Strokes and The Black Keys to ending up working with founding member of another well-known “The” band, Aaron Dessner, on her latest full-length, 2019’s ‘Silences.' Telling Dessner she wanted the record to sound like, “Billie Holiday got lost in a Radiohead song,” the album is a dense and expansive expression of the blues in the hands of a creatively independent woman of color unafraid to explore.
Recorded 03/12/2019.
Watch the full Live on KEXP session on YouTube
Support the show: https://www.kexp.org/donate
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

38,430 Listeners

38,950 Listeners

26,242 Listeners

6,007 Listeners

3,152 Listeners

1,059 Listeners

1,973 Listeners

1,674 Listeners

7,714 Listeners

3,928 Listeners

6,467 Listeners

2,618 Listeners

567 Listeners

13 Listeners

13 Listeners

4,120 Listeners

532 Listeners

10,883 Listeners