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2007 January | Americana Roots

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Drew Kennedy - Alone, But Not Lonely (Live) (Free Download) There is something warm and soothing about live acoustic music. It allows the singer to paint a picture with his lyrics with amazing clarity and passion. When you combine well written lyrics along with...

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Tom Savage Trio- The County Line Kingston, Ontario's Tom Savage fourth studio album called The County Line recently founds its way to my ears.  Even though it is a 2008 release it deserves your attention if you haven't heard it. ...

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Marley's Ghost - Ghost Town Ever ask yourself what has happened to real music as you search your radio dial….looking for anything that sounds appealing? The music is still out there, you just need to look in the right places. Some...

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Jeremy Porter - Party of One After listening to “Party of One,” Jeremy Porter’s debut solo CD, it’s easy to see what makes Americana music a deeper listen than pure Pop. Both genres share the synthesis of multiple source genres,...

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Drunk On Crutches - People.Places.Things. Have you ever decided to listen to new CD, not knowing what to expect? Sure you have. And when the first song starts, you are not only surprised, but ready to hear what’s next? Well, that’s what happened...

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Charlie Robison

Category : Features

A couple of weeks ago I went to see Shut Up and Sing, a movie about the Dixie Chicks. The movie is excellent; watch it if you can, regardless of your political inclinations. You�ll discover there are real people behind those performers that some choose to hate. Good, decent American people with love for this country and the traditions on which they were raised. In them I saw my sisters, daughters and the mothers of our children, not some evil incarnate the press, Lipton tea or Clearchannel Corporation would have me to believe they are. Charlie appears in the movie�he�s married to Emily, one of the Chicks. And damn if I wasn�t looking at a kindred spirit.
Charlie hails from Bandera, Texas. He�s eighth generation Texan and still lives and works on a ranch. Hot damn. A real person. A real man. A country boy. Hard to find these in the world of glitz and glitter. Unapologetic, uncomfortable in a world where kissing ass is the rule and a necessary part of doing business. He stays home while Emily tours the land playing her songs.
Charlie is a strapping fellow, well over six foot tall and built solid. I heard he played college ball for Texas Tech but don�t know much about that part of his life. He looks the part. He�s comfortable in jeans and work shirts. On a horse. Feeding cows. In a pickup truck. On a tractor. Under a cowboy hat or a farmer�s cap. He wears a comfortable smile, looks you in the eye, no shrinking violet or false modesty here. Bet he�d kick your ass if he saw you offend a woman. But when he takes a child in those massive hands, it�s the safest place in the whole wide world.
I discovered Charlie�s CD�s in reverse order, starting with Good Times. Then Step Right Up and finally Life of the Party. Damn if I know which one I like best. All three are solid from beginning to end. It�s obvious that he didn�t produce the albums on demand or to fit some schedule. Each is carefully crafted, without filler. They are spaced three years apart, beginning in 1998. Live albums appear interspersed among these, but I don�t own them.
I hear of places and people I know in Charlie�s songs: Bandera, Seguin, even Balmorhea appears; oil field workers, ranchers, border towns, tacos, enchiladas, barbecued brisket, and fire roasted weenies when the brisket runs out, the girls that broke my heart, the songs I found to heal those wounds, and the fun we shared with friends. He covers everyone from the preacher to the whore, from a desperate bank robber to a loving wife, from drunk rowdy fun-loving cowboys to devoted parents and generations of hard-working, honest people. I hear traces of Ireland, Germany, Mexico and good old American country music in his songs. Charlie drank and doped, fought and played, loved, lived and bleeds Texas; this boy is Texan, through and though.
Buy his music, watch his live show. You�ll be glad you did.

2006 Top Ten

Category : Features

10.  White Ghost Shivers � Everyone�s Got �Em
This mix of string band and hot jazz instrumentation leads to a compelling m�lange of styles: �hot jazz, hokum, blues, and hillbilly music,� I think their show poster reads.  Quite campy, I know, and by no means claiming any sort of �authenticity,� this CD shows how fun it can be to play and listen to roots music.  Favorite song:  �Little Kisses.�
9.  Gary Bennett � Human Condition
This may be the most honest and heart-felt CD of the year.  Gary breaks with the retro vibe that sometimes seemed to overshadow him in his former band BR5-49 and focuses here on his songwriting.  Not to say that this is a singer/songwriter album�it�s not�Gary plays finger-style guitar on one track, but largely leaves the instruments to a good cast of supporting players, including notables such as Marty Stuart, Kenny Vaughan, and Lloyd Green. The result is a musical background that is both compelling and focused on the songwriting.  Favorite song:  �Headin� Home.�
8.  Grayson Capps � Wail and Ride
This New Orleans-based singer/songwriter�s second solo release is dedicated to the recovery of his city.  Primarily a heavy blues-based sound, he also incorporates aspects of New Orleans R&B, particularly on a few tracks featuring piano reminiscent of Professor Longhair or Allen Toussaint.  Similar to Gary Bennett, Grayson features interesting instrumentation, helping this album transcend the singer/songwriter label, but the backing music is always at the service of the songwriting, which shines through.  Favorite song: �Give It To Me.�
7.  Old Crow Medicine Show � Big Iron World
Old Crow largely stick to their formula on this album, but there�s nothing wrong with more of the same, when you�re the premiere old time string band in the country.  They do stretch themselves a bit, covering both Lieber/Butler and Woody Guthrie.  They also give a much more prominent position to the harmonica.  But their amazing three part harmony remains central to this album.  Favorite song:  �I Hear Them All.�
6.  Solomon Burke � Nashville
Solomon Burke has been toying around at the edge of country music for almost fifty years; on this album he finally crosses over incontrovertibly and doesn�t disappoint.  Producer Buddy Miller lets Burke�s powerful voice take center stage on this record, cushioning it in instrumentals undeniably country yet perfect for Burke�s soulful singing.  Favorite song:  �Valley of Tears.�
5.  Johnny Cash � A Hundred Highways
Although not the best of the American Recordings, this is a powerful album�Johnny truly seems to be speaking from the grave.  Death pervades this album in a way that cannot be found in the work of younger people who feel prematurely near death.  Johnny�s slow, deliberative delivery in his already-rough voice further exhausted by age leaves a subtext of death in all of these songs.  Or maybe it�s just the knowledge that he died shortly after recording these that makes death so apparent.  Whatever the reason, this is a haunting album.  Favorite song:  �God�s Gonna Cut You Down.�
4.  Hank Williams III � Straight to Hell
Two or three years in the making, this album doesn�t disappoint.  This album relies heavily on old-time instrumentation, going without drums for half of the tracks, often preferring Dobro to the more countrypolitan steel, and featuring some amazing claw-hammer banjo by BR549’s Donnie Herron, giving us a thoroughly Appalachian sound, although updated to include more than a nod at Hank’s parallel interest in metal.  While III�s rhetoric of mayhem may lead to fatigue, well, so what, you can sleep when you�re dead, right?  Favorite song:  �D. Ray White.�

