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A 1970s-inspired folk-pop songwriter, Suzie Brown responds to the seismic changes of the modern moment with 2022'sSome See The Flowers, out
May 20th. Written somewhere between her shifts as an Advanced Heart Failure/Heart Transplant cardiologist at Vanderbilt Hospital and her
responsibilities as a mother of two, it's a record about resilience, resolve, and maintaining perspective in difficult times. It also finds Brown — an
award-winning musician whose songs have earned recognition from the Great American Songwriting Competition, Forbes Magazine, People
Magazine, and the long-running television program CBS This Morning— nodding to the soul singers, folk artists, and roots-rockers who came before
her.
Some See the Flowers finds Brown reuniting with Billy Harvey, who previously produced her 2019 release, Under the Surface. Working together
during a series of quarantined recording sessions, the two experimented with new beats, new arrangements, and new narratives from a storyteller
who'd previously taken the stage not only as a musician, but also as a featured speaker at medical events like TEDMED. When the dust settled, they'd
created Some See the Flowers — a boundary-breaking Americana album that's every bit as diverse as its creator.
"I love everything about you, Suzie — you're wearing a lot of hats, and wearing them all very well," said broadcast journalist Gayle King during an
episode of CBS This Morning that showcased Brown's unique balancing act between music, medicine, and motherhood. Some See the Flowers turns
that balancing act into music, spotlighting an artist who has spent a decade rolling with the punches, adjusting to the changing times, and writing
the ever-evolving soundtrack to her journey.
Scot Saxʼ multi-faceted career started with a bang when his song ʻI Walkedʼ became a radio hit with his bandW anderlust (RCA) in ʻ95. It was the #1 most requested song on rock stations across the country. That year ended with Wanderlust opening for The Who. After signing a publishing deal with Warner/Chappell in Los Angeles, Sax went on to write and perform “I Am The Summertime” for the filmA merican Pie (awarded a Gold Record) and form indie-darlings FEEL (Curb Records). In 2005 he co-wrote the Grammy-winning Faith Hill/Tim McGraw duet “Like We Never Loved At All”. Upon hearing Scotʼs song “What Gets In The Way”,R obert Plant, Alison Krauss and T-Bone Burnett asked he and singer Sharon Little to be their opening act for their Raising Sand Tour in 2007. Sax worked with Don Was in 2009 on Littleʼs 2nd album.
Scot taught a songwriting course at University of The Arts in Philadelphia for several semesters 2010/2011.