Warren Haynes has unveiled the Million Voices Whisper 2025 Tour in support of his new solo album.
The 9-date run will launch February 7th in Knoxville, and the Warren Haynes Band will travel throughout the Midwest and Northeast, stopping in such cities as Huntsville, Toledo, Des Moines, and Burlington before wrapping February 22nd in Buffalo. See below for all dates and details.
Fan Club presale tickets will be available starting Wednesday, November 20th at 10am local time with local presales beginning Thursday, November 21st at 10am local time and the general on sale commencing Friday, November 22nd at 10am local time. $1 from every ticket sold for the winter tour will be donated to assist with hurricane relief.
A limited number of specially curated fan packages will also be available for the Million Voices Whisper 2025 Tour. Packages include one Ultimate Guitar Player Package per show, featuring a Les Paul Standard 60s Plain Top guitar in Sparkling Burgundy to be played and signed by Warren, meet & greet with a photo with Warren, soundcheck access, premium reserved seats, and more, and the Guitar Player Package, which includes an autographed Gibson Les Paul Standard Pickguard, a set of custom Warren Haynes guitar picks in collector box, a Dunlop guitar slide, and set of GHS strings (items as used by Warren), plus soundcheck, priority access, and more.
Visit www.warrenhaynes.net for all ticketing and VIP information and to purchase.
Performing alongside Haynes (vocals, guitar) will be the current, all-star lineup of the Warren Haynes Band: longtime drummer Terence Higgins (of the Dirty Dozen Brass Band), Govāt Mule bassist Kevin Scott, Matt Slocum on keys, and Greg Osby on sax.
Just released November 1stvia Fantasy Records, Million Voices Whisper ā Warrenās first solo album in almost a decade and fourth solo collection in his esteemed career catalog ā debuted at #1 on Billboardās Blues Albums Chart and also entered the Americana/Folk Albums chart at #3, Current Rock Albums chart at #5, and Top Current Albums Sales chart at #29. Already hailed as his best album yet, the 11-song collection of soulful blues-rock, produced by Haynes and recorded at Power Station New England, includes the singles āThis Life As We Know Itā and āDay of Reckoningā featuring Lukas Nelson and Jamey Johnson as well as guest appearances from Warrenās Allman Brothers Band bandmate and longtime friend Derek Trucks on multiple tracks including āReal Real Love,ā a song whose lyrics were initially started by Gregg Allman that Haynes finished to honor his friend. Million Voices Whisper is available digitally and on CD, 2-LP vinyl set, and a deluxe CD version with four bonus songs.
This Sunday, November 24th, Haynes, a native of Asheville, and Dave Matthews Band will host āSOULSHINE,ā a benefit concert to aid relief and recovery efforts in Western North Carolina and Florida in the wake of Hurricanes Helene and Milton, at Madison Square Garden. The sold-0ut, all-star event ā featuring performances from DMB, Warren Haynes Band, Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats, and Goose along with very special guests Trey Anastasio, Mavis Staples, Robert Randolph, Joe Russo, Trombone Shorty, Susan Tedeschi,and Derek Trucks ā will now be available worldwide via a free live stream hosted on YouTube. Produced by Volta Media and sponsored by Cisco Systems, the concert will be streamed live on Sunday from 7:00-11:00 pm ET on the official event website SOULSHINEMSG.COM. Net proceeds will go to the SOULSHINE Concert Fund at the Charlottesville Area Community Foundation, which will benefit Habitat for Humanityās 2024 Hurricane Recovery fund and will also support a variety of non-profits on the ground in North Carolina and Florida. Visit SOULSHINEMSG.COM to learn more or make a donation.
Following āSOULSHINE,ā Haynes will wrap the year with Govāt Muleās annual New Yearās Run ā December 28th at College Street Music Hall in New Haven, Connecticut, and December 30th and 31st at The Beacon Theatre in New York City ā and then launch 2025 with his annual concert-cation experience Island Exodus 15 in Jamaica from January 19-23 before heading out on the road for the Million Voices Whisper 2025 Tour.
For more information, please visit warrenhaynes.net.