3.  Kris Kristofferson � This Old Road
This album is very sparse and atmospheric, yet not vapid as Kristofferson’s lyrics come to the front.  I could see comparisons to Cash’s American Recordings, especially the character of the old voice. The production here, by Don Was, is much less obvious than Rick Rubin’s on the American series, though. The songs are mostly rather sparse, with Kristofferson on guitar and harmonica with mandolin, drums, bass, and piano also appearing.  The lyrical content of this album is what you might expect of a lefty during a conservative political swing, but Kristofferson’s writing skills haven’t lessened over the years and he once again proves his place as one of the great songwriters. He deals subtly with topics that might be approached more clumsily by lesser writers.  Favorite song:  �Pilgrim�s Progress.�
2.  Bob Wayne and the Outlaw Carnies � Blood to Dust
I wasn’t expecting much from a CD that wasn’t even formally pressed, just burned off a computer and hand labeled with a Sharpie, but this album blew me away.  Bob Wayne and the Outlaw Carnies, when I saw them, were a Bob Wayne (who I’ve found out is Hank III’s guitar tech) on acoustic guitar, Joe Buck on bass, and a really good banjo and telecaster player who’s name I don’t know. The CD includes drums and some other instruments.
Bob Wayne (I assume) writes really pensive and spiritual songs. I could easily see these same songs becoming maudlin in the hands of an unskilled singer/songwriter, but Bob Wayne doesn’t fall for undue dramatics. This album is also the most honestly spiritual set of songs outside of true gospel, referencing God and the devil on almost every track. But, unlike some �alt-country� indie rockers, he’s not being ironic or dismissive. In fact, his subtle understanding of the sin/salvation contrast of gospel and the blues might give discomfort to some hipsters who are only familiar with ironic spirituality or cherry-picked, tourist versions of Buddhism or Kabbala.  Favorite song:  �27 Years.�
1.  Scott Biram � Graveyard Shift
I left this CD in my car stereo for five weeks, playing over and over uninterrupted.  This is the second Bloodshot album by Austin-based �dirty old one man band� Scott H. Biram and his fifth album overall. Unlike his previous record, this record really is just him, singing lead and harmony vocals and playing all the instruments: guitars, harmonica, Hammond B3 organ, and a plethora of percussion and �random noise.�
This record is rather morose, as is indicated by the title and the album art. Scott continues to work through his near-death experience in a head on collision with a semi. His deep ambivalence to death and spirituality is puzzling as it makes him hard to categorize. His frequent use of the gospel call and response form as well as calling out to Jesus both come off as neither sincere nor insincere. His use of religious musical forms certainly cannot be grouped with the so-called irony of current indie rock, but it also doesn’t have a place within gospel.
While this album doesn’t quite teeter precariously between Saturday night and Sunday morning (it’s more Saturday night) the way Bob Wayne’s Blood to Dust does, I feel that it further represents a revival of the ambivalent relationship between gospel and the blues that was so important in the formative years of what we have come to call country music and which has been somewhat lacking recently.  Favorite song:  �Been Down Too Long.�
Joel Luber is a student in the masters program in American Studies at the University of Kansas.  He studies popular music in American culture, focusing on country and �roots� music.  When he�s not engrossed in esoteric critical theory, he keeps a vaguely alt-country-oriented audioblog Postmodern Sounds in Country and Western Music.

 

The Liturgy of Mystery: David Wilcox at the Fitzgerald, St. Paul, MN

Category : Reviews

Five songs into Wilcox�s set he simply had to level with us: �Olson has heart and soul, and this carbon fiber guitar has no heart and soul.� Rainsong then chose to go out of tune obstinately, which then elicited an apology from Wilcox. From there, Olson was still missed, but Rainsong proved to be up to the task.
Of course, Rainsong was working with great material.
From this wonderful body of work, Wilcox ends up selecting songs partly based on the feeling from the crowd. As soon as Wilcox walked on stage, you could tell it was his crowd to work with, an almost rowdy crowd (for a folk show). Talking with Wilcox on the phone the next day, he remarked how there was this �surprising energy� which meant he could do some �really fun songs.� �A time of celebration� and a �fun ride� were his other ways of describing what it was like in the Fitzgerald that night. With that, he launched into an extended version of �Start with the Ending,� including more and new stories from what he had been doing on previous tours.
The second song of the night was �Get On� from the new album, Vista. The guitar line doesn�t wander off too far into dreamy space before the chorus gets us on that train, bouncy shocks, a groove, and yet, because of its philosophical contemplations, the song appropriately doesn�t end on a resolving chord.
That unresolved chord might be an analogy for Wilcox�s theology which clearly remains Christian without demarcating it from other worldviews. A new song, �Three Brothers,� talks about a hope for peace in Jerusalem, merging that cities seemingly disparate faiths�Islam, Judaism, and Christian. It�s a song for the horizontal, this world peace among three faiths, but it might be a tough sell in many Christian contexts because it doesn�t mark out Christianity as the one truth.
Wilcox said in our conversation that he is Christian, but he thinks about his music as �a start of the journey.� �My openness about respecting everyone on their path is a tricky thing. If you find someone on the bottom, then you journey together.�
That invitation to journey certainly comes through in Wilcox�s live show. At times, I could almost see a liturgical order happening like how the Christian Church has traditionally ordered a worship service to follow a flow of theological ideas.
Yet, with Wilcox as �worship leader,� the liturgy is for those ready to journey; it�s not just the club. Those ready to journey are those ready to set aside their preconceived notions and see how the spiritual interacts with their souls. As Wilcox said, �A spiritual path without surrendering is like scuba diving without getting your hair wet.� Wilcox urged us to dive.
Liturgically, the service opened with �Start with the Ending,� what my denomination might call the �As We Gather� meditation point�a time to reflect on just what it means to come before God. In fact, even as that song reflects on the need to lay everything on the table at the beginning of a relationship, so that corresponds to the idea that worship begins in realizing that we die first in baptism, raised to life in Christ.
�Waffle House,� an old favorite on which Wilcox really played up the border tango tune, acts like a passing of the peace, seeing the fellowship we have amid the congregation of people who all have their struggles and needs. Then with �The Hard Part� (Vista) comes a reading from Song of Songs, God�s love song to His people, moving with that groove clip in the chorus. Wilcox said before he played the song, �This is a ferocious love song. This songs works on the horizontal [between two people], but I love to imagine it on the vertical coming from that big love. Hear it how it serves.�
What comes through this liturgical service of sorts is a greater sense of the mystery than perhaps most Sunday morning services allow. Even as opener Justin Roth (see below) and Peter Mayer really explore the ideas of mystery, the universe, and the mystical, Wilcox delves into these unknowns with a different kind of knowing. He�s being led on a journey, he�s not providing all of the answers, he�s not even pretending to have all of the answers, but there is a �big love,� a Creator behind the vista, a Someone who finds us (�How Did You Find Me Here�).
Wilcox closed the evening with a three-song encore. Returning to stage with another wild-eyed laughter that seemed even more surprised and enthusiastic on that evening, Wilcox�s guitar picked up on the initial energy in the Fitzgerald for �Eye of the Hurricane.� He followed this with �Rusty Old American Dream� and then closed with the Pierce Pettis co-write, �Great Big World.� These were the closing hymns, the fuel for the journey, the benediction and prayer sending us along to see the light.
Justin Roth

