Hailing from Nashville, TN, Framing Hanley released today their new single ‘Hear Me Now Redux’ through Thermal Entertainment. today. A reimagining of their 2007 hit “Hear Me Now“.
Listen to the track here
Official Audio video here
Of the new version, Kenneth Nixon said
“It’s funny because my growing up in Nashville, TN, my first love was wrestling. I went to all the small territory promotion’s events every weekend with my great grandfather as a child. I always wanted to be a wrestler. Obviously didn’t get the build for that ha. Jeff Hardy was always one of my favorites. My brother and I pretended we were The Hardy Boyz when we’d smash each other over the head with baking sheets and do leg drops off of our couch. Fast forward 10-15 years, and I met Jeff at one of our shows. Turns out, he was a big FH fan. In the years since, our friendship grew and I worked with him and his band and helped with songwriting and production on some of their stuff. When we discussed reimagining Hear Me Now I had the wild idea to reach out and ask if he’d like to feature on it as I knew he was a big fan of the song (it’s how he discovered our band). I couldn’t be happier with the way things turned out with his addition.”
“Hear Me Now Redux” was produced by Andrew Baylis (Jelly Roll, Sleeping With Sirens).
Framing Hanley will be announcing an April 2025 tour shortly and will be appearing at Sonic Temple at the Historic Crew Stadium in Columbus, Ohio on Saturday, May 10th.
Framing Hanley’s story:
Framing Hanley formed in 2007 and went on hiatus from 2015-2018 before reforming. They have released four albums: The Moment (2007), A Promise To Burn (2010), The Sum Of Who We Are (2014) and Envy (2020) which have sold over 200,000 albums, 1.5 million downloads and music has been streamed over 300 million times. Official music videos have surpassed 55 million views.
Four singles have charted at radio including Criminal (#20 – Rock); Lollipop (#25 – Rock / #20 – Alternative); You Stupid Girl (#36 – Rock); Collide (#39 – Rock). They have accumulated over 50,000 spins at radio.
Framing Hanley online: