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Nadia Reid has been forging a low-flying pathway in song writing and live performance with her unique brand of understated charm for a while now. Nadia embarks on an extensive three-week tour starting in Christchurch on 8 June with a collection of new and much loved songs. This second national tour sees Reid return to her acoustic roots and is joined by fiddle player, and The Eastern's, Flora Knight. Together Reid and Knight play fifteen venues on a whirlwind trip to major centres and smaller towns like Oamaru and Wairau Valley, featuring the odd local guest or two.

Adam McGrath, from The Eastern, describes Nadia’s music. “Sometimes the Song is the Easy Part. Listening to Nadia it seems that way, they appear (on stage and on record) fully formed, alive in the world, born and crafted with a weight that belies an author’s young age. Maybe it’s because Nadia sounds more than a singer and more than a songwriter. She sounds like a worker, one who cares for her craft and the path in which she intends to take it. Her songs shape and turn and lie carved in the air, they carry your ear and lift your eye to the back of the room, the corner of your heart and the world outside your window but sometimes that's not enough. Sometimes the song is the easy part. To make them live you have to give them out, send or carry them into the world. That's the hard work, and that's where you find a writer's gift, their true worth. Nadia carries those songs and the moments they create, like water from a well, like a thing to care about. If you’re a listener then you can trust her, it helps to know she refuses to take it lightly and will work as hard as she wants you listen.”

In 2011, Reid released her debut EP Letters I Wrote And Never Sent, ventured out on her first national tour, and had her song ‘Rise and Fall’ feature in Gerard Smythes’ film When a City Falls. The documentary film of the Christchurch earthquakes was shown in over 40 cinemas nationwide throughout the summer and is now due for international release. A pretty big year by all accounts, for someone only twenty years of age. After a two-year stint in Christchurch, the Dunedin-raised musician is now based in Auckland and is set for the next stage in her career.

“Nadia Reid possesses a measured melancholia that speaks eloquently of the smoldering embers of life's firestorms.” Jeff Harford, (source).

“Self-styled “New folk” singer Nadia Reid has a rich sultry voice, which on her Letters I Wrote And Never Sent EP, she drapes languidly over ornate folk and alt-country instrumentation. Reid sings about relationships, but not strictly relationships of romantic love, also relationships with friends, places, events and ideas.” Martyn Pepperell, (source).

“’Rise and Fall’ has already etched itself into many people's hearts and that's in no small part to its hushed cadence, beautiful vocal performance and glistening acoustics; a gorgeous song on its own.” Music Hype.

All tour dates in June:

Friday 8

Darkroom, Christchurch

Support From Happiness Stan

8pm / Free show

Saturday 9

The National, Dunedin

Support From Matt Langley

8pm / $10 ($5 un-waged)

Sunday 10

New Edinburgh Folk Club, Dunedin

7.30pm / $10 ($5 members)

Wednesday 13

Harbour Street Theatrette, Oamaru

Support From Marla-jean + the Carpet Floor

8pm / Koha entry

Thursday 14

Wunderbar, Lyttelton Harbour

Support From the Tiny Lies + Aldous Harding

8pm / $10

Friday 15

Dharma Bums Club, Wairau Valley

8pm / Koha entry

Saturday 16

Everyman Records Live In Store - Day Show

The Freehouse, Nelson

8pm / Free show

Wednesday 20

Le Cafe, Picton

8pm / $10 ($5 un-waged)

Thursday 21

Meow, Wellington

Support From Eb + Sparrow

8pm / $10 ($5 un-waged)

Friday 22

Matinee, New Plymouth

Support From Diarmuid Cahill

8pm / $10 ($5 un-waged)

Saturday 23

The Wine Cellar, Auckland

Support From Tono

8pm / $10

Sunday 24

Golden Dawn, Auckland

Gypsy Fair + DJ Set

12pm / Free entry