While a hometown boy, Justin Roth had never played the Fitzgerald and apparently had never been invited to be an opener for a more major artist like Wilcox. I last saw Roth opening for John Gorka in Cedarburg, and while Roth did not add any new originals to his set, he nevertheless set the stage well for Wilcox while also thrilling the audience with his guitar skills.
�Fatima�s Waltz� is a fingerboard instrumental with an Irish air. On �Savior,� Roth uses his right hand to strum as if playing the bone (an Irish drum) while his left hand adds guitar body rim shots.
With �Shine,� Roth is reaching for Peter Mayer�s way of being enamored with the natural world and cosmology. This makes sense seeing as how Roth said he wrote this song as he discovered the music community growing around him in Minneapolis. Although, considering that much of that community has been around longer than Roth, perhaps it is better to say that the music community that was there for Roth to grow into.
And he is�growing into that music community. Perhaps with his next recording effort, we may see Roth take another step towards widening his body of work and reach into the singer-songwriter world. For now, it was a pleasure to see his excitement on being on that beautiful Fitzgerald stage talking about being an usher there just nine years earlier. Making up his own verb, Roth said, �I don�t think I ushed enough times to know how good it is to stand in this place.�

One Hoarse Town:  Bill Kirchen

Category : Reviews

Long before many of today�s up-and-coming �Americana� artists were even old enough to hold a Telecaster, Bill Kirchen was driving them through the wall as a singer, songwriter, and most notably as a lead guitar player in the 1970�s trailblazing group Commander Cody and his Lost Planet Airmen, whose now famous re-working of the 1950�s classic �Hot Rod Lincoln� went to No. 9 on the charts in 1972.  It was during this stint with Commander Cody and crew that Kirchen came into his own as a guitarist, mixing together an array of different musical styles and backgrounds from blues, rock, country, and rockabilly.  With Telecaster always in hand, Kirchen would become known for his �dieselbilly� sound, a sound for which he is now the undisputed king.
Now some thirty years removed from those days of outlaw rock n� roll, Kirchen has been building a solid solo career that began years later in 1994 with the release of his debut solo album Tombstone Every Mile.  That was followed by the critically acclaimed release Have Love Will Travel in 1996, and together the two records showcased Kirchen�s vast range of musical tastes and further established him as a touchstone artist in this world of �Americana� music long before any such label every existed.  The line of artists that have praised Kirchen�s work or point to him as an influence ranges from the likes Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, and the Allman Brothers Band, to Big Sandy and His Fly Rite Boys, Junior Brown, and a whole host of artists whose music does not fit neatly into one category or distinction but whose sound is rooted in the rich history of rock, country, and hillbilly blues.  With the release of Hammer of the Honky Tonk Gods, Kirchen continues to beat a path through the wide world of sound, once again showing the way forward for future artists to follow.
Hammer of the Honky Tonk Gods kicks off with a blast in the form of the album�s title track, a song that pays tribute not only to Kirchen�s trusty Telecaster but also to the host of musicians that have slung the straight driving �honky tonk hammer� as Kirchen lists off the likes of Buck Owens, Keith Richards, Muddy Waters, and Bruce Springsteen just to name a few.  Tightly wrapped around a stomping beat and plenty of string bendin�, this is just one of five new tracks that Kirchen wrote or co-wrote for the new record.
True to his diverse musical background and tastes, Kirchen jumps from straight ahead roots rock to Gram Parsons-tinged country as heard on another of the album�s brand new songs �Get A Little Goner� as Kirchen trades classic country guitar licks with special guest Cindy Cashdollar who sits in on steel guitar.  The best of the new songs comes along just before the album�s mid-point with a blue collar do-wop rocker Kirchen wrote called �Workin� Man�.  With a shuffling, deep drum beat, a catchy back chorus of ditty ditty wops, and a double shot of organ and piano from band members Austin DeLone and Geraint Watkins, �Workin Man� bounces and grooves while Kirchen voice is strong and convincing as he delivers the song�s underlying message:  �Now a workin� man won�t understand, how a company man became a hired hand / Now a workin� man can�t understand how he can�t afford a ticket to the promised land�.
