The band began playing in 2000 anywhere they could between Richmond and Charlottesville, VA. Some shows were strictly Bluegrass while other shows were full on electric rock with the bands country and bluegrass sensibilities weaving through their songs.
As they adopted their name, they also began to hone their sound. Just as their namesake comes from a cross breeding of a horse and a donkey, the music of the Wrinkle Neck Mules is a unique hybrid of rock and Bluegrass. Influences run the gamut Andy explains, �For me, I�d say that at the baseline there�s a main vein of classic country � Don Williams, Buck Owens, Waylon Jennings, etc. � jumbled up with the things I listened to growing up: Led Zeppelin, R.E.M., Ralph Stanley, Widespread Panic � folks like that. Mason grew up on reggae and Led Zeppelin.� Tongue firmly planted in cheek, he continues, �and Chase, being from Orlando, heavily draws from New Kids on the Block, Menudo and El Debarge.�
In 2002, guitarist Mason Brent moved to Jackson Hole, Wyoming while vocalist, bassist and banjo player Chase Heard headed for Austin, TX leaving Stepanian and drummer Blake Gayle in Richmond. But the band continued to write despite the distance and released their debut, Minor Enough, in early 2004.
Shortly after the albums release, the band members all moved back to Richmond to give it a go as a fulltime unit and Brian Gregory joined the band as bass player allowing Heard to concentrate on vocals and banjo work. The band continued to tour and in early 2005 entered the studio to begin recording their sophomore release, Pull The Brake, which was released April 4. �It�s really been finished since May 2005, but it took a long time for us to shop it around and get comfortable with who was going to release it,� says Stepanain. The band chose to go with Atlanta-based Shut Eye Records to release the album.
Chris Kress, who has works extensively as an engineer with Dave Matthews band, co-produced Pull The Brake with the Mules. �Chris helped us out with Minor Enough, which we recorded and produced on our own and then searched high and low for someone to clean up the mess we made. Chris was the only taker. We became fast friends and after the smoke cleared there was all of this talk about going to a real studio with more than one microphone and trying to clean up the mule a little bit,� Stepanian states, �So, we landed at Haunted Hollow � which is the Dave Matthews Band�s tremendous private facility with many, many $10,000 mics and acoustically perfect sound chambers � and did most of the tracking there along with various houses and holes around Charlottesville.�
Pull the Brake is filled with strong songs which tell vivid stories. The lead track �Liza� is the tale of a man whose girlfriends� family would rather he left her alone. After a confrontation with her father and the shooting of her brother the two run off together. The Mules follow it up with the buoyant �Okachobee� which is about a man choosing his home over his woman � �She said I had to choose/Bet she never thought she�d lose.�
Stepanian and Heard are the group�s primary songwriters drawing from experience and observation to craft their songs. �For me, basic human experience and family play a big roll. My mother�s people hail from the southern part of Virginia and farmed tobacco and a lot of the things I got to see and do down there show up in my songs,� Stepanian relates, �And you can�t rule out blatant fiction. Sometimes I will come across a single turn of phrase in a book or elsewhere that will give rise to an entire song concept.�
Another highlight of the disc is �Lowlight� which features strings from Anne Marie Simpson-Calhoun , formerly of Old School Freight Train, and a guest vocal from Bonnie �Prince� Billy. The song talks of longing and leads directly into the instrumental track �Stranger/Sojourners.�
With possibilities expanding and a strong sophomore effort to build on, Wrinkle Neck Mule will continue to tour and grow their following throughout the South with an eye to expanding their territory. �We do have a few long runs coming up in the summer – one out to the Midwest and another with Jesse Dayton and his band that will span from Texas to New York. Pull the Brake just got picked up by the European distributor Sonic, so hopefully that will lead to another European tour in the Fall or late summer.�
Apr
28
2006
Apr
24
2006
Category : Features
Or maybe you aren’t familiar with him at all and just need something to read at work. Whatever the case, we caught up with Radney recently and talked about his new album, his songwriting and his fans among other things, so now we can all be a little more familiar with Radney Foster.A good part of The World We Live In was recorded with the X-Pensive Winos, Keith Richards side project, how did that come about? Was it something that you had in mind from the outset, or something that just developed?Well it’s kind of something that developed, uh, Darrell Brown and I had worked together on the See What You Want To See album, which was the last album I did for Arista Records, that I did for Arista Austin, which sort of ran and acted like an independent. And then when I… you know, I’ve made a couple of records since then and I felt like it was time for me to go back and try to do something with Darrell again, he’s been a great co-writer and a friend.We didn’t really think about the band ‘til we picked the songs, that was sort of our feeling with it, you know, let’s find the songs and let’s find the thing that’s going to make all that happen and really not try to repeat ourselves, but pick up on something that is going on there. So as it got around to, you know, we’re sort of going over things and we started to think about groove and he mentioned Charlie Drayton and I said the guy’s a great player and it would be awesome to use him. And I said, "well isn’t Niko Bolas [who engineered This World We Live In] friends with Waddy [Watchel]?” and he said “yeah” and I said then you’ve got two of the guys from the X-pensive Winos right there, that might be the guy, that might be a great way to go. So we called Niko and said do you think you could talk to Waddy and see if he would be interested? The funny thing was that Waddy said “yeah, I can do the first day, but I can’t do the second day.” And, uh, I said, well that’s cool, we’ll record him that way and then the second day I was going to record bass, drums, acoustic and keys and just overdub the electric guitars when I got back to Nashville. I thought, well, that’s cool, we can divide up the songs that way and it will start to make sense. We got into the second song and Waddy kind of leaned over to Niko and said, “man, if it’s ok, this is really, really cool, I can make it tomorrow.” (laughs) I think he just didn’t want to get into something he didn’t know what he was getting into, you know. Then he thought, hey, this is cool, these are really pretty good songs, that guys a really good singer and it’s a cool thing and I want to do it. So we did and it was pretty cool.You also used some of the guys like Mike McAdam, that you have used for a long time and some of your band members in the recording as well …Right. Basically what we did was, we cut with me on acoustic, Waddy on electric, bass and drums with Charlie Drayton and Bob Glaub and then keys was, obviously, Rami Jaffe. And we cut that way in L.A. and we basically cut the ten songs in L.A. in two days. And then additional guitars we spent a couple of days when we got home just having guys like Mike McAdam come in and play six-string bass or slide on something or just the color parts where it would be a second guitar to whatever Waddy was doing. And some of them, it didn’t make any sense to have second guitar since it’s really not there, you know, and certain things, like, “you know, two guitars on this would sort of makes sense to get a different guy.” Eric Borash did a really, really great job, I think he was so effective. He plays so much like Waddy and that guy