FTM doesn't usually post this sort of thing (and we get quite a few requests), but I really like this tune and the sounds of the record 
it's on. 
Sara Rachele (pronounced Ra-kelly) is a singer-songwriter in 
the vein of Lydia Loveless, Lucinda Williams, and Neko Case. There's 
also an atmospheric, indie quality to her approach a la Mazzy Star. You can read some 
quotes and her bio below and check out the premiere of her song "Strong 
As My Hands (Delilah)" right here. It's also available to download for free! I think you'll dig it.
Sara's forthcoming album, 
Diamond Street, is out September 2
“A must-have album that follows no road map but Rachele’s heart and soul.” - No Depression
"'Bristling with an incisive edge floating aside picturesque melodies courtesy of a
 voice that has just enough twang to rope you in for an extended visit." - Glide Magazine
 
“From
 the moment I heard Sara Rachele’s voice and words I knew I was in the 
presence of truth. She is a fearless artist with a desire to lyrically 
explore the nuances of her experiences in, around and against life.” – Melissa Ferrick
"When
 sound hits tape you get something back that you know is true and 
honest, listening to Diamond Street there is an undeniable realness and 
truth in these songs" – Art Decade
SARA RACHELE / DIAMOND STREET
Release Date: Sept. 2, 2014
Label: Angrygal Records
Recorded
 in her hometown of Atlanta, the NYC-based Sara Rachele's debut, Diamond
 Street, rides out slow and dark as a jet-black 1960s Chrysler New 
Yorker. The live-to-tape LP—produced by Kristofer Sampson (B-52s, 
Balkans, Coathangers)—was recorded in just two days, and captures the 
East Village nightlife of a young songwriter in a timeless, vibrant rock
 ’n’ roll statement. Diamond Street's sparkling lo-fi charms span the 
decades, Rachele channeling everything from classic Fleetwood Mac and 
Petty's Heartbreakers to Lucinda Williams and David Lynch muse Julee 
Cruise.
On
 recording with producer Sampson (who plays in New West Records band 
Ponderosa), Rachele says, "Kris really challenged me on this album. Even
 though we were working quickly, he had patience with the songs, and   
he took the sound to a new place for me without it seeming 
disingenuous."
The
 daughter of a baby-boomer painter and Italian/Slovak immigrant, Rachele
 (pronounced ra-kelly) grew up a studio rat and folk child. Working for 
free cleaning out the cupboards at famed Atlanta acoustic hotspot 
Eddie’s Attic, she met countless musicians and writers and fell into 
bands as a side-player before she even knew how to write a song. While 
still a teenager, she became backing vocalist and keyboard player for 
The Love Willows, who promptly signed to Decca/Universal, writing and 
recording with producer Mike Daly (Whiskeytown, Lana Del Ray, Grace 
Potter).
Eventually,
 though, Rachele decided to leave behind The Love Willows' bubblegum pop
 sound, moved to Boston and enrolled for a time at Berklee College of 
Music, before dropping out to live in her newly adopted home of New York
 City. Inspired by its long history of seedy bohemian songwriters and 
poets, and by the energy of the city itself, Rachele filled up journals 
with her ramblings and penned ballad after ballad as she roamed the 
coffeehouses & nightclubs of the East Village, trading innocence for
 experience. Word spread quickly about her passionate delivery, her 
honest, unadorned lyrics and her uniquely Southern sound. Along with 
sidekick and fellow Atlanta expat Charlotte Kemp Muhl (with Sean Lennon,
 half of Ghost of the Saber Tooth Tiger), Rachele found a home—musical 
and otherwise—in New York.
"For
 such a big city, New York can be a pretty small town," Rachele says. "I
 saw an ex across Houston Street once—he was playing a show I think, 
everyone always is, you lose track. But I remember running across four 
lanes of traffic—just seeing him, turning, and running through the East 
Village. No one ever leaves you in New York. You still have to learn how
 to know them. It's the continuousness of it all—nothing every really 
ends. And the cabbies just know to get out of the way… 'cause at any 
moment some heartbroken woman might run out into the street."
While
 in New York, she befriended veteran music photographer Perry Julien, 
who was intrigued by Rachele and shot portraits of her at The Chelsea 
Hotel, that sacred place of rock lore. Her session with Julien was one 
of the haunt’s final photo shoots before it closed its doors to guests. 
Rachele's images from The Chelsea Hotel—once home to Dylan Thomas, Bob 
Dylan, Patti Smith & The Sex Pistols—have been featured in SXSE 
photomag, Creative Loafing, and art galleries up and down the East 
Coast. She and Julien’s collaborations were also published in Julien’s 
book Secrets (2013), and forthcoming Chelsea Hotel photo book Guests. 
Rachele is a photographer herself, her work having appeared in 
Pitchfork, Brooklyn Vegan, Creative Loafing and Stereogum.
In
 addition to producer Sampson, Rachele's new debut Diamond Street 
features the musical contributions of budding folk hound J. Thomas Hall 
(New West imprint Normaltown Records) as well as a cast of Atlanta-based
 heavy hitters including Lightnin’ Ray Jackson (Washed Out, Gringo 
Star), Spencer Pope (Ocha La Rocha), Spencer Garn (Ruby Velle & the 
Soulphonics) and Snowden's Chandler Rentz. Diamond Street represents the
 gorgeous clash of Rachele's folk-centric upbringing and her beat rock 
& roll adventures in New York City. With five years of stories under
 her belt, she has created a moody musical pulp, resounding with smoky 
memories of ambling city nights.
"I
 think the strangeness of my work is what makes people get it," Rachele 
says. "We all have these stories, but where I grew up, we were always 
throwing furniture around the house, emotionally. Like a lot of people, I
 got intensified in New York, so I just started writing—to keep sane."