1/06/2025

Greg Freeman ​Adds NYC Show, Plays Night Club 101 1/24 + Union Pool 1/25 (Sold Out) With Ekko Astral | 'I Looked Out' Re-release Out Now

Greg Freeman ​Adds NYC Show

Plays Night Club 101 1/24 + Union Pool 1/25 (Sold Out) With Ekko Astral

'I Looked Out Re-release Out Now via Canvasback/Transgressive
Photo Cred: Justin Gordon
LISTEN & SHARE: Greg Freeman - I Looked Out Vinyl
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LISTEN & SHARE: Greg Freeman - I Looked Out
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PRAISE FOR GREG FREEMAN

"Some musicians make you wonder if what they’re doing is some sort of ironic mischief. Not Greg Freeman. He really means every word, bashing away on his electric guitar as bandmates on bass, drums, saxophone, and pedal steel guitar add rich colors to his visions."
-
Rolling Stone

"There’s a certain Vermonter who made a really tremendous singer-songwriter record in 2022, and his name is Greg fucking Freeman—he also happens to be one of the best guitarists alive. I Looked Out is dripping with feedback, distorted by the reliquary of Florida men, sobering, end-times-ridden folklore and a Holy War of the interpersonal woven into the God-fearing and mysterious."
-Paste

"'The Celtic thrum of noise that kicks off his album is a bit of a red herring (it’s full of hopelessly addicting indie-rock bops), and while a track like “Colorado” is missing shoegaze tenets like “glide guitar,” the voluminous crescendos (packed in tight with warm, tattered horn blasts) create a shoegaze-like effect, and “Souvenir Heart” indeed uses the unmistakable yowl of a distorted ‘gaze guitar."

Stereogum

"I’m late on this one — it’s my favorite album of 2022 that I discovered in 2023... It’s obvious that Freeman has worshipped at the altar of the late, great Jason Molina, though he also brings his own influences (particularly ’90s indie rock in the form of Neutral Milk Hotel and Guided By Voices) to the table. What I’m saying is that this is yet another blown-out country-rock record that sometimes delves into pure noise. (I can’t get enough of this formula lately.)"
Uproxx

Greg Freeman's I Looked Out Re-release has officially made its mark, with his album debuting at #12 and his song "Colorado" at #15 on the Official SubModern Top 25 charts. With two tracks featured in the same charting period, Freeman's album has secured a spot among the top performers in the genre.

Vermont's finest, Greg Freeman, has recently signed with Canvasback/Transgressive Records. To celebrate this exciting partnership, his critically acclaimed debut LP, I Looked Out, was re-released, complete with two bonus tracks. The vinyl version is scheduled for release on January 17, 2025. This reissue features a new rendition of "Long Distance Driver (Acoustic)," which includes a special collaboration with Merce Lemon. Additionally, the final bonus track, exclusive to the vinyl release, is a captivating mashup titled "Sound Tests, Scraps, Lists," which weaves together sounds, songs, and snippets collected during the creation of this masterful debut.

Greg on the track, "I wrote this song a few years ago, when the world was entering a scary and uncertain time, and hope seemed fleeting and very far in the distance.  The song is about wanting to find connection in such a world.  In a way, it feels like an old song to me at this point, but that place of uncertainty feels even more pronounced than when I wrote it.  The acoustic version is just more sparse.  There's a harmonica instead of a saxophone.  There's no drums either.  Merce does the high part and I do the low part.  I also play the concertina in the recording.  Our friend Nate Campisi recorded the song at Mr. Smalls studio in Pittsburgh (where we also recorded the video).  It used to be an old church."

Greg Freeman’s album I Looked Out has been garnering praise from notable critics, with Steven Hyden of UPROXX calling it “my favorite album of 2022 that I discovered in 2023,” and Paste Magazine naming it among the 25 Best Debut Albums of the 2020s. The magazine went further, hailing it as “one of the best rock records of this generation.”

His noisy art-rock Americana will be put on display for his London debut at The Line Of Best Fit Show with Greg Mendez on January 15th in London and in New York with Ekko at Night Club 101 on January 24th and at Union Pool on January 25th.

Tickets for these dates are on sale now. Find more information and tickets HERE.

Look Out For New Music in 2025.
Tour Dates:
1/14 - London UK - Servants Jazz Quarters
1/15 - London UK - LOBF Show w/ Greg Mendez
1/16 - London UK - Rough Trade East - Solo Acoustic + Vinyl Signing
1/24 - New York, NY - Night Club 101 w/ Ekko Astral
1/25 - New York NY - Union Pool w/ Ekko Astral

Greg Freeman - Long Distance Driver Acoustic (Feat. Merce Lemon) Live

Vinyl Tracklisting:

Side A
1. Horns
2. Right Before the Last Waves Took Vestris
3. Long Distance Driver
4. Colorado
5. Come and Change My Body
6. Connect To Host 
7. Tower

Side B
8. I’ll See You In My Mind
9. Souvenir Heart
10. Palms
11. Sound Tests, Scraps, Lists