is so much his hero, he was like “I don’t know what to do because Waddy’s doing what I would do.” (laughs) then do what you think Waddy wouldn’t do and it worked out great.You’ve always had a knack for picking female singers that don’t get a lot of recognition or that might not be well known. Of course, Kim Richey is well known throughout Americana circles, but where do you find singers like Emily West, Sarah Buxton and Ashley Arrison?They’re hanging around Nashville like crazy, you know! I knew Emily West and so did Darrell and she has that kind of angelic voice and Darrell said I just think she would be perfect for “The Kindness of Strangers” and for “I Won’t Lie To You” and I totally agreed. I didn’t really know Sarah. Darrell said, “man, she sings like Bonnie Bramlet” and I was like ok . (laughs) Let her come sing on a song and if we don’t like it we can find someone else to sing, but if she sings like Bonnie, I’m ok with that. And about that time I walked into my managers office and I said do you know anything about this girl, Sarah Buxton? And he said “Oh my God! I’m trying to manage her!” cause she’s about to sign with, oh, I forget which label it is, but anyway she is about to sign a record deal and she needed a manager, so he played me four things she had cut and I was like “Wow! Yeah”, I called Darrell back and said “Yeah, I wanna use her, let’s use her!”In my opinion, some of your best songs you do are the great stories where you look into the psyche of the characters. Two of my favorites, one from the new record, “The Kindness of Strangers” and then “Old Silver” from Del Rio. Do songs like this come fairly easily to you or do they require a lot of rewriting and time?Yeah, those are the kind, to me, that come out all at once. I don’t know why they do, it’s kind of like I, you know… to me there are a lot of songs I have certainly labored over and there are probably a lot of songs I have labored over that I probably shouldn’t have. (laughs) Most people don’t get to hear those. But, you know, for some reason those kinds of stories are almost like you see the picture, you have the vision and you just can’t get it written down fast enough. And they wake you up at 2:30 in the morning. Or they are a catharsis unto themselves. “Old Silver” was written on the anniversary of my Grandfathers death and it just poured out of me. The same was true of “The Kindness of Strangers.” It was almost like it was all there and I went down into the basement after Cyndi and the kids were in bed in the middle of the night and I don’t know that it was more than about an hour and a half to write it.I actually just interviewed Rodney Crowell this morning…(laughs) You’re kidding me!I know he was one of your influences and that is what he said, the songs come to him and tell him how they are to be written and the ones that he spent a lot of time trying to get out weren’t worth the trouble afterwards.I really think you have to go through … the thing about it is, you write songs in a lot of different ways, I do. If you get together with somebody and you are going to write, you’re writing really from a team, that’s really a group therapy kind of session in a way, or a social occasion even almost, it’s all of the above wrapped up into one. That’s not a bad thing, it’s a cool thing. But it’s a very different thing when you write one by yourself, it’s just, it has to come out of you and I don’t know how to explain that, but they end up being very different types of songs, for the most part.You’ve had a lot of great co-writers, is it hard to adjust to a different approaches they might have?Only if they… not… the co-writers on this record are all people I know well. So you’ve kind of gotten to know their style and who they are and h
ow they think and how they go through the process. You know, what they do and what they don’t. The thing I try to do is find people who fit that. I get tons of calls these days from artists wanting me to write with them or from big names wanting me to write with them and just because two guys that are great writers get together, doesn’t mean they are going to come up with anything. It really is… It’s got to click and I don’t know why it does or it doesn’t with certain people, but it’s just the way it works.Speaking of great writers together, what was it like writing with Harlan Howard?It was fun, it was always fun. In addition to being fun it was always fruitful. He was, you know, a great curmudgeon, it the best sense of the word, and a great guy. And he really didn’t have any pretensions about what a song was or where it was going to go, no preconceived notions other than it needed to have a blue-collar, work your way through it conversationality [sic]. You can have a lot of complications with the characters in the sons, but you better be able to speak plain English.How many songs did you guys write together?Only four or five.We’ve heard “Scary Old World” on Another Way To Go, will we ever hear the rest?Well, there’s a possibility. There’s a couple that I’ve thought about cutting. And hopefully a couple somebody else might think about cutting. I almost cut one of them on this album, but it just wasn’t the right song for the band that was playing in L.A. at the time (laughs) you know?You’ve had several songs recorded by other people, is there a song in your catalog that you look at and think “That’s a great song, why hasn’t anyone latched on to it?”Only about four or five hundred of them! (laughs) You know, I’m as egotistical as the next guy, I think everybody oughta cut all of my songs, thank you very much. But I realize it probably doesn’t work that way and that’s ok. There are ones that seem so perfect to me for certain artists, not that… the other side of that is I’ve never written a song for another person, unless I was writing with that person. Well, I take that back, I did in the early part of my career when I wrote some of the worst crap I have ever written in my life and nobody will ever see those. But I quickly found out, and it was great, I had a great publisher at MTM who… it was real old school back in those days at that publishing company. You had to go to the writer’s meeting on Monday to get your paycheck. Or you had to talk to your tune plugger and say, I’m going to be out of town can you mail me my check. So they expected that and there’d be guys who’d say Dolly Parton is cutting the day after tomorrow and three guys would go into a room and come up with something that was absolutely stunningly perfect for her, you couldn’t believe it. And I would think, I guess that’s how you’re supposed to do this. It was a disaster. My publisher, Meredith Stewart said, you know, Radney, the songs that you bring me that wake you up in the middle of the night that you write all by yourself, those are the ones that are the most interesting and I want you to continue to do that, but also, the stuff that you write with that guy Bill Lloyd, there is something going on when you write together. I just want you to concentrate on those two things and you write whatever it is that you want to write and don’t think a thing about who’s cutting it, we’ll figure out where it’s home is. And it was really solid advice, ‘cause then I started writing things that I cared about. Which is why they got interested in me in the first place.Jace Everett included “Half Of My Mistakes” on his new album. Another song on his album, “The Other Kind,” was co-written by Stephany Delray, who you have co-written with …Stephany is one of my long time co-writers, yeah.And Brian Nash also wrote on the song. Jace said when they sat down to write that song he said to them “I want to write a Radney Foster song.” How does hearing something like that make you feel?That’s a huge compliment and it’s … I’m always astounded, I have so many times that, especially when I am at home in Texas that someone will come up and say “I started a band because of the first Foster and Lloyd record” or “I started a band because of Del Rio, TX 