NATHAN GRAHAM

"Sterling, catchy singles that seem sure to catapult him to stardom"
Chicago Reader

"Saint of Second Chances sees Graham pulling shades of blues, country, and soul, knitting them together with sharp guitar lines and warm vocal melodies."
Under the Radar

"Even though the collection is his first, the Americana songs have a lived-in quality of an old soul using music as a vehicle for self-reflection and redemption."
WBEZ

"Each song on ‘Saint of Second Chances’ tells a very human story of loss, hope, anxiety, fear or love, in various combinations”
Americana UK

Saint of Second Chances
Pravda Records

DEBUT ALBUM

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  • Raised on Prince and Earth, Wind & Fire, Chicago-based singer, songwriter, and guitarist Nathan Graham bridges South Side Blues with Southern Americana to deliver a bittersweet and soulful sound.

    Graham spent a decade building his career as a guitar-for-hire, backing blues singers at famous haunts like Buddy Guy’s Legends and Kingston Mines, before forming bands to perform his own music and lyrics. It took a bit of convincing to overcome his self-doubt as a singer, but some advice from his mother eventually pushed him forward: “All you have to do is open up your mouth, and project.”

    What Graham projects now are stories of the human condition, somehow both achingly painful and exquisitely comforting. His guitars convey heartbreak, lyrics tell stories of regret, but his rich vocal delivery offers the remedy.

    On Graham’s debut record Saint of Second Chances, his guitars reach from delicate and pristine to reverberatingly powerful. Tracks like “Good Honest Man” speak frankly about the urge to give up on love rather than risk loss, while “Fake Friends” offers a stomping, nostalgic rhythm behind some anxious self-reflection: “Saw you going down, down in flames / Well I guess I just didn’t know that I was doing the same.

    It’s a versatile record that Graham hopes can drive inclusivity in a genre not always known for its diversity. “When people hear ‘singer-songwriter,’ they typically think of somebody who is white, middle-aged, male,” he says. But greats like Smokey Robinson, Luther Vandross, Lauryn Hill and even J. Cole deserve to be reframed as a part of the genre just as much as someone like Bob Dylan. “They’re doing it in a different way, but they’re doing the same exact thing: they’re using their voice to tell a story.”

    Lenny Kravitz taught Graham black men can rock out on a guitar, Chuck Berry proved to him that straightforward lyrics are some of the most impactful, and his own mother convinced him to pick up the mic. Now, Graham is challenging the assumptions and doubts that create musical barriers, and he hopes to bring people together in the process.

    “I wrote a record about the human condition of having anxiety, having feelings of love and being scared to lose that, or scared that you’re going to screw it up somehow—or they’re going to screw it up somehow,” he says. “I want the audience to go on that journey with me. To sometimes be sad, and sometimes be joyful. I want us all to be walking through that journey with each other.”

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