Luke Sweeney
PRESS:
● “‘Rishi’ is the sound of finding beauty in the ephemeral and of the deeply spiritual healing power of music.” - Datebook
● “the most beautiful album I’ve heard in a very long time and a difficult but rewarding emotional experience” - LADYGUNN
● “endearingly light and airy, belying the sorrowful subject matter” - SF Examiner
LINKS:
● Rishi - Official Music Video
● Princess of the Pearl Palace - Official Music Video
CONTACTS:
● Total Accord Management: Tyla Jones
Emerging from the 2010’s San Francisco garage scene as an oddball visionary and outsider pop wunderkind, Luke Sweeney has been enthralling audiences with eclectic soundscapes ranging from finger-picked freak-folk to “riveting psychedelia, bubblegum, glam, and mellow Seventies balladry” (Austin Chronicle).
His journey from trouble-making troubadour to profound storyteller is marked by four critically acclaimed albums and an EP of compositions that lean on “humor and irreverence—both calling cards of Sweeney's songwriting” (Portland Mercury), as well as collaborations with Tim Cohen and Healing Potpourri.
The self-dubbed ‘Calm Poseur’ seemlessly traverses genres with “a power pop punch to gain the envy of Alex Chilton, Eric Carmen, Emmit Rhodes and everyone in-between and thereafter” (Week in Pop). However, the loss of his infant daughter in 2018 pulled him into an artistic process unlike any he had undertaken before: channeling his grief into Garageband demos on his iPhone as his family traveled through India. Refined in a San Francisco studio with Joe Santarpia (Mac DeMarco) and Roberto Pagano (tonsstartsbandht), the resulting 2022 album RISHI is “a mesmerizing blend of future jazz and George Harrison’s Indian influences, celebrating the healing power of music” (SF Chronicle).
Luke Sweeney’s continued evolution, both as an artist and a person, signals a profound commitment to sonic exploration and soul-baring storytelling that few artists today can match.
Genre Tags: psychedelic pop, freak folk, classic rock
RIYL: Cass McCombs, Fruit Bats, Toro y Moi, The Lemon Twigs, Drugdealer