1959” or “I moved to Nashville because of it” or whatever it is, and that’s always unbelievably complimentary, I’m very flattered by it. But it’s funny that Jace would say that because I’ve written so much with Stephany that Stephany knows… She would’ve gone, ok, I know where to go with this one (laughs) I know how the guy thinks, I’ve only written about 25 or 30 songs with him.At what point in your career path did you decide or did you decide that you wanted to steer more toward the songwriting as opposed to touring constantly and jumping through the label hoops?Well, I think I had a couple of things happen. One is that I had my oldest child, at 5, moved over to France with his mom and that was very emotionally devastating. And it’s how I wrote the song “Godspeed.” I wrote it for him and put it on a cassette five times in a row so that he would have something to listen to at night so then he would know that his Daddy loved him.But it also changed a lot of my priorities. It was when I began to move in an independent direction. Tim Dubois steered me from Arista Nashville to Arista Austin, back to a more alternative and Americana side of things. As that began to happen I felt a creative freedom but I also knew I was never going to tour 150 dates a year again, ever in my life. Then when that album got caught up in, the See What You Want To See record got caught up in the arguments between Strauss Zelnick and Clive Davis, not because of records, but because they were arguing over Clives’ retirement age with the heads of BMG. So that ended up closing the division where my record label was. You know, it was like, this doesn’t make any sense, I don’t want to be caught in those types of circumstances again and I’m going to do this my way and I am going to try to do and make independent records. And I got a call, after I got out of my contract with Arista… ‘Cause even though the division had closed, I was still signed to the label, by the way, (laughs) but I went to Tim Dubois and Tim was great. He said, man, I’ll let you make another record and let you take your chances with whomever ends up here after me or I’ll let you go, I’ll do anything you want. So he let me go and as I started to try to figure out how to do this independently and how to start my own record label if necessary, I got a call from Dan [Herrington] and Scott [Robinson] and they said we hear you are starting a record label in your basement? And I said, well, yeah. And they said, that’s good, ‘cause we’re starting one in our basement and we want to talk to you (laughs). And pretty much we have worked on a record by record basis the last three with the guys at Dualtone ever since. It makes sense, it works for me financially, I sell enough records that I can make a healthy living, but the publishing side of things, because of that has worked out real well for me too. I think people cut more songs outside of, you know, from a different perspective because of that.Between this new record and the last you released And Then There Was Me (The Back Porch Sessions) as an internet exclusive. What was behind that decision?Traditionally, “me and my guitar&rdq
uo; records don’t sell that well, but I’ve always had fans who … about half of my shows are with a band and half are me and my acoustic guitar and I just thought, I need something to sell at those shows. People always ask me, how do I hear what I heard tonight? How do I hear something like that? And I thought, Ah, I can make an acoustic record in my basement, print them up, put them out and then realized I could sell them on the web site as well and that was my whole thought process. Then the darn thing blew up so much that, we got all these press requests and radio stations calling the house not the management (laughs) trying to figure out how in the Hell they could get a hold of one. I had to hire a guy to work radio and a publicist to work the dang record! (laughs) and I’m not even putting it in the stores! But it sold a bunch on our web site and then it made me realize it’s not a bad thing to have some music on your web site, stuff that’s only available at your web site.Speaking of which, you have a track up now, “Ease Up On The Rain” which is only available on your web site, another kind of gift to the fans?Yeah, it’s a way to keep track of the fanbase. If somebody wants that song bad enough and doesn’t mind getting an email, I don’t abuse the privilege, but if they don’t mind getting an email from me maybe 3 or 4 times a year or especially, it’s sophisticated enough at this point that it they are 100 miles from Philadelphia, and I’m playing at a 200 seat, what I like to call the “black turtleneck bars” they would really love to hear about it, so it kind of works out good for everybody. And I’m sure after three or four months I’ll change that one out of there.You seem to be one of the few fortunate artists who have such a supportive fanbase that when somebody else cuts your songs, they are as excited about it as anyone else…It took some education to get them to do that, by golly they were pissed off a long time at first! I had to make them understand that babies need shoes, you have to pay for college education. (laughs)We talked a second ago about the acoustic album, and “Half of My Mistakes” was on there before you cut it for the new record. Will we ever see studio versions of the new songs from Are You Ready For The Big Show?You know everybody always asks me that, uh, maybe. The only reason I cut these new songs was because I always thought the cool thing about live records was just the energy and the best ones were awesome, really something else, but they didn’t have any new songs on them, so they were a greatest hits package in that respect and that part was kind of boring to me. I even thought about that Frampton Comes Alive record had new songs on it that you hadn’t heard – not that I listened to that when I was in the Camaro in 1976, I’m not sure I can own up to that. But that was my whole thinking, there’s four or five songs, you know, we are going to have thirteen or fourteen songs on this live record. And then the guys at Dualtone were like, it’s hard as Hell to get live songs played on the radio, it was totally a commercial thing on their part, but would you be opposed to doing two bonus tracks that are studio tracks. I said not if I take one of the songs that’s one of the new songs off the live record and do a studio version, I think that will be cool and then let me figure out something like an old chestnut. And the reason we thought about “Texas in 1880” was because it was the one song for whatever reason that we didn’t hook as well both nights. I’ve played it live for a long time and I played it live at that show, but we just didn’t hook it. There was stuff that was played better out of the sequence, so I decided I would like to do that one and that’s how we ended up with the two extra studio tracks. But I have no idea, I might go back and revisit one of them. Or two of them. Who knows.How did you come about contributing background vocals on Willie’s new record? Fred Foster [producer of You Don’t Know Me: The Songs of Cindy Walker] is one of the first guys that ever really believed in me and helped me in my career in Nashville, TN. He was always unbelievably good to me and still is a dear friend and he just called me up and said “Do you want to come and do something fun and sing on a Willie Nelson record?” Yeah, I do! He said I want you and Buzz [Carson], because I think you all sound great together, to do it. I was supposed to write that day with my buddy Jay Clementi, a young writer who wrote “Fools That Dream” and “Sweet and Wild” that’s on this record with me and he’s really a great young writer. I just said hey man, do you want to hang out, just hang out in the studio, he was like “Oh my God! I get me meet…” because he is a big Roy Orbison fan “I get to meet Fred Foster? I gotta call my Dad!” So he was over there and Fred said, this part really needs a trio more