As Hammer of the Honky Tonk Gods moves from displaying Kirchen�s songwriting talents into celebrating the music he loves, we find him tapping into his Michigan Motown roots with a soulful, bluesy version of �Devil With the Blue Dress� (made popular in 1967 by Motor City rockers Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels), as well as celebrating one of his songwriting heroes on the lonely roadhouse blues of Blackie Farrell�s �Skid Row in My Mind�.  And just for good measure Bill and his band kick it up with a taste of Memphis rockabilly that would make Mr. Sam Phillips smile and tap his toes on the hopping, piano pounding number �Heart of Gold�.
In the end I don�t think Bill Kirchen cares if you call his music Americana, roots driven country/rock, or a big ol� slab of burning love.  In the end, he has made a career out of ignoring labels by playing and writing music that has a story to tell or that simply feels good or sounds good to his ears and his heart.  As for Hammer of the Honky Tonk Gods?  � I�m reminded of an interview I heard with James Mangold, who director the Johnny Cash biopic �Walk the Line�.  Mangold said that Johnny Cash initially had but one concern when casting the role of who would play the Man In Black.  �Whoever plays me, make sure they don�t hold the guitar like a baby�.  Then Johnny preceded to pick up his guitar by the neck with one hand and swung it into his arms�the same way a carpenter would a hammer�to illustrate that the tools he used were the same any man might use.  Much like Johnny Cash, Bill Kirchen hits the nail right on the head.

Ashley Cleveland – Before The Daylight Shot

Category : Reviews

Cleveland released her first album, Big Town, in 1991 on Atlantic records, her guttural, raspy voice cutting through the Pop princesses and clattering rise of Grunge to present an alternative.  An alternative that at the same time pushed forward while giving music fans a piece of the past.
In 1991, her album was a rarity of another form.  Her personal spirituality shone through on cuts beginning with the acapella rendering of Andrae Crouchs� �Soon and Very Soon,� a reminder to Believers that this world is not our home and it won�t be long before we meet the Father on the path out of this often times overwhelming cesspool, which leads into the self-penned �Big Town� with it�s message of hope in things to come.  A Major label home for an artist with an outspoken Christian belief was out of the ordinary and even though the album was a critical success, it wasn�t the crossover success Atlantic hoped it would be.
Moving to the Christian label Word in 1993, Cleveland released Bus Named Desire and in 1995 Lesson of Love.  But the same formula that was cutting edge on a Major label (mixing �secular� songs with �Sacred�), proved to be a little too much for the more narrow-minded in the Christian music community. (Cleveland received some criticism for a song called �Skin Tight� which was thought to be too sensual, although it is about the physical attraction between a married couple and a little criticism goes a long way in the CCM world).
After independently releasing a live album and an album of hymns, Cleveland�s current release finds her coming full circle.  Before The Daylight�s Shot is filled with songs of faith and songs of life.
Starting off with �Queen of Soul,� a tribute to Aretha Franklin, Cleveland shows that her voice is in fine form, wailing through the homage to her hero with ease.
Another tribute of sorts is Stevie Wonders� �Higher Ground,� one of two covers on the album.  As much as I hate to admit it, the song is a bit of a misstep as Cleveland and band try to slow the funky number into a slower, bluesy number, but it sounds as if Cleveland�s voice is pulling against the weight of the band, ready to take off but not being permitted to do so.
Quick to recover, �Streams of Mercy� is a song of forgiveness and, as the title states, mercy and follows thematically into the �The Blessing.�  Where the songs share in theme, the music of �The Blessing� is a rocker allowing producer/guitarist/husband Kenny Greenberg to shine laying a bed of blues-rock guitars where Clevelands� voice lays comfortably.
The groove of �Ready or Not� provides a showcase for Clevelands� unmistakable voice, a voice which has graced the albums of artists such as John Hiatt, Pam Tillis, Emmylou Harris, Etta James and Rodney Crowell.
�I Need Jesus� is a well-crafted admission of faith and a prayer for Jesus to take the lead in her life.  Cleveland has a way of writing songs that speak to the spiritual side of things without coming off as preachy or cheesy.  Her songs weave the threads of faith through the fabric of life with a balance that shows the lessons that her experiences in life have imparted.
As I said, it is a rare thing for an artist to come on the scene with a full formation of talent, but Ashley Cleveland pulls it off.  Before the Daylight�s Shot is musically and thematically a rare feat of someone growing in their artistry while not losing focus of the types of songs and sounds that brought them to that point years removed from their debut.

