Press

Let Us Make A Record 9/3/2015

“Sing to Your Mountain” by Rachel [a review]
September 3, 2015

When I look at what is happening at Great Comfort Records, I am reminded of the gospel record labels of yesteryear—those many companies that sprang up in the early days of vinyl, in the inner city side streets of Cleveland and Chicago and elsewhere, where families and congregations were making vibrant spiritual music with what appeared to be little regard for the mass market process. They didn’t always have the most polished sound, but what they did have in abundance was plain, unfiltered joy. Great Comfort’s newest release, Sing to Your Mountain by Rachel, continues that same tradition of exuberant melody makers wrecking joyful havoc upon unsuspecting listeners. Rachel and friends are making music for the sheer joy of worship. A member of brother Daniel’s Danielson Familie, and daughter of hymnist Lenny Smith, Rachel has found a middle ground between the former’s unusual arrangements and the latter’s love of Biblical poetry. Her songs are full of peace and longing and aggression. Her whispering voice carries each tune, drawing wayward melodies back to earth, lest they escape into the stratosphere. It’s worship music, sure, but not in a genre-type sense. It’s worship music because she sings with conviction and fire and of course, plain, unfiltered joy.

The Even Ground  8/27/2015

Paste Magazine: 18 Musical Moms Talk Motherhood

Rachel (Smith) Galloway
Danielson
RachelGallowayAndGirls

Song: “Did I Step on Your Trumpet?”

Names and ages of your kids:
Rosemary, age 10; Esther, age 7; Eleanor, age 4.

How does having children and being a mother change the way you approach your career?
Having children has definitely limited my availability to play shows with Danielson. My husband Jon plays in the band Soul Junk so he’s extremely supportive with the children when I fly to play a show or go on tour for a week. I have some amazing friends and family here who help me out a lot too. A week plus a couple days is my max to go on tour. I know what I can handle and what my girls can handle. My family always comes first; but that being said, sometimes it’s good for them for Mamma to go away for a short time and come back fired up to be a Mom again.

What’s the best part about being both a musician and a mom?
Being a musician is a lot of fun. I love singing and spending incredible time with my brother and sisters in a way most families don’t get to. And I love being a mom. In college when I was studying earning two degrees and working at an amazing internship opportunity I told my mother, “I never want to work just for money. This stinks.” I have always wanted to be a mom. It is the hardest job I have ever done and the most amazing one. The best part of being a “musician mom” is that my children and I sing and play instruments together all the time. I have a little nook by my fireplace where my guitar and ukulele hang on the wall to remind me to play everyday. Even when the girls don’t play with me, they hear me sing and they play around me while I sing. Music is a very integral part of their life and they probably don’t even realize it. I remember as a child that my brothers and sister and I would do the same thing as my father would sit and play his guitar in the living room almost every day. He would sit on the couch singing and playing his guitar and we would play, read, do our homework and coexist. The music was a daily presence and one that I know greatly impacted all of us in a positive way. Now I do the same thing with my children. I get such pleasure when I overhear one of the girls off in her corner and own little world singing to herself. I used to think this was commonplace, but as I get older I realize that most families don’t really do this.

What’s the most difficult part about being both a musician and a mom?
I want to do it all. And I can’t.

What do your kids think of your music?
My girls love the music. We play it all the time and they know all the words. Just recently, my daughter Rosemary was preparing for the Jog-A-Thon at her school and her gym teacher allowed the kids to bring in their music to listen to while they practiced jogging. She was comparing music with a friend and she noticed that he had both Danielson and Soul Junk music on his iPod. She told me that she yelled out, “Those are my mom and dad’s bands and they are really famous!” I had to laugh at that.

I think all the girls have decided that they are going to be in bands when they grow up. Of course, they also want to be designers and computer programmers too…so that probably just goes along with the territory. As for Jon and I, music is a very important part of our lives and we want to encourage that element to thrive in our daughters as well.