than it needs a duo sound on the background vocal, I’d love to have a real three part. I said, well Jay’s a really good singer and Fred said “Well, son, walk on in there! Try one out, I’ll tell you if it sucks.” (laughs) So he was really thrilled, it was a really fun day.And I am a huge Cindy Walker fan. I’ve really felt badly for her and her family that her death was so overshadowed by Buck, that you don’t see any… there was almost no mention of it in the press, it was just… I couldn’t believe it, she was, and rightly so, a Hall of Fame member, just an absolute monster inspiration of a songwriter to me.And as I say that, then I gotta turn around and mention Buck because he was such an influence on me and a great guy.And you’ve said that “Big Idea” was kind of your Buck Owens inspired song…Yeah, pretty much, I think writing the song, Darrell and I were thinking Buck Owens and Harlan Howard, just trying to write something that’s that much fun, where wordplay is as important as anything else. And at the same time, when we got in there [in L.A.], I was like these guys ain’t going to … (laughs) so it was more NRBQ. So it was kind of Buck Owens/Al Anderson thing.Are you producing anything right now?I just finished, and I mean this week I just finished the Randy Rogers Band’s new record which is going to come out on Mercury Records instead of as an indie. Which I am really happy for them, I think that’s a great situation where the band got big enough on their own where they really do need a partner rather than someone to tell them what to do. Luke Lewis told me, he said, you guys made a perfectly great record without any help from us, so would you please just go do it again? Which I proceeded to drop the phone, bang on it a couple times and go “do what?” (laughs) Can you run that by me one more time? He said, no, I’m serious, we’ll stay out of your way and they did. And I’m really proud of the thing and I think the guys really stepped to the bat, Randy as a writer. It was a lot of fun to make.And I’ve got a couple of things that I’m doing. I don’t know that any of them are ready to be talked about yet.What a tease. (laughs) Thanks for talking to us Radney.Thanks, I’m the luckiest guy on the planet. There is still a part of me that gets astounded that anybody besides my family likes this stuff.
Apr
20
2006
Now it can be said that one begets the others and there is a lot of truth to that. My music geekness led to my love of music history, which feeds my love of Bluegrass, which, of course, fuels my music geek status.And that brings us, roundabout, to James Reams and the Barnstormers. The music geek was excited that some CDs showed up in my mailbox. The Bluegrass part was pleased to see a Bluegrass CD in the pile, even though I had never heard of James Reams or his Barnstormers. The music history lover in me became near giddy after going over Troubled Times a couple of times.James Reams was born in London, Kentucky, a town of around 6000 in the Eastern part of the Commonwealth. Reams, a middle school literacy teacher for special education students, has lived in New York City for nearly 25 years. “When I play in Kentucky, they announce me as being from New York. When I play in New York, they announce me as being from Kentucky, so I guess neither wants to claim me, but they are both home,” he says. He formed the Barnstormers in 1994 and has been spreading the Bluegrass word across the Eastern part of the Country.Troubled Times, the Barnstormers second release, is an extremely comprehensive package. Accompanying the CD is a full-length documentary DVD on the group, as well as extensive liner notes.The documentary, titled Rollin’ On, is a 78 minutes documentary which follows the group on a variety of show dates, from playing in New York City to a radio show to a church to a Square Dance. Through the documentary we meet the Barnstormers: James Reams on guitar and lead vocals, Mark Farrell on fiddle, mandolin and baritone vocals, Carl Hayano on bass and tenor vocals and Mickey Maguire on banjo. The groups love and respect for the music they play is evident as we see them playing these shows as well as when we see them relaxing with family. We see the process they went through to record, which was essentially in a living room with very little dampening of the room which lends to the authentic sound of the music considering many of the oldest Bluegrass recordings were done in small rooms which were not as acoustically treated as today’s studios. The DVD also offers two additional features. One is additional footage of the group recording and the second is a 20-minute preview of another James Reams project, a documentary entitled Pioneers of Bluegrass. Judging by the preview, this documentary will be a Bluegrass fans dream. It, like the Rollin’ On documentary is a low budget one or two camera affair. You won’t mistake it for a Sundance entry. But its subject matter transcends the technical aspects featuring artists from the “first generation” of Bluegrass. Included on the preview were anecdotes told by Bobby Osborne, Curly Seckler and the late “King of Bluegrass” Jimmy Martin.The CD portion of the package is also evidence Reams’ love of authentic old time Bluegrass music and the song selection shows the Barnstormers knowledge of old time Bluegrass music. While it is common for Bluegrass bands to strengthen and broaden their repertoire using songs by the artists that come before them, many fall back on the classics that might even be known to the casual fan. Reams takes a different approach, reaching deep into the Bluegrass songbook to pull out near forgotten tunes or perhaps songs that have never been heard.Songs such as the 1972 Goins Brothers gem “Head of the Holler” or 1940’s Roy Hogsed tune “Ain’ta Bump in the Road.” The Barnstormers also mine the traditional songbook and that of well-known Bluegrass artists such as Arthur Smith. In choosing songs, they tend to go for the under recorded songs in an effort to keep them alive. In the early days of Bluegrass music groups performed many songs that never made it on to record. Young Bluegrass enthusiasts would attend concerts and festivals and situate portable tape recorders near the stage to both preserve the songs they were hearing and to broaden their own repertoire. This allowed songs to be passed down through the generations of artists. It seems to be in this vein of thinking that Reams and company choose their songs. They are also unafraid to record something more modern a is evidenced by the inclusion of the Robbie Fulks song “Cold Statesville Ground.”There are also five original songs included on the disc, two are banjo-fueled instrumentals written by Maguire, the other three are Reams originals. The orginals here fit in perfectly with the old time numbers on the album. As a songwriter, Reams and co-writer Tina Aridas, write songs that deal with real problems with a social conscious. “Troubled Times” talks about the growing threat to family operated farms with lyrical insight that would make Willie, John and Neil proud. “Eye of The Storm” could be lifted from any Hurricane Katrina story while “Hills of My County” warns against the prevalent practice of strip mining for coal and it’s consequences.It is evident that James Reams and the Barnstormers not only love Bluegrass music, but they have a healthy respect for those that have come before them. The Barnstormers can lay it down with the best of them, yet never seem to compete for the spotlight, holding their place and propelling the music forward. Reams has a great voice for the old time songs and is right in line with his musical heroes such as Red Foley and Carter Stanley. It is groups like James Reams and the Barnstormers who will not only tow the line of authentic Bluegrass, but will provide (through comprehensive CD packages, film documentaries, their annual Bluegrass festival or their Jamborees held in the heart of Brooklyn) the next generation of Bluegrass musicians a watermark for authenticity.
