Sister Sadie share official music video for "Let The Circle Be Broken"

NASHVILLE’S GRAMMY-NOMINATED SISTER SADIE SHARE OFFICIAL VIDEO FOR “LET THE CIRCLE BE BROKEN”

NEW ALBUM ALL WILL BE WELL OUT JUNE 27

With the release of Let The Circle Be Broken,” a song Billboard stated as essential listening from one of bluegrass music’s most-lauded groups,” the GRAMMY-nominated ensemble Sister Sadie broke new ground with a somber yet uplifting exorcism of the generational trauma of domestic abuse. Today, they share the official video for the song.

“Dani Flowers, Erin Enderlin and myself wrote “Let the Circle Be Broken” right after my Dad passed away,” says the group’s co-founder, fiddler Deanie Richardson. “He was an abusive man who verbally, emotionally and sexually abused me for most of my 18 years living at home with him. When I confronted him as an adult, he said that it had been done to him as a child. This song is about that generational trauma and abuse that keeps getting passed down. The continuing of that trauma and abuse stops with me. It doesn’t go any further.”

“This song is about how we’ve decided that these cycles that have been repeated over and over in our families end with us. I was born into a family of some of the worst types of people to ever exist in this world, and it is sometimes so hard to sit with the fact that you come from a line of people who are capable of doing such awful things to others — to you. While I can’t say the same for many of my family members, I can say for sure that my children will never experience from me what I experienced from my mother and what she experienced from hers and what she experienced from hers,” says Dani Flowers.


PRE-SAVE ALL WILL BE WELL

OUT JUNE 27


Sister Sadie’s new album All Will Be Well, their second album for preeminent bluegrass label Mountain Home Music Company after 2024’s Best Bluegrass GRAMMY-nominated No Fear, is slated for a June 27th release

“We didn’t go in to record a bluegrass meets 90’s country record,” says Deanie Richardson, award-winning fiddler and a founding member. “However, as the record progressed, it quickly turned into my most favorite record I’ve ever done. Each song is personal to us all.”

All Will Be Well is by far the most fun and most fulfilling recording experience I’ve had in my 15+ years in the music business,” adds Dani Flowers, who co-wrote more than half of the album’s songs. “Each song was carefully selected. Some we poured pieces of our souls into, others we’ve loved for years and years — and we each deeply relate to every song.”


ABOUT SISTER SADIE:

Sister Sadie, which launched in the wake of an ostensibly one-off show at Nashville’s World Famous Station Inn in 2012, has both embraced and transcended its all-female identity, earning acclaim that includes being named as the International Bluegrass Music Association’s Entertainer of the Year in 2020, as well as Vocal Group of the Year in 2019, 2020 and 2021. Members range from acclaimed veterans to rising newcomers, who have won individual recognition, too, with founding member and fiddle player Deanie Richardson named as Fiddle Player of the Year in 2024 and banjo player/vocalist Gena Britt — SPBGMA’s reigning Banjo Player of the Year — having participated in three award-winning collaborative projects.The lineup is rounded out by 2024 IBMA Female Vocalist of the Year and Mountain Home recording artist Jaelee Roberts (guitar), Dani Flowers (vocals and guitar) and mandolinist Rainy Miatke. The band’s previous two releases, Sister Sadie II and No Fear, earned them GRAMMY nominations for Best Bluegrass Album in 2019 and 2023 respectively.


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