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Photographer: Chad Cochran
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 SHORT BIO

JAIMEE HARRIS

“The Next Queen of Americana-Folk” (NPR)

The Congress House Sessions

On the heels of acclaimed debut Red Rescue, Jaimee Harris doesn’t disappoint with The Congress House Sessions, an intimate EP with stripped-down arrangements of selected songs.  Recorded at the Congress House Studio by Mark Hallman (Carole King, Ani DiFranco) and Andre Moran (Sarah Borges, Rickie Lee Jones) and featuring Jane Ellen Bryant and Kris Nelson on backing vocals, Ray Bonneville on harmonica, Brian Patterson on electric guitar, and Sammy Powell on piano, this is no large, speaker-rattling production.  Longtime friends add color, but what you’ll hear is Harris and her guitar, delivering performances close to what the songs were when conceived alone with her guitar. Harris demonstrates that her talent and command of her craft is undeniable, accompanied, or not. Whether there’s a rhythm section thumping behind her, or whether she’s alone with her Gibson “Gillie” on an empty stage, all eyes and ears are locked on Jaimee Harris.

 full bio

JAIMEE HARRIS

“The Next Queen of Americana-Folk” (NPR)

The Congress House Sessions

In 2018, everything in my life changed. In May, I left my job to pursue music full time.  By August, I was on a musical rocket ship, opening shows all over the world for Mary Gauthier, who received a GRAMMY nomination in December of 2018.

On paper—and on social media—it looked like a dream come true.  In a lot of ways, it was.  

But in reality, I felt like I was drowning.

                — Jaimee Harris

On the heels of her debut album Red Rescue, hailed by many as one of the top Americana albums of 2018, Jaimee Harris does not disappoint with the release of The Congress House Sessions, a thoughtful, intimate EP with stripped-down recordings of some of her most requested songs.  These new recordings, recorded at the storied Congress House Studio by Mark Hallman (Carole King, Ani DiFranco, Eliza Gilkyson) and Andre Moran (Sarah Borges, Rickie Lee Jones), feature some of Austin’s favorite players, including Jane Ellen Bryant and Kris Nelson on backing vocals, Ray Bonneville on harmonica, Brian Patterson on electric guitar, and Sammy Powell on piano.  

Don’t let the healthy list of players mislead you; this is no large, speaker-rattling production.  Longtime friends add color and texture, but what you’ll hear is Harris and her guitar, delivering her songs in a setting closer both to what they were at their inception, alone in her room with a guitar, and how they have developed after a few years acclimating to performing without a band.

Jaimee Harris loves fronting a band, and it shows.  During the years she built a devoted critical and popular following in Austin, Texas, she fronted a slate of seasoned musicians with admirable swagger. When she alighted upon the scene, this jaded music city, replete with (and weary of) singer-songwriters, woke up and took notice.  Here, finally, was a new voice—yes, her singing voice is noteworthy: rich, sonorous, full, delivering a uniquely stylized, throaty tone—but equally important, here was the new voice of a noteworthy writer and performer.  

If you meet Harris today, you’ll want to be her friend.  And no matter what part of the country you’re in, if you spend a day with her, she will convince you to meet up at a nearby roller coaster park/pinball arcade/skeeball hall she happens to know is awesome.  She will share embarrassing stories and laugh at your worst jokes (either because she finds them funny or because she finds hilarious how bad your jokes are).  Later, when you watch her sing, she’ll break your heart, cradle your heart, win your heart, then break it all over again.

The next day, you wouldn’t be the first to feel jealous.  This friendly, breezy, beautiful swirl of platinum hair, impossibly high cheekbones, and a winning smile has it too easy, you think.  Talent and looks?  Gag me.  While a cliché in this age of ubiquitous self-improvement empathy memes, it holds true that you never know what someone is going through or has been through.  Jaimee Harris has been through plenty.

Well, I never thought I could be free
After all those nights in the D.O.C.
I’m thankful God’s forgiven me
‘Cause I never thought I could be free
But I gave up the cocaine, gave up the gin
Freed myself of the hell I was in
Asked the Lord to keep me clean again

— From “Snow White Knuckles”

In case you wonder about a young person penning “Snow White Knuckles,” there is no minimum age requirement for confronting addiction, depression, self-doubt, and good old-fashioned dysfunctional relationships, and Harris writes what she knows.  Delivering lines that testify to her keen insight while keeping things conversational and cool, Harris accomplishes what songwriters most long to do: carve out words and a melody to give voice to that feeling you couldn’t quite put your finger on.

In a depressive state—how long will I feel this way?
Is it forever?  In my mind prisoner
Will I be okay?  Will I ever be okay?
And not someone that everyone hates
Will I ever be okay?

— From “Depressive State”

It’s not unique to have a crisis of confidence.  We carry around knowledge (or nagging suspicions) of what is beyond our capability and dread being called upon to do what we cannot do well.  Jaimee Harris faced an eighteen-month-long pop quiz when she joined partner Mary Gauthier on her relentless tour schedule, facing stages for the first time on a regular basis as a solo performer.  This was not what Harris signed up for when she left her desk job earlier that year.  This was not the performance scenario she had been building to for a half dozen years, having spent countless hours rehearsing and honing her sound with a set group of players.  She called friends from the road, unsure of herself, apologizing for her insecurities, afraid of sounding ungrateful for the opportunity laid before her.

