NEW ALBUM

 

Caroline's new album, VERSES, is available here. 

 

 

 

 

 

MAILING LIST

 

 

TOUR

Saturday, February 17 - 12th Night Revel, Chief Reveler, Benefitting Emory Rose Library

Thursday, February 29 - Bushwick Book Club, Waller's Coffee, Avondale Estates GA

Sunday, March 10 - Soulful Sundays Salon Series, private, Atlanta, GA 5:00-7:00pm

Sunday, April 7 - Frog Pond, Silverhill, Alabama

Friday, April 19 - Eddie's Attic, Decatur, GA 7:00pm

May 3-5 - Fingerpicking Guitar Weekend - Augusta Heritage Center, Elkins, WV

Sunday, June 9 - Spring Circle Concert Series, Alpharetta, GA  

 

 

 

 

 

 

Friday
Aug242012

THE INDEPENDENT UK NAMES CAROLINE SHOW OF THE WEEK

Thanks to Tim Cumming and the Independent UK for naming Caroline as the folk gig of the week for her shows at Cecil Sharp House and Shrewsbury Folk Festival!     http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/folk-gig-of-the-week-caroline-herring-various-venues-8076679.html

Monday
Aug202012

FOLK ALLEY FIRST LISTEN STREAM OF CAMILLA

Folk Alley is streaming the entirety of Caroline's new album, Camilla. Of course you can listen to a few tracks here on the website (and buy a signed copy!), but why not stream the entire album while you have the chance? Check it out here at http://www.folkalley.com/music/firstlisten/caroline-herring Thanks to Kim Ruehl for the lovely review. Here are a few of her words: There’s something about the way Caroline Herring delivers a line like, “Mama, sweet mama, where are you going with all your babies and that casserole?” Indeed, this is the opening line of “Camilla” – the title track on her new album – and it sets the tone and scene for the rest of the exquisitely written songs included therein. You know even as she’s delivering that line, this isn’t just a single song. This is a world in which women know they must take a casserole with them when they’re trying to appeal to justice. (The next line: “I’m going to the jailhouse in Camilla, Georgia, to see a woman and ask for her parole.”) You can listen to Camilla in the same way you might drive through such a town. ...It’s a difficult world in Herring’s Camilla."