Apr
14
2006
Category : Reviews
Trailer Life is a mixture of southern rock with power pop with a dash of steel-guitar country. If you like those genres, it�s probably impossible to dislike this catchy CD. The songs are filled with hooks, tasty and energetic guitar solos, harmonies, keyboards and even horns! They just played the Narrows Center for the Arts in Fall River where I volunteer and we were knocked over by their showmanship, energy and solid musicianship. For our readers in the southern part of the United States, you can see them in Raleigh, Charlotte, Pensacola and Nashville over the next few weeks. With apologies to Smuckers, �with a name like Drunk Stuntmen, they�ve got to be good.� And they are, to these furry ears.
Click here to view pictures from the show at the Narrows Center for the Arts
Apr
13
2006
Category : Reviews
When I unwrapped Lost Hotel I was not familiar with the music of Wade Bowen, so I came to the disc with no expectations other than that I knew Bowen was predominately associated with the Texas music scene and that the Waco, TX native had a new video on CMT for the lead single “God Bless This Town.”The album kicks off with “God Bless This Town” and if you have ever lived in a small town it will sound very familiar: the rumors that run around the town, yet the feeling of being torn between wanting out and the security familiarity brings.The themes of loss and loneliness run through this album, which Wade calls a “serious” album. Songs like “One Step Closer,” “Lay It All On You” and “Lost Control Of My Heart” deal with the loss of relationships from slightly varying degrees. “Resurrection,” along those same lines, is a revenge-filled break-up song written with another Texas songsmith, Bleu Edmondson. “Perfect Silence” also deals with relationships, but not in the lose of one and is a beautiful love song Bowen wrote for his wife, one of only two love songs he says he has ever written. In my opinion, if Bowen wants mainstream radio recognition, this should be the next song on the release list.But it’s not all mid-tempo songs of remorse and longing or ballads. Songs like “Handle” and “Crazy Enough” show the more rocking, barroom side of Wade Bowen.A couple of songs on the album bear looking a little further into. The first is “Lost Hotel,” the title track. Bowen states that this song “represents the seriousness of the record that I wanted to get across to people as a songwriter and artist.” The song simply speaks of giving up: You lose all your good sense You go way over the edge There’s no turning back Once you’ve checked in to the Lost HotelBut, as bleak a picture as Bowen and co-writer Greg Brownd paint, redemption can also be found at the Lost Hotel: So say a prayer for the weary Say a prayer for the lost Say a prayer for the hungry They’ve all paid the highest cost Hope is there to find We’re just so quick to condemn Lay your hands on a desolate soul ‘Cause someday you just might see them Down at the Lost HotelOne of my favorite songs on the album is the closer “Mood Ring.” The song is written by Aliway, Jennifer Kimball and Paul Wayne Thorn and follows a man into a store while he struggles internally with questions about the woman he is with. It seems nothing pleases her and he isn’t even sure that she wants him around, so his solution is to buy a mood ring: If it turns black, I should turn back If it turns red, she likes what I said If it turns blue, I should leave her alone If it turns green, she wants me I knowThe song has an infectious chorus and the accessibility of any mainstream song without giving up its identity, except it is over 6 minutes long, so that chances of it being heard on the radio are slim.With Lost Hotel, Wade Bowen has shown himself to have the potential to be another breakout artist from the fertile Texas music scene. His voice reminds me of my favorite bourbon, it has enough bite to make it stand out, but it smooth enough for repeated servings and could easily appeal to a more mass audience without being watered down.You can purchased Lost Hotel at LoneStarMusic.com
Apr
08
2006
Category : Features
Ingram continued to tour Texas and received interest from Sony imprint Lucky Dog. Having been burnt twice, Ingram was understandably hesitant. But with a passion for his music and the fact that Lucky Dog was also home to fellow Texans and friends Charlie and Bruce Robison, Ingram took the leap. To capitalize on the overlapping fanbase, Lucky Dog released the live album Unleashed Live featuring the three artists live at Gruene Hall. His first Lucky Dog studio release, Hey You, featured the single “How Many Days” which peaked at #64. In 2002, Ingram released his final Lucky Dog album, Electric and parted with the label. Between then and now, Ingram released three live albums, one in the popular Live from Billy Bob’s Texas series and two on his on RAM label (Happy Happy – Live at Gruene Hall and Acoustic Motel)In late 2005, Ingram took the label plunge again and signed on with a new label, the Toby Keith funded Big Machine Records. January 2006 saw the release of Live…Wherever You Are which was a repackaging of Happy Happy with the addition of “Never Knocked Me Down” from the 2005 CMT Outlaws concert and two knew studio cuts. The first single “Wherever You Are” entered the charts at # 40 and has continued its steady climb ever since.This week, “Wherever You Are” is number #9, congratulations.Thanks.Will the follow-up single come from this album or from a new album?Yeah, it will be “Love You” from this album.With having a #9 single, do you feel any pressure, for the next album, to maybe write with other writers or to pick songs from other writers more so than you have in the past?Um… I’m not sure it would be considered another, um, more of a pressure, it’s more of a… I see what’s going on as a big opportunity. Something that I have been trying to get the whole time, you know, I’ve been trying to achieve some type of mainstream success while, you know, keeping my integrity about myself and my music, for the entire time I’ve been doing this, so now that I’ve kind of, we’ve achieved that this time around, I want to keep it going, but it’s not any outside pressure, it’s the same inside pressure I’ve always put on my own, on my self.Your next album will probably be coming out this year?Right.And it will be a studio album. Is it based on or are any of the tracks from the album you had completed in 2004 and were looking at releasing in 2005?Absolutely. There’s going to be some stuff that I did even