I’m impatient.  You’re starting to see.
Give up easy.  You’re starting to hate me.
I know, I know.

— From “Fake”


Eventually, Harris had a full-on breakdown while on tour overseas.  She credits Gauthier for giving her the support she needed, and night after night, as she felt herself improving as a solo performer, her confidence returned.  What she could not have known was that the very leg of the tour that felt like her breaking point would lead to the next turning point in her career.  Red Rescue landed in the hands of Marcel Albers and Rose Spearman of M.A.R.S. Worldwide and resulted in Jaimee’s first record deal.

Harris demonstrates that despite being a capable bandleader, her talent and command of her craft is undeniable, accompanied or not.  Just as the cast of players on The Congress House Sessions might lead a casual observer to assume this is a full-band record, the thoroughly convincing delivery on the EP’s tracks might cause you to believe Harris is done playing with others.  You would be wrong. Harris is much in demand as a collaborator, both as a songwriter and a background vocalist (Ray Wylie Hubbard, Malcolm Holcombe), and you’ll find her playing lead guitar with Mary Gauthier.  And when circumstances thrust her onto a stage fronting a band, she has no problem summoning her natural confidence as a bandleader, wearing the role comfortably like her red leather jacket.  Whether there’s a rhythm section thumping behind her, or whether she’s alone with her Gibson “Gillie” on an empty stage, all eyes and ears are locked on Jaimee Harris.

what the press is saying

 

“Jaimee Harris’ Red Rescue Is The Debut Of The Year And The Arrival Of A Major New Figure In Americana”

— AMERICANA HIGHWAYS

Red Rescue may be a debut record, but this is the work of an artist of considerable maturity and sophistication. She has already produced a work of art that far surpasses what most musicians ever will. This could very well mark the arrival of one of the major figures in the next generation of Americana artists.”

— Americana highways

“...there’s no doubting Red Rescue heralds the arrival of a major new Austin singer-songwriter.”

— Peter Blackstock, Austin360

“One of the best releases this year.”

— Lonesome highway

“Rarely is a young artist tasked with so much to prove and live up to on their debut. Then again, rarer still are debut albums like this one, which sounds a lot more like a mid-career breakthrough on the level of Car Wheels on a Gravel Road than a tentative first step. Yes, it really is that damn good.”

— LONE STAR MUSIC MAGAZINE

“My number one from AmericanaFest is Jaimee Harris. I’m obsessed with [Depressive State] right now.”

— ANN POWERS, NPR

“The Congress House Sessions is a confident and cool record, and it leaves the listener feeling a little bit better just for having heard it. It’s a heaping helping of hope and heart, and it gets better with each listen. Big props to Harris for taking this leap of faith and showcasing these great songs in this stripped-down, tender format.”

- HoustonMusicReview.com

WHAT OTHER ARTISTS ARE SAYING

 

“She’s quick to pay homage to her musical heroes but Jaimee Harris is her own person, with her own voice. She’s got a natural songwriter’s instinct for the hard truths, and a voice that brings them home with a visceral punch. Pay attention.”

— GRETCHEN PETERS

“There’s so much passion in Jaimee’s voice that you just want to climb inside it and hang out there forever. She is unafraid to channel the dark side of her own being...the woundedness is there, as well as the strength required to overcome it and redeem us all. That’s what good music can do.”

— eliza gilkyson

“I just like the way she looks.”

— mary gauthier

“Wise beyond her years, Jaimee Harris is a force to be reckoned with. Her song “Where Are You Now” might just haunt you for the rest of your nights.”

— gurf morlix

“We’ve all been waiting, patiently...knowing it was bound to happen. With every track you know it’s clearly Jaimee Harris’ time to shine, and Red Rescue is sure to take her far beyond Austin.”

— jeff plankenhorn

“Wow! [Jaimee Harris’s song “On the Surface] is beautiful and so haunting. What a song for our moment! And her voice...”

— kary antholis, crime story media, former president of hbo miniseries

“When Jaimee asked me for a quote for her new album ‘Red Rescue’, I was thinking man, it really should be the other way around. Jaimee is a really good writer, and her songs are hit songs for our time, but they are presented in a naturally unique way, that could only come from Jaimee herself.

I’d say that her new album is a really good one, that is perhaps on the verge greatness. If you are fortunate, you might just be able to shake Jaimee’s hand (as I’ve done) outside of Gruene Hall on a random weeknight, and say that you knew her when. But, it’s much more likely that you’ll need to buy a ticket to go and see her, where you’ll have a hard time finding a place to sit down. So, you might want to hurry before your seat is taken.”

— adam carroll

VIDEOS

 

CONTACT

GENERAL

Contact Jaimee
Jaimee Harris
jaimee@jaimeeharris.com

 

NL Label

M.A.R.S. Worldwide
Marcel Albers
m.albers@mars-worldwide.com
Rose Spearman
rose@mars-worldwide.com

Booking

Fleming Artists
Craig Grossman
craig@flemingartists.com