WARREN HAYNES TOUR DATES
Govāt Mule ā New Yearās Run
December 28 ā New Haven, CT @ College Street Music Hall
December 30 ā New York, NY @ Beacon Theatre
December 31 ā New York, NY @ Beacon Theatre
Island Exodus 15
Featuring Govāt Mule, Warren Haynes, Drive-By Truckers, Karina Rykman & Big Sugar
January 19-23, 2025 ā Runaway Bay, Jamaica @ Jewel Paradise Cove Resort
Million Voices Whisper Tour 2025
February 7 ā Knoxville, TN @ Bijou Theatre
February 8 ā Huntsville, AL @ Mars Music Hall
February 11 ā Toledo, OH @ Stranahan Theater
February 13 ā Northfield, OH @ MGM Northfield Park ā Center Stage
February 14 ā Carmel, IN @ The Palladium
February 15 ā West Des Moines, IA @ Val Air Ballroom
February 20 ā Burlington, VT @ The Flynn
February 21 ā Concord, NH @ Chubb Theatre
February 22 ā Buffalo, NY @ Town Ballroom
April 5 ā Columbia, SC @ Township Auditorium (rescheduled from 9/28)
Govāt Mule ā Festival Appearances
March 6-8 ā Live Oak, FL @ Suwannee Amp Jam #1 (on sale 11/21)
July 23-27 ā Floyd County, VA @ FloydFest 25~Aurora
Warren Haynes Band ā European Festival Appearance
July 6 ā Sperken, Austria @ Castle Clam
- Warren Haynes: Capture the Chemistry āŗ
- Rig Rundown: Gov't Mule's Warren Haynes [2023] āŗ
- Beyond Blues: Warren Haynesā Southern-Fried Blues-Rock āŗ
Billy Strings has become one of the biggest drawing guitar players out on the road these days. His music brings bluegrass fans and jam band scenes together, landing him on some of the biggest stages around. Your 100 Guitarists hosts have brought in guitarist Jon Stickley to help them work out their differencesāone of us is a jammer and the other ā¦ is not.
Stickley goes way back with Billy, spotting his talent early in the young guitaristās career. The two have worked together since, and recently, when Billy had to dip out of his own festival as his wife headed to the hospital to deliver their baby, it was Stickley who was called to jump on stage and fill in at last minute notice. Stickley recounts the story of not only getting on stage, but strapping on Stringsā guitar, plugging into his space station, and taking off with Billyās band.
We called the right guitarist to guide us through, navigating Stringsā work, the way he brings together influences from genres outside bluegrass, and what makes him a guitarist you need to know.
This episode is sponsored by Grace Design.
Learn more at https://gracedesign.com.
The Americana singer-songwriter, known for supporting her vocals with intricate fingerpicking, found herself simplifying her process for her latest full-length, which, in turn, has led to more personal and artistic growth.
Folk singer-songwriter Amythyst Kiah is a formidable fingerstylist. When asked about her creative process, she explains how sheās come up playing a lot of solo showsāsomething thatās inspired her to bring out the orchestral range of the guitar for her own vocal accompaniment. Over the years, sheās taken her high school classical training and college old-time-string-band experience to evolve her fingerpicking skills, developing three-finger technique and other multi-dimensional patterns influenced by players like Mike Dawes. And for her latest full-length, Still + Bright, sheās only continued to grow in her musicianship, but by stepping back to square one: rhythm.
Amythyst Kiah - "God's Under the Mountain"
āIāve stayed away from writing songs where Iām just strumming for a really long time,ā she prefaces, ābecause I was worried that it was going to be too boring to not do fingerstyle. But then I realized, thereās so many [strummed] songs that are super powerful, and you can still make it interesting rhythmically.
āI started to listen to more rhythm guitar players, like Cory Wong, and reconfigured how I was viewing rhythm guitar,ā she continues. āIt was a matter of finding a way to do it that was exciting and interesting to me. Now, itās really expanded the songs that I can write.ā
All of the demos for Still + Brightbegan with strumming, says Kiah. When working on ideas, she would āplay rhythmically as much as I could,ā then open GarageBand, choose a tempo she felt comfortable playing to, and add programmed drumsāoften going with a modern R&B pattern. But when she brought her songs to the studio, she discovered that she was struggling to replicate the guitar parts sheād recorded at home.For Kiah, whoās always had a very strong sense of self and vision for her sound, that was a bit discomforting.In the making of Still + Bright, Kiahās fifth full-length album, the songwriter strengthened her skills as both a rhythm guitarist and a vocalist.