Digital Tracklisting:
1. Horns
2. Right Before the Last Waves Took Vestris
3. Long Distance Driver
4. Colorado
5. Come and Change My Body
6. Connect To Host
7. Tower
8. I’ll See You In My Mind
9. Souvenir Heart
10. Palms
11. Long Distance Driver Acoustic (feat. Merce Lemon) 
12. Sound Tests, Scraps, Lists 
 
ALBUM BIO:

When Greg Freeman quietly released his debut album I Looked Out in 2022, it was immediately clear to the small community who heard it that the Vermont songwriter captured something intangibly exciting and distinctly American. Across 10 explosive songs that meld knotty indie rock with pastoral twang, he sings with a zealous urgency of shipwrecks, biblical visions, doomed drifters, dams breaking, and lives left in rearview mirrors. His evocative writing paints a world where revelation or ruin is behind every corner but it always leaves room for hope and human connection. A resoundingly confident LP, it’s a testament to Burlington’s vibrant music community and the pure magic of opening yourself up to creative risks and collaboration. 

Now, for the first time, I Looked Out has been pressed to vinyl. Out digitally on Nov. 20 and on vinyl Jan. 17 via Canvasback/Transgressive, two bonus tracks are also available. On the digital release, there’s an acoustic duet version of “Long Distance Driver” with Merce Lemon, and on the vinyl, there’s the noisy sound collage “Sound Tests, Scraps, Lists.” Greg Freeman will release new music and this album’s full-length follow-up in 2025. 

Though I Looked Out arrived seemingly fully formed, the album is the product of a transitional period for Freeman. When he started writing its songs in 2020, he graduated from the University of Vermont studying religion and anthropology. Unsure of what to do next, he worked in museums, was a bread baker, and even had a stint as a cemetery groundskeeper. While he’d played in bands around Burlington, namely with Lily Seabird and the experimental rock outfit Rockin’ Worms, his own music was sparse and solo. “Before I Looked Out,  I had just done everything myself: recording a lot of layered guitars and layered vocals,” he says. With that year’s societal upheaval leading to an abundance of alone time, Freeman decided to double down on writing. He soon came out of isolation with two finished songs: “Long Distance Driver” and “Colorado.” 

“Long Distance Driver” is a woozy, minor key dirge that finds Freeman’s voice somewhere between a croak and a coo. He sings, “I don't care where you've been / I just want you to smile / Or at least pretend.” It’s a dark and near-menacing tune that highlights Freeman’s propensity for vivid, lyrical world-building. “That song came out of a year where I was just writing without any pressure,” he says. “I didn't even know if I was going to record it.” Eventually, Freeman decided to try something he’d never done before: bring on a cast of collaborators. 

While recording I Looked Out, Freeman and his co-producer Noah Kesey were content just to see where the creative process took them. “The most defining thing about the creation of that record is that we didn't really try to do anything with it,” says Freeman. “There was no specific intention with how we were going to put it out, or timeline, or even how it was going to sound.” Instead, they leaned on welcome surprises and happy accidents. Take the thundering “Colorado,” which bursts through with a careening, overwhelming energy. Inspired by maximalist production on Leonard Cohen’s Death of a Ladies Man, Freeman wanted to stack the song with as many instruments and players as possible: strings, horns, keys, etc. The result is a cathartic and chaotic orchestra that never veers off track. The experiment paid off. “It's so hard to convince yourself that you're writing a record, but then you have one song you really believe in so it helps you get to that place,” he says.  “‘Colorado’” is definitely that song for me.” 

With that north star guiding the process, the experiments didn’t stop. The propulsive squall that ignites “Connect to Host” came out of a jam from a discarded tune, repurposed with tape warble, roaring guitars, and barreling drums from Zack James (Dari Bay). “Towers” simmers with a roiling intensity that eventually rips apart at the seams: strings clashing with the blistering, feedback-laden guitars. Elsewhere, closer “Palms” boasts biblical imagery taken from Freeman’s studies of Christian mysticism, heretics, and prophets. At times, it feels apocalyptic but he yelps, “If it's not the end of it all / It must be a strange kind of grace” before soothing pedal steel and guitars stumble on a sense of closure. The through line of I Looked Out is how he resonantly balances interpersonal struggle with global calamity, raising the emotional stakes while holding a mirror to the self and society. 

Following its release, which had no PR campaign, label, or music industry promo, it still received raves from Stereogum and Uproxx. Since then, Freeman’s toured relentlessly with a backing band featuring bassist Lily Seabird, multi-instrumentalist Cam Gilmour, pedal steel player Ben Rodgers, and drummer Scott Maynard. While many of those players also guest on the album, the palpable and expansive energy of their live show has found Freeman sharing the stage with A. Savage, Empty Country, Florry, and Sadurn. “The music scene is so good in Burlington that it didn't feel like I was doing anything remarkable with I Looked Out because everybody had great bands there,” says Freeman. “You gotta try a little bit harder in this city.”
GREG FREEMAN LINKS
Website | Bandcamp | Instagram

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