Corb Lund – Hurtin’ Albertan

Category : Features

Corb Lund is one of those artists who have reached all of the goals put before him. His videos are seen on CMT. You can turn on the dial and hear his songs right along side those of Big and Rich and Kenny Chesney. He was awards an Artist of the Year award and an Album of the Year for his newest release Hair in My Eyes Like a Highland Steer. That album, along with its predecessor, Five Dollar Bill, have both gone Gold, selling over 500,000 copies each.
But all of this success has come in his native Canada and doesn’t easily transfer to a big career start in the States and even the recognition he has received in the Great White North has been hard won. ԉt’s kind of weird, too, ‘cause even up here, I’ve been doing this for ten or twelve years,ԠLund recounts, ԩt’s always sort been an underground, independent release kind of thing, this is the first time that we’ve really had an sort of industry attention this whole time. I’ve had a pretty good career for the last number of years, but it’s always been real grassroots, kind of under the radar, this is the first time it’s really been sort of accepted and recognized by the industry and stuff, so that’s interesting.ԍ

Perhaps it is out of our own ignorance or shortsightedness to see very far beyond our own borders that many do not even realize that there is a Country music scene in Canada. ԉ don’t have that much in common musically with the sort of straight ahead, sort of vanilla, cookie cutter kind of Country stuff, but there’s a lot of stuff in Canada that sort of aspires to that. It’s kind of weird ‘cause there’s a lot of acts in Canada that do this imitation of this Nashville thing that I didn’t like even to begin with when it was done by the Nashville people,ԠLund says with a laugh.
Ԕhere’s a lot of cool stuff in Nashville, but I’m talking about the Mainstream Corporate Country stuff. So there’s a lot of that stuff up here, but on the other hand there’s a whole underground sort of Country scene as well which I’ve been part of for years and that’s usually where the good stuff comes from. And we’re lucky because it’s crossed over in to the mainstream world somehow up here. Like up here they’re playing us with all of the mainstream Country people, which is really strange.ԍ

So what’s next? Conquer America.
With all of the success the band has celebrated in 2006, coming to America is like starting from square one. ԛI]t’s kind of a challenge though,ԠLund says, ԩt’s cool.ԍ
With a release that Lund feels is on par with anything else on the market, he has assembled a team around him to make that push into the States. The songwriting on Highland Steer continues to improve and Lund’s band, the Hurtin’ Albertans, have been perfecting their road show on recent tours through the States.
In his march south Lund has aligned himself with three allies that have helped him improve as he grows as an artist.
His first ally, one from across the border, embedded in Nashville, is Harry Stinson, who produced both Five Dollar Bill and Highland Steer. When it came time to record 2002’s Five Dollar Bill Lunds’ former manager suggested they meet with Stinson. ԉ have to admit, I think that was five or six years ago probably when we did that first one, I wasn’t aware of him and his pedigree when I first worked with him because my manager at the time knew him. We were looking for a producer and she said, ‘oh, I know this guy’ and we went into the studio when he was up here for a show and did a couple of songs over the weekend and it was awesome. And then I started digging around on the ‘net and was like ‘holy shit!’Ԡlaughs Lund, ԓpeaking of cool stuff in Nashville, he’s like the Zen master of all the cool music in Nashville.ԍ