āI had a moment of, āI can either spend way too long trying to replay this part that Iāve been playing from muscle memory at this point,āā she shares, or hand it off to her session player, Nashville guitarist (and, coincidentally, Premier Guitarcolumnist) Ellen Angelico, and focus on her lyrics and vocal delivery instead. āI used to be very much like, āI have to be playing guitar on everything.ā But thereās a team of people here that can help, and make things go along more smoothly. My ego shouldnāt be getting in the way.ā
She did, ultimately, play guitarāacoustic or electric, or bothāon five out of 12 tracks, and banjo on two. Angelico performed on each track, alternating between mandolin, dobro, pedal steel, and acoustic, electric, and baritone guitar. (Youāll also hear Billy Strings, with his unmistakable, rapid-fire bluegrass licks, on āI Will Not Go Down.ā)
The finished album exudes a spirit of triumph. It rings as one extended anthem, beginning with āPlay God and Destroy the World,ā a reflection on a childhood rejection of religious hypocrisy, and ending on āPeopleās Prayer,ā an avowal of humanistic compassion. āS P A C E,ā one of the more pensive songs in the collection, features Kiah playing clawhammer banjo. āGodās Under the Mountainā builds and undulates with a communion of syncopated vocal melody, fiddle, pedal steel, dobro, and background vocals by producer Butch Walker and Avi Kaplan. Then, the waltzing āDead Starsā unwinds with simpler, judicious instrumentation supporting a mournful theme, before swelling with Morricone-like eloquence as it closes. āThis is the first album where I really had a concept about everything, from the logo to the color palette, and everything else,ā says Kiah, āand I had an incredible team who was able to really bring to life what I was envisioning.ā
āAmythyst Kiahās Gear
Some of Kiahās building blocks for her fingerpicking abilities came from classical training in high school and old-time studies at East Tennessee State University.
Photo by Tim Bugbee/tinnitus photography
Effects
- L.R. Baggs Para Acoustic DI
- TC Electronic Polytune
Strings, Picks & Accessories
- Acoustic: DāAddario light
- Electric: Ernie Ball medium
- Dunlop .73 mm picksPaige capo
Throughout the record, Kiahās propulsive singing voice is the glowing flame to the hearth, acting as a centerpiece to the already luminous, Americana-fueled full-band arrangements. Like rhythm guitar, voice was another essential element that she cultivated while creating Still + Bright.
āI kind of diminished that power of having a voice,ā she admits, explaining how sheās always been preoccupied with measuring up on guitar, and has long held multi-instrumentalists such as Prince in high esteem. But something shifted when a sentiment expressed by her manager, Dolph Ramseur, years ago, finally sunk in. āHe said, āAmythyst, you know, you could just stand in a room and sing a cappella, and people would sit there and listen, and they wouldnāt get up and leave, and they would not be bored.ā And then it really dawned on meāitās a powerful thing, people that can just sing; thereās a power and strength there, too. Itās just understanding where the power lies, and then embracing it, as opposed to feeling inadequate.
āItās just understanding where the power lies, and then embracing it, as opposed to feeling inadequate.ā
āI have this ongoing obsession in the back of my mind that Iām never doing enough,ā she continues. āSo, anytime I remove something from the equation, I worry. That stems from social anxiety, and being overly concerned with, like, āAm I making the right decision?ā But it doesnāt matter how long I agonize or rethink or redo something; at the end of the day, the decision I make is still going to be spontaneous. Because thereās only ever ānow.āā She adds, laughing, āIām a big Alan Watts fan.ā
Now, sheās started doing vocal warmups before shows, āand through that, Iāve expanded my range and Iāve also been able to gain even more control over my voice. It also means that I can write more challenging songs. Those two thingsāexpanding [rhythm] guitar and expanding voiceāhave let me open a whole new side to my sound.ā
Spiritual themes appear frequently on Still + Bright, in both Kiahās song titles and lyrics. The opening lines of āEmpire of Loveā include, āMy religion is none at all / I build my own cathedrals and let āem fall.ā On āLetās See Ourselves Out,ā she sings, āSo many matrices we create to escape / Sometimes I wonder if weāre just a mistake.ā And, on more than one song, thereās mention of how āweāre all made from stars from above,ā alluding to the scientific evidence that the elements of the human body were created by stars that went supernova.