before I got signed. The bulk of the record will be that. And then I’ve been doing some recording over the past six months that are going to, you know I’m going to take all twenty songs or something and make a record out of it.Have you been producing that or are you working with any producers?With producing, I’m going to do some more tracks with the guy that produced ‘Wherever You Are,” his name’s Jeremy Stover and then I did a bunch of tracks with Doug Lancio who is the band leader and producer for Patti Griffin. So it’s going to be some of that stuff, there’s not going to be one producer on the record.How did the opportunity to open for Sheryl Crow come about?Well, you know, I think our agents, you know, kind of one of those deals where my people talked to her people (laughs), you know? As funny as that may sound. They kind of… She’s going out on tour, so they pitched me to go out and open for her, and they accepted.That will be a great opportunity to, maybe get in front of a few people, I mean she is kind of touching in to the Country audience now, but she still has a wide Pop/Rock fanbase, really, so it will be a great opportunity to get your stuff out there.Absolutely, especially since we are just kind of on the other side of the fence from each other, she’s a rocker that leans toward Country and obviously what I do is Country that has a rock edge to it as well. I think it’s going to match up really well.The tour has all been re-scheduled for June and July, will it be going beyond that or just those twelve dates there?The dates in June and run into July with her and then the rest of the summer is basically going to be hooked… We got offered 35 dates for Brooks & Dunn’s US tour, we’re going to open that show the rest of the summer. And then in the Fall, we’re going to open for Gary Allen out in the Western United States. So it’s going to be a year of opening slots for me. It’s going to be nice.Is it different for you to approach an opening slot whereas you are more used to being the headliner as you go out in Texas and those areas?Yeah, you kind of have to, um, I mean, I’m not going to change too many things, but obviously there is a bit of an introduction that need to be established with a new audience, you know. I’ve done it before and it just feels like we’re playing a town for the first time, that’s how I kind of approach it. Where I’m here to do something, I’m here to turn people on to what I’m doing and then hopefully they’ll come back.On the set list, will you be mainly playing stuff off the new album, which of course is a lot of your “greatest hits,” so to speak…One good thing for me is that I get to… I’ll be playing basically stuff from this record, which it is, like you said, it’s almost like a greatest hits record (laughs) for a guy who’s never had any hits. All of the songs I’ve kind of established as my “hits” over the last few years, so, I’ll probably stick with mostly that, you know.Are you throwing in any new stuff from the upcoming album?There’ll be one or two brand new songs, yeah. For Sheryl Crow, and for all of these opening slots, you only get about 40 minutes at the most, that’s about 8 or 9 songs for me. And I’ll cover the record, maybe cover 1 or 2 brand new ones.And you are doing a few dates, not very many, with Charlie Robison. Is that kind of like old times?Should be fun, yeah. We haven’t got to go out playing together for a few years, so it will be nice, nice to hook up with the old gang.Do you feel like there is a drawback to the label “Texas Music?”Well, yeah, of course, not the music itself….Right, but the labeling …If everyone knew exactly what that term meant, there’d be no drawback to it. You know, I mean, it’s talking about the music having a distinct style, it’s the same as calling it alt-country or roots rock or whatever. For people who are music fans it’s become known as a term of a certain style. But for people who don’t understand it, it’s a drawback because it sets you in a geographic area, you know, kind of plants you there. And by no means is this music made for Texans. So, you know, it’s kind of a yes and no. It’s kind of a drawback, but there’s also been a lot of positives that have come from being able to identify with an entire group of fans who know what that is and support that music incredibly well.Do you think it’s allowed some radio programmers to leave some of it off because they can say “it’s Texas music, not the Country we play.” Like for example in the early days of Bluegrass, Bill Monroe and Flatt and Scruggs, they didn’t really like the term “Bluegrass” because they felt they were doing Country. But the radio programmers took the opportunity to, after a few years to say, “That’s bluegrass, not Country, so we’re not playing it.”That’s one of the funny parts about being in this business, being in any business really where you have to choose, pick and choose what you are going to do. You are always looking for a reason not to do
something ‘cause there’s so much coming at you, if you can weed out things for certain reasons, “Well, that’s Texas Country, we don’t play that.” Yeah, that’s definitely been a drawback and that has been one of the biggest challenges in getting mainstream acceptance, in getting programmers to play my stuff, is to say “wait a minute, listen to the record. Is that sound like what you are calling Texas Country or does that have a few elements that are just a little bit different than what you are playing already?”So yeah, that was something we had to fight through and have had to fight through for years. Hopefully, and I never say that battles over, but I think we have broken down a few of the barriers this time with “Wherever You Are.”#9 single, that’s a pretty good indication that some of those barriers are probably falling.(Laughs) Now we just have to keep those barriers down.Yeah, well the single has been doing a steady climb since its debut, so. And you have, arguably one of the best radio pitchmen (Big Machine label head Scott Borchetta) in your corner, so that’s beneficial.Absolutely, without a doubt.But the music speaks for itself and that has kept it up. Has the album been continuing to sell well as the single climbs?Yeah, we’re selling about 1500 units a week. Which for a live record… I think the live thing, that’s historically tough to sell. Which is why we didn’t really put too many expectations on how many of these we were going to sell. What we wanted to do was introduce ourselves, or re-introduce ourselves, however it fits, to the format of Country and then come immediately with a studio record, which is what we are going to do.As a fan it is good to hear that the record company had a strategy that didn’t include a magic number. It seems that so often a label puts out an artist that no one knows and when they don’t sell that magic number, they are gone. So it’s good to hear they didn’t have a number set and say “well if you don’t hit this, it’s back to Texas.”(Laughs) You got it man, I’m glad for that as well, I really am. I got in bed with these guys because I felt like that was going to be their approach. So they are staying true to their word.Have you felt any backlash maybe, for lack of a better term, or accusations of selling out just because of dealing with Nashville and guys like Toby Keith, people who they perceive as stars who they might not like their music, so what’s Jack doing getting tangled up in the mess?Well, you know, I haven’t felt it, but I know it’s out there, I mean it has to be, ‘cause any time I have ever seen anybody change the playing field they’re on, there’s always that. I’m not sure if that there is a fear that I am going to sell-out or if there’s a perception that I am going to, if I have. I’m sure it’s there, I’ve seen it happen before and I just… all I really care about as far as that goes is making sure that I do my job good enough to where I stay at this level we’ve achieved right here long enough for those people who say that to really be forced to take a good look at what I’m doing.Right.And you know, it’s just human nature, I don’t know what there is about it but I’m sure when Neil Young was playing 200 seat clubs, when he was just getting started, all of a sudden he’s playing 2000, 5000, 10000, 20000 seaters there were people who go “aw man, I liked him better when he was doing this.” That’s fine, that’s cool, but I guarantee you those people are fans of Neil Young today.You know what I mean? So I just decided a while back that that wasn’t going to be my concern, I know the kind of music I want to make, I know the kind of music I’ve made and am going to make and everybody else can have their opinion.And if they want to come along for the ride, then they are welcome to it.Absolutely man! ‘Cause I know that I didn’t get in this to make “pop,” slick music, that’s not what gets me off, that’s not what inspires me, so I just know that’s not what I’m going to do. All the other things, that just comes and goes, man.And then there’s also that group of fans that exists in every form of music that are like, “Everyone in the world didn’t know Jack Ingram, but I did. And now a lot more people do, so either he has to not be cool or I have to not be cool and I’m going to choose him.”(Laughs) Right, man! I totally get that! I’m lucky I do, I’m glad I do, because that is a painful process for an artist to go through, where they feel like people have turned against them. But I am a big enough fan of music that I know I’ve felt that way before myself and it wasn’t necessarily true. And with your radio show, you prove you don’t have boundaries in your own musical tastes, so if you’re knocking a few boundaries down here and there, that’s kind of to be expected, that’s where your roots are, that’s where you are coming from. So the thing that’s cool about your radio show is it’s like the DJs used to be. You play what you pick up, “hey, I like this, I’m going to play it” it’s not a computer generated list of songs someone has to play.Exactly man. If it wasn’t for that, what’s the point, for me any way, ‘cause it’s not my day job, it’s just fun, you know?With a top ten single, the album is selling really well, some great opening slots, people might look at you and think now he is hitting a success point. I read a quote from John Mellencamp recently, from an interview from around 1983, around the time American Fool, people said “Man, John, you are a success!’ and his reply was “I’m only a success if I can do this five of six more times.” Is that kind of the way you look at it?That’s funny, man, I always knew I liked him. The first successful moment you have, or that I had, that most people have, is when you realize that this is what you are doing for a living. And it’s not going to be taken away from you for just because, whatever. You’re doing it, you’ve made a certain name for yourself to where you are making a living. That’s a moment where you go, alright, cool, things are okay. And I feel like I did that years ago, you know? And now, he is right, it’s like now the game… this is a whole other chapter, now let’s get this right, we did it once, but the idea is to do it until you’ve had your full time at bat. This is just our first swing.So let’s say after that time at bat’s over, way in the future, what do you see yourself doing then? Producing, going into label work, or just retiring on a farm somewhere?You know, I don’t think I’m ever, you know, who knows, never say never and I have no idea what the future holds, but I’ve never seen myself as one who is just going to retire. I love music, man, I just love it. I love the way it affects me as a fan and as a musician so I can’t imagine… You know I produced a record on a guy named Josh Owen which is going to come out in Texas and I intend on doing some more production work. I know that I know this business fairly well at this point and I know that I could do some people some good, you know? So, I’ll just see what happens, but I’m going to be in the music business.Will there be a Real American Music Festival this year?We’re talking about that, this will be number four and we’re trying to figure out how we are going to do it with the Brooks & Dunn tour, we’ll be out with Brooks & Dunn on the weekend that
we traditionally do that RAMFest. So if it’s done this year it’s going to have to be a different date, but I’m planning on doing it.Who’s in your CD player right now?Oh man, it’s funny you ask, I just imported into my iTunes last night and I put Kathleen Edwards in there. I put Rhett Miller’s new one The Believer in there and I put Roy Orbison the Essential series in there. So I’m kind of all over the map. I just got done reading a book by this guy named Paul Zollo called Conversations with Tom Petty, which is really cool, that kind of got me on another Tom Petty kick, as if I need to be on another one. (laughs) So that’s what’s in there right now.(laughs)Maybe next summer you can tour with Tom Petty?(laughs) Man, you know what? That would be a dream come true and, man, these days I’m not ruling out dreams coming true.
Apr
07
2006
Category : Reviews
There are always reasons for not chasing the dream: I’m too old to change course now, I don’t have the money, I need the money I make now, etc., etc.Luckily, Adam Hood decided to chase his dream a few years back and we get to reap the benefits.Hood began playing music very young and joined his first band at age fourteen. He continued to play, solo and in bands, until college. After a brief stay at Auburn, the Alabama native reached that common crossroads – chase his dream or get a job. He chose a job. But that idea only lasted three months, Hood quit his job as a land surveyor and began playing gigs around the college towns.In 2002, Hood released a live album, 21 to Enter. And now he has released his follow-up EP 6th Street.This four song EP carries a strong theme of relationships. In “Tuesday Nights” Hood recounts a typical evening of playing to a small crowd, yet chasing his dream and the thankfulness of having a significant other that supports his quest. “Million Miles Away” takes a counterpoint to that where the man laments as he drives home that her heart is a million miles away.“Coffee Song” is a story that could happen to any of us: a businessman who chose success over friends and a barista who grows weary of the thankless job of serving. It is the man’s kind “thank you” that leads them to a conversation that draws both into a relationship built on kindness.“Play Something We Know” was the first song I had heard from this record and made me seek out more on Adam Hood. It is a playful Todd Snider-esque ode to “that guy.” You know the one that shows up at every bar or show. The guy that yells, as the chorus states: We wondered if you know Any Lynyrd Skynyrd? Or “American Pie?” Willie and Waylon? “Magic Carpet Ride?” How ‘bout Marshall Tucker? Or David Allen Coe? Play something we can sing to Play something we know.The EP, while only four songs long, exhibits Hood’s evocative songwriting and his great voice, which is a great mix of southern drawl and soulful power.6th Street is available, as well as the live CD, at www.adamhood.com, Amazon, iTunes or LoneStarMusic.com.
Apr
06
2006
Life gets in the way. The phone rings. Someone needs hay. I decide to move a grain drill from Seguin to Belmont—the damn thing is sixteen feet wide and between road construction and too much traffic, the trip leaves me frazzled. I look at my watch and realize I barely have time to make it if I leave without changing clothes or cleaning up. Austin traffic on a Friday. Not just any Friday. SXSW. Gridlock. Find a parking space? Good luck. Takes more than luck. Seven bucks and knowing where to go. I don’t know. I arrive thirty minutes later than planned, dirty, ready to cut the next son-of-a-buck that gets in my way. The place is full of people. Two cowboy hats. One on my head, the other on the head of Enrique Garza Sr., the father of Los Lonely Boys. So maybe I’m not totally alone in this insane city. Then I see Hector. He gets me past the protectors of the gate. I take my seat. The movie comes on. For the next two hours I am lost in the world of Los Lonely Boys. Before it’s over I am washed clean. Afterwards, I go to a party and get to meet the patriarch of the Garza family. I had listened to the boy’s music and thought it OK, but never quite understanding why they were so popular. Now I know. Watch this movie and you will too. Catch them live and you’ll know. These guys are on fire. Their live performance incorporates power, skill, heart, soul, timing and spirit, uniquely their own. Henry Garza compares playing his music to making a tortilla. He takes a little Hendrix, a little Clapton, some Ritchie Valens, Stevie Ray Vaughn, some of the roots music his dad taught him, throws in his own secret ingredients and viola, Texican Rock and Roll emerges. But what sets this group far and above the rest is family. There’s a bond among these boys: love, respect, pride in their culture and their heritage, and a general sense that you’re in the presence of good honest American folk. That’s right. American. Best of the best we have to offer. These guys have roots. One of the mistakes people make when describing America is that Mexicans get left out of the equation. America wouldn’t be America without the contribution Latinos have made and continue to make to this land. The world of Americana music is not unlike the rest of the country, dominated by white males. It’s time to break down the barriers and let the raza in. There’s no way you can call your product roots music without recognizing all the various branches that make up this land and its history. (Note: On a recent trip to El Paso/Juarez I visited an old cathedral. Date of construction, and this is one big honkin’ building: 1600’s. About the same time some white guy was landing at Jamestown and settling (?) North America.) Enrique Garza Sr. fought like hell to be included in the world of country music, and while he was allowed to play in honkytonks, the large arena remained beyond his reach. Not too many rednecks were willing to consider some Mexican singing country songs. When his boys asked him how to handle this rejection he told them to take it easy and that when you play your music, they’ll understand. The boys listened and are still doing that to this day. Enrique Sr. didn’t fulfill his personal dream of being a name brand performer, but his sons are accomplishing the feat on his behalf. The studio CD has sold over two million copies. If I don’t miss my guess, they’re just getting warmed up. Their live performances are light-years better than the CD. Hector Galan was around to capture some of that along with the family history that makes this group what it is. Watch the movie when it comes your way. Parts will make you angry. Parts will make you laugh; other parts may make you cry. Before it’s over you’ll clap and cheer and emerge feeling cleansed of divisive hatred and racism that threatens to tear this country apart. I for one left feeling better about the land I know and love and proud to call Los Lonely Boys, mis hermanos. ——————– About the Author – Don Henry Ford, Jr. When Don’s not writing books he lends out his talent to Americana Roots to put together great articles like this. If you’ve enjoyed what you read, then pick up Don’s latest book Contrabando: Confessions of a Drug Smuggling Cowboy at your local bookstore or online at Cinco Puntos Press.
Apr
05
2006
Category : Reviews
I was a little puzzled when I was listening, though, because to my furry ears Mr. Robison does a dead-on imitation of Jerry Garcia on a tune called “Tennessee Jed”—and, sure enough, the song was written by Jerry and Grateful Dead lyricist Robert Hunter. Don’t know why Bruce is imitating anybody because he’s certainly a more than adequate vocalist. Then, right after the Jerry Garcia imitation, he does a Webb Pierce song—More and More—that struck me as sounding very much like Americana patron saint Gram Parsons. That said, perhaps the best track on the CD is a song Robison co-wrote with Miles Zuniga, Days Go By, which is a first-person, almost breezy account of a man’s descent from a happy marriage in 1974, to losing a baby, to mental illness, to drug abuse, to pawning (presumably) a wedding ring on a cold spring day in Chicago, to living in the streets “on the corner of 5th Street and Vine with a bottle of wine.” Good stuff, overall, even when he sounds like Jerry and Gram. Purchase Eleven Stories at LoneStarMusic.com




