Peter Mulvey Unveils New Project Floyd Mercantile with Jenna Nicholls, Releases Debut Single "Some People"

Peter Mulvey Unveils New Project Floyd Mercantile with Jenna Nicholls, Releases Debut Single "Some People"

Today, Floyd Mercantile - the new project from Jenna Nicholls and Righteous Babe Peter Mulvey - releases their debut single "Some People" from the upcoming self-titled album, out June 12 on Righteous Babe Records. Listen to "Some People" HERE. Pre-order the album HERE.

In April 2025, Peter Mulvey and Jenna Nicholls, along with guitarist Ross Bellenoit, traveled to Floyd, a small mountain town located in the Blue Ridge Highlands of Southwest Virginia, for five uninterrupted days of recording. What emerged is Floyd Mercantile — a record that feels both intimate and timeless.

The makeshift studio was a decommissioned general store called (you guessed it!) Floyd Mercantile — a weathered wooden building standing across the road from an open pasture where cows wandered and grazed in the gentle early spring. (One cow even volunteered to be on the album cover.) Inside those old walls, the trio recorded the album live — no isolation booths, no heavy overdubbing — just three musicians in a room, listening closely and letting the songs unfold in real time.

The sessions were recorded by Jeff Oehler and filmed in their entirety by partner Sue Bibeau and their associate Skylar Locke. Together, Sue and Jeff comprise Beehive Pro, an audio, visual, and design collective famed for their intimate recordings and thoughtfully considered visuals. They captured not just the sound, but the atmosphere — the wood floors, the daylight through the dusty windows, and the creak of the porch boards could all be considered session players on this album.

The repertoire bridges eras. Mostly comprised of songs Peter and Jenna wrote separately, there are a few gems from the Great American Songbook: “Skylark" (Hoagy
Carmichael/Johnny Mercer), “Them There Eyes" (Maceo Pinkard/Doris Tauber/William Tracey), and “I'll Be Seeing You" (Sammy Fain/Irving Kahal). The visual and sonic tones of the project reflect the periods these songs evoke — even the newly composed tracks feel in conversation with another time. The goal was not nostalgia, but continuity: to stand inside the lineage of American song and add something honest and present to it.

Floyd Mercantile is not just an album. It’s a document of place. Of three musicians in a room. Of songs — old and new — allowed to breathe in the quiet of a Virginia afternoon.

“This was the first song I ever wrote in the spirit of a Jazz standard," Peter Mulvey shares about the new single "Some People," "having become utterly charmed by how the songs of that era applied such a light touch to such heavy topics. I folded religion, paganism, hypocrisy, politics, Hildegard of Bingen, and nice sandwiches into a tidy little tongue-in-cheek song, stole a bridge melody from Paul Simon, and without meaning to, launched a fan favorite in my sets for years. Jenna Nicholls saw what had been hiding in plain sight: it's a no-brainer to make it a call-and-response duet!”

Follow Floyd Mercantile:

Instagram / Facebook

See Floyd Mercantile on Tour: 

5/28 | Madison, WI | The Bur Oak
5/29 | Milwaukee, WI | Anodyne
5/30 | Chicago, IL | Old Town School of Folk Music
5/31 | Ann Arbor, MI | The Ark
6/04 | Pittsburgh, PA | The Original Pittsburgh Winery
6/05 | Columbus, OH | Natalie’s Grandview
6/07 | Charleston, WV | Mountain Stage
6/18 | Buffalo, NY | Hallwalls Contemporary Arts Center
6/19 | Becket, Ma | The Dream Away Lodge
6/20 | Bedford, MA | New Song
6/21 | Quechee, VT | Quechee Hot Air Balloon, Craft, and Music Festival
6/24 | Wayne, PA | 118 North
6/25 | Brattleboro, VT | The Stone Church
6/26 | Portsmouth, NH | Music Hall Lounge
6/27 | New York, NY | Cafe Wha?
6/28 | Vienna, VA | Jammin’ Java

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