Kiah was raised in a predominantly white, Christian suburb in Chattanooga, Tennessee, as part of a Black family who didnāt attend church. She identified as an āalternativeā kid, vacillating between agnosticism and atheism, shopping at Hot Topic, and drawing inspiration from The Matrixās theme of breaking free from societal constraints. (She remarks on her younger selfās ācognitive dissonanceā of buying āāalternative clothesā at the mall.ā) As a self-proclaimed introvert, she dealt with social anxiety, and spent a lot of her time at home alone on the computer. But when she began learning guitar at 13, and later started attending a creative arts high school, she finally felt like she fit in: āācause everybody there was misfits and weirdos.ā
Spirituality is a common theme in Kiahās music. Her current beliefs draw mainly on principles of Zen Buddhism and Taoism.
Photo by Kevin King
Though still adamantly individualistic, her spiritual views evolved when she took courses in both Western humanities and Eastern religion in college: āI realized that people have created narratives about how to live our lives for thousands of years. So, this idea that only one group of people got it right and everyone else is wrong; that threw all of that out the window.ā Today, she says that Zen Buddhism probably best captures her personal belief system, but, āI hesitate to call myself a Zen Buddhist because I feel like I still have more to learn,ā she says. She also rereads the Tao Te Ching by Laozi āpretty regularly,ā lauding the principles of Taoism as another strong influence on her philosophies.
At the beginning of our 1 p.m. Zoom call, Kiah shares that she typically spends her mornings alone and in silence, meditating, writing, and reading, and lightheartedly apologizes for enthusiastically āgoing onāāsaying sheās had a lot of time to think before speaking to another person. When I ask her about what modern artists sheās listening to lately, she has more to say about what sheās been reading. One of the books in her current rotation is The Lost Art of Silence by Sarah Anderson.
Growing up, Kiah identified as an āalternativeā kid, and was something of an āanime mall gothā who often shopped at Hot Topic.
Photo by Tim Bugbee/tinnitus photography
āIt goes along really well with meditation and learning to live in the present,ā Kiah says. āItās been interesting to explore those different perspectives on silence, and make more of an effort to find time in my life to be quiet. I find that Iām getting more and more comfortable with myself and my thoughts, and I feel less like I always have to block out anxious thoughts. Or, if I have anxiety about something, I can come up with an idea of, āOkay, well, how can I alleviate this? Can I do anything about it?ā, and solve the problem as opposed to starting the spiral.
āImpostor syndrome was the big driver for my social anxiety, and now, I feel like Iām on the other side of being an impostor,ā she reflects. āIām doing what Iāve been wanting to do for the past 12 years, making a living doing this. Thereās stressful things that happen, but you have to decide, what are you willing to be stressed out about? To try to seek a perfect, happy life where nothing ever upsets youāthatās called emotional repression and itās really unhealthy. Itās just about accepting the fact that, hey, some days, some weeks are gonna be shit, and to find ways to take care of yourself that are as least self-destructive as humanly possible.ā
āIt doesnāt matter how long I agonize or rethink or redo something; at the end of the day, the decision I make is still going to be spontaneous. Because thereās only ever ānow.āā
And while sheās outgrown a lot of her social anxiety, she says itās been a challenge adapting to the stress that comes with the unpredictability of touring. āWhen I would be at home, I would establish this really tight routine, and then I got completely knocked on my feet when I would leave,ā she explains. āI had to get to this point where I would just be focusing more on the present and less on trying to micromanage how my dayās going to be, because itās not gonna always go the way that I want things to go.
āThatās been also helpful in my creative process, because then Iām not as anxious and worried about all these other things that I donāt have control over, and Iām able to just ā¦ enjoy the process of living.ā
Ellen Angelico's Gear
Guitars
- Dismal Ax Barnstormer
- Cervantes Telecaster
- GFI Expo S-10
- 1980s Kentucky KM-250S mandolin
Amp
- 3rd Power Dream 50 Plexi
Effects
- Peterson StroboStomp HD tuner
- Line 6 HX Stomp
- 1981 DRV
- MXR Timmy Overdrive Mini
- Electro-Harmonix Deluxe Memory Boy
- Strymon Flint
Strings & Picks
- DāAddario NYXL
- Wegen picks
YouTube It
On WDVXās Blue Plate Special, recorded in Knoxville, Tennessee, Kiah performs an evocative, stripped-down version of āEmpire of Loveā from Still + Bright.
Designed with versatility and innovation at its core, the St. James 100 features four channels and six modes, alongside a suite of cutting-edge connectivity options
Blackstar Amplification has introduced the St. James 100 Head and Combo, the companyās flagship series in valve amplifier technology.
These include a built-in reactive load, CabRig IR-based speaker simulation, MIDI control, and USB-C connectivity making it the ultimate tool for the gigging professional and studio player alike.
Continuing the legacy of the acclaimed St. James series, Blackstarās St. James 100 Head is the worldās lightest 100 Watt valve head, while the St. James 100 Combo claims the title of the lightest 100 Watt2x12ā valve combo. By blending traditional craftsmanship with modern technology, these amplifiers set a new standard in high-performance amplification.
The St. James 100 introduces a suite of groundbreaking features that distinguish it from the competition. At its core is the innovative switchable and mixable power valve configuration, which incorporates two distinct power valve types, 2x 6L6 and 2x EL34. These can be toggled between or combined using a front-panel switch, allowing players to select 50-watt operation for specific tonal flavors or engage all four valves for the full 100-watt experience, unlocking a wide range of tonal possibilities.
The amplifier also features continuously variable power reduction, enabling the output to scale down to 5% of its maximum while preserving the signature valve tone, feel, distortion, and compression, making it ideal for any environment. Adding further versatility, the patent-applied-for āCutā selector offers a 3-position toggle to fine-tune the highest octave audio range (10kHzā20kHz) at the speaker outputs adjusting high-end frequencies for anything from aggressive clarity to warm, vintage tones.
The effects loop is equally flexible, switchable between +4dBu and -10dBV for compatibility with professional or stompbox-level devices, and offers both series and parallel routing options.
Additionally, a rear-mounted potentiometer provides fine control of the foot-switchable Solo Boost, adjustable between +2dB and +6dB, ensuring you get the kick that you need for standout lead moments.
The St. James 100 is a testament to Blackstarās dedication to pushing the boundaries of amplification. With one patent secured and another pending, this amplifier showcases the ingenuity of Blackstarāsengineering team and delivers groundbreaking solutions for guitarists worldwide.
Pricing for the new amps:
- St. James 100 head - $1999
- St. James 100 combo - $2499
For more information, please visit blackstaramps.com.
Strapped with the ā51 Fender āNocasterā that he used to record the solo on āTumbleweed,ā Urban walks Shifty through some of his guitar secrets, like how he came to own Waylon Jenningsā iconic, leatherbound 1950 Fender Broadcaster.
Next up on this action-packed season of Shred With Shifty, country superstar Keith Urban joins Chris Shiflett to walk through some of his most iconic solos and unpack some fine details behind his successful music career.
Strapped with the ā51 Fender āNocasterā that he used to record the solo on āTumbleweed,ā Urban walks Shifty through some of his guitar secrets, like how he came to own Waylon Jenningsā iconic, leatherbound 1950 Fender Broadcaster (hats off to his wife, Nicole Kidman, for that one). Urban tells avid surfer Shiflett why he never got into surfing while growing up in Australia, and remembers his earliest influences in the countryās music scene.
Low-gain players like Mark Knopfler, Ray Flacke, and Lindsay Buckingham helped shape Urbanās lead-guitar tastes, imprints you can hear in the capoed, drop-D solo on āStupid Boy.ā (Urban says his new solo record, High, features more of these theatrics.) Amid the fretboard analysis, Urban talks about his ālove-hate relationshipā with his Fractal amp-modeling unit, which he still leaves at home when he plays liveāa 100-watt Marshall Super Lead and PRS J-MOD 100 still reign supreme for Urbanās concerts.
Tune in to learn how Urbanās unique pick grip gave his solos some extra percussive edge, how he keeps his chops up, and which artist heād want to āgunslingā for.
Credits
Producer: Jason Shadrick
Executive Producers: Brady Sadler and Jake Brennan for Double Elvis
Engineering Support by Matt Tahaney and Matt Beaudion
Video Editor: Addison Sauvan
Graphic Design: Megan Pralle
Special thanks to Chris Peterson, Greg Nacron, and the entire Volume.com crew.