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There’s a kind of record that feels less like a collection of songs and more like a conversation with a trusted old friend — honest, unhurried, soulful. Turning Magic On Its Heels, the latest full-length from Atlanta’s own Graham and The Band Upstairs, is exactly that. It’s a record that, in the best tradition of Americana’s great storytellers, captures life’s tender, restless, and triumphant moments with disarming clarity and warmth.
Led by singer-songwriter Graham Waldrop, the band has long been a beloved fixture of the Southern Americana scene. With this record, they’ve delivered what feels like the culmination of years of playing smoky bars, front porches, and late-night festival stages — a collection of songs that wear their influences proudly while forging a distinctly personal identity.
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33 ratings
There’s a kind of record that feels less like a collection of songs and more like a conversation with a trusted old friend — honest, unhurried, soulful. Turning Magic On Its Heels, the latest full-length from Atlanta’s own Graham and The Band Upstairs, is exactly that. It’s a record that, in the best tradition of Americana’s great storytellers, captures life’s tender, restless, and triumphant moments with disarming clarity and warmth.
Led by singer-songwriter Graham Waldrop, the band has long been a beloved fixture of the Southern Americana scene. With this record, they’ve delivered what feels like the culmination of years of playing smoky bars, front porches, and late-night festival stages — a collection of songs that wear their influences proudly while forging a distinctly personal identity.