Another ally is Canadian Country/Folk artist Ian Tyson who began his career in the folk duo Ian & Sylvia in the early 1960s. The influential duo also released a Country-Rock-Folk cult classic under the name Great Speckled Bird in the late Sixties. After a brief retirement to tend to his ranch in 1979, Tyson returned to recording and followed a more Country direction.
ԗell it was probably inevitable that I would meet Ian at some point ‘cause we’re both from Alberta, we both have similar backgrounds as far as the Western stuff goes and we’re on the same label up here,ԠLund explains. ԉ meet him a few years ago, I can’t even remember where, but I’ve known him quite a while, because we are both from Alberta, but he’s been a real supporter too, he’s sang on the record. I go up there to his place and we pick and drink beer.ԍ
That friendship lead to meeting another folk legend, Ramblin’ Jack Elliot. ԗe played a show together a number of years ago, in Alberta, I opened for him and we ended up hanging out and drinking beer until five in the morning,Ԡhe laughs. Ԉe took a shine to me, as it were. We’re buddies now, I call him once in a while and he tells me 45 minute stories. One of the songs that has, surprisingly been the most played up here is the one about the trucks getting stuck and that was a talking blues and he was the guy that inspired me to, I mean I’d heard that stuff before but, after getting to know him a little bit and playing with him, I went back and dug into my Dylan and Guthrie, all that sort of stuff and that was loosely the inspiration to write a talking blues song. I was happy to be the guy who got a talkin’ blues song on CMT up here, I was proud of that.ԍ

Ԃut that’s been one of the coolest things about the whole last few years of my career is meeting the ‘old guard’ and the guys you’ve listened to for years and looked up to,Ԡhe muses, ԉt’s pretty neat.ԍ
{mospagebreak}
The music on Highland Steer is an eclectic mix that represents Lund’s influences and tastes. Growing up on a ranch, Lund listened to many of the great Country artists of the late-’60s and ‘70s such as Willie Nelson and Johnny Horton (“Marty Robbins was a huge one.”).
But not all of his influences were stars: ԁctually, it’s interesting, one of my earliest influences were my grandfathers because they’re both cattle ranchers, they both came up from Nevada and Utah, around the turn of the century our families came up from America. When I was a kid they used to sing old- they weren’t singers, they were just cowboys and they were terrible singers, but (laughs) they had these songs that were kind of old cowboy oral tradition history songs that predate recorded music, like the ‘Strawberry Roan’ and ‘The Streets of Laredo’ and that sort of stuff. Which is really cool and I didn’t know this at the time, but thinking back on it now it’s like a real connection to a time when those ballad songs were documentations of peoples exploits and they would be passed around from guy to guy working, before anyone was thinking about making money with music they were singing songs as entertainment and a way of recording their own history. So the first songs I learned were ‘Strawberry Roan’ and one called ‘When the Works all Done This Fall’ and a handful of them,Ԡhe says.
Around age 15, like many adolescents are prone to do, Lund discovered Rock ‘n’ Roll via bands such as Black Sabbath. Ԕhat was what actually got me into playing music, I played indie rock for a number of years as well as this stuff,Ԡhe recalls.
While keeping one foot in the Country music he grew up with, Lund began a fairly lengthy career in a modern Rock outfit, The Smalls, which drew heavily on the Sabbath influences. As a primary writer in the band while also writing songs for his Country side project, Lund continued to stretch himself creatively.

