The Everybodyfields to play the Bijou Theater
Sam Quinn of The Everybodyfields performing in Nelonsville, Ohio.
TNJN/ Hart, Jonas
TNJN/ Hart, Jonas
Sam Quinn of The Everybodyfields performing in Nelonsville, Ohio.
published: March 06 2008 10:56 PM updated:: March 12 2008 02:59 AM

A sad song isn't easy to deliver. It can be painful for the listener, but most of all, it can wrench the heart of the singer. The Johnson City, Tenn, duo of Sam Quinn and Jill Andrews, known as The Everybodyfields, deliver tunes that summon a raw emotion from the deep hills of Appalachia.

This raw emotion can be felt Saturday, March 8 at the Bijou Theater as The Everybodyfields come to deliver their tunes and wrench their hearts for a Knoxville audience.

On the group's latest record, Nothing Is Okay, the heart isn't just worn on the sleeve - it's worn pumping away in an elevated fist. Their aching harmonies hit the canvas of their delicate sound-scape and tell their story.

The story is of a record that was almost compromised by personal issues between Quinn and Andrews. The two ended a dating relationship just before the release of their debut album in 2004. These issues resurfaced during the making of Nothing Is Okay - the songs were nothing short of painstaking to record.

In an interview with Paste Magazine this summer, Quinn said, "We recorded it three times. Every time we'd go through it, there'd be so much other shit going around, [I'd think], 'Whatever, I just don't even want to listen to this stuff. I don't know if we want to make this. You're out, you're out, I'm not so sure I'm in either.'"

But the two used the process to communicate with each other, and they still have the playful sense to quote Wes Anderson's Bottle Rocket in a Paste interview.

Quinn and Andrews take the stage this weekend to continue their support of Nothing Is Okay, which was released August 21, 2007 on Ramseur Records. Their sound is fuller than on their previous efforts as they have enlisted the talents of Josh Oliver on electric guitar and keys, and Knoxville's own instrumental Polymath, Tom Pryor on pedal steel.

For tickets and information visit the Bijou Theater Web site.

Story Images
Jill Andrews of The Everybodyfields performing in Atlanta.
TNJN/ Adan, Alex
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"Aeroplane" - the lead track from Nothing Is Okay
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