hannah-wicklund-the-steppin-stones

One of Hannah Wicklund’s key influences growing up was her brother, Luke Mitchell. Wicklund & the Steppin Stones are currently on the “Sibling Rivalry Tour,” playing 45 dates with Mitchell’s band, the High Divers.

A bandleader since she was 9, the 20-year-old guitarist goes deeper on her self-titled new blues-rock album with her trio, the Steppin Stones.

By nature, genres like the blues, funk, and jazz are meant for the stage. Groove and freedom of musical expression are at their heart, and they work best with the kind of kinetic, effervescent energy that can only be captured with a live audience. Which is why it makes perfect sense that Hannah Wicklund, 20-year-old guitarist and frontwoman of her blues-rock trio Hannah Wicklund & the Steppin Stones, lives for the stage.

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Hannah Wicklund plays custom Tom Anderson guitars, like this Drop Top Classic S-style, through an Orange half-stack.

At it for a decade, this young blues-slinger’s self-titled new album marks a musical coming-of-age for the bandleader. Listen to the exclusive premiere of her new single, “Ghost.”

A bandleader since the age of 9, guitarist, vocalist, and songwriter Hannah Wicklund is no newcomer to the music industry. Today, as frontwoman of her blues/alt-rock trio Hannah Wicklund & the Steppin Stones, the 20-year-old’s stage presence and guitar playing is pure voltage. But with the release of her new self-titled album, she feels as though she’s reached a benchmark. “I’ve been putting out music with the band since I was 12. I feel like for the first time, I was able to draw from my life completely,” she says. “I feel like my life finally caught up.”

That personal touch is certainly felt on “Ghost,” a Premier Guitar exclusive song premiere and the second single off the album, which drops in late January. Wicklund’s scarlet-toned vocals drip over a steady blues-rock groove punctuated by gnawing electric guitar—which echoes the songwriter’s bitter resentment towards the titular “ghost” that haunts her. “A house made with love, but I burned it down,” she sings with cool contempt. Halfway through, the song’s edge transforms with ominous vocal harmonies, and Wicklund exercises that contempt with a short yet incisive solo that expresses it in a way the lyrics can’t.

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