ԉ think that that’s had an interesting affect on my writing style because I think that if I’d, growing up in a rural setting, if I’d gone into making music directly without getting into other stuff, I think my music would be a lot more straight ahead, like normal Country and Western music, but having been in an underground indie rock band for eight or ten years where individuality and uniqueness is rewarded instead of discouraged, I think that’s had an influence on my writing style. I think my writing style is a blend of Western heritage with independent irreverence,Ԡhe laughs, Աuirky.ԍ
That quirky sense of humor shows up on songs like the aforementioned talking blues Ԕhe Truck Got Stuck,ԠԈurtin’ AlbertanԠand one of the albums most popular songs, ԁll I Want To Do Is Play CardsԠ(“That’s one of my primary distractions when I’m trying to get songs written, so I figured I could use it as field reference that way I could justify all of my hours in the card room as field research.”).
But a quirky sense of humor in songwriting can sometimes be a drawback as many critics will be quick to write you off as a novelty. ԙeah, they have a couple times,ԠLund chuckles, Ԃut, I don’t know, whatever. I think about the stuff that I like to listen to and, I don’t know, I’m a big Jerry Reed fan. It’s like, I do what I do and if people like it, they like it. I mean there’s more lighthearted stuff on this record than my last one, I didn’t do it on purpose, that’s just the way it turned out, but there’s actually more fun kind of stuff on this record. Actually, my favorite tunes on the record are the darker ones like ‘The Truth Comes Out’ and the one with Tyson is one of my favorites, ‘The Rodeo’s Over.’ԍ

Ԃut on the other hand up here in Canada which is kind of a microcosm of the music industry internationally or whatever, it’s interesting, it’s been the novelty, the hooky songs have been the ones that have drawn people in to buying the record and then when they buy the record they go ‘oh, wow, there’s some interesting stuff on there.
ԉ’ve heard a lot of records that are a lot of shoe-gazing introspective stuff and that kind of gets me down (laughs). I don’t know, I think on a record it is important to have a variety of moods on it.ԍ
The moods of Highland Steer navigate between the advice from his grandfathers on ԁlways Keep an Edge on Your KnifeԠto the trucker song Ԉurtin’ Albertan.ԠStory songs such as Ԕhe Truth Comes OutԠand ԃounterfeiter’s BluesԠreveal Lunds’ songwriting chops and his dual love of story songs and history. ԙeah, I’m a sucker for the old-fashioned stuff in all things but in music I always look to the past for stuff. There’s other stuff on the record, there’s a bit of ragtime, Western Swing.ԍ

The variety seems to be serving him well as he continues to see his exposure grow and his fan base widen. But regardless of whether he makes it big internationally, he will continue to do what he believes he was born to do.
ԉ’m pretty serious about music so I’m kind of doing it either way. So I made the decision a long time ago to do this and I decided I would do this whether I had a lot of help or not, but finally it’s nice to have some.ԍ

Corb Lund Review

Category : Reviews

The well-played music focuses on familiar themes of trucks & truckin’, love, rodeos and home on the range—all of which I’m sure translates very well at his many, many live performances to packed rooms. Mr. Lund has a nice, even voice on this album, but his tone seldom varies from his tongue-in-cheek delivery. He is a good storyteller and a great yodeler. And I bet, if he focused in on the right song, he could sing the hell out of it, too. Regardless, this is a fun record with memorable songs such as "Little Foothills Heaven," "Always Keep An Edge On Your Knife" and "The Truck Got Stuck." Ramblin’ Jack Elliott is featured on "The Truck Got Stuck Talkin’ Blues" redux with a great story about a paying $12 for a Model A Ford. – Mary Sack

Bud’s Bounce – Bud Isaacs

Category : Reviews

While not the first to use the pedal steel guitar, Isaacs is credited as the man who brought the new sound to the ears of Country music listeners everywhere, in the process inspiring future pedal steel legends as Buddy Emmons and Ralph Mooney.
On March 26, 1928, in the small Indiana town of Bedford, Cecil and Iva Isaacs welcomed their son Forrest Ray �Bud� Isaacs.  Bedford�s location, nestled in the Ohio Valley, allowed the Isaacs� to tune in Barn Dances from Chicago (National Barn Dance, WLS), Nashville (The Grand Ole Opry, WSM) and Cincinnati (Midwestern Hayride, WLW) and Isaacs� Mother encouraged him to take up the steel guitar.
After eventually equipping his guitar with pedals, Isaacs knew his next step to fame would be to play the pinnacle of hillbilly entertainment, The Grand Ole Opry.  At age fourteen, he hopped a train from Bedford to Louisville, KY, then on to Nashville.  In the early days of the Opry, and indeed most radio barn dances, open auditions were held daily and if one desired to appear on the show, they had only to show up and do their best.  Isaacs did just that and Opry founder, the Solemn Ole Judge George D. Hay, liked what he heard and arranged for Isaacs to have a spot on the show playing in the band of one of the Oprys� most popular stars Pee Wee King.  Almost as an aside, Hay tossed out the question, �How old are you anyway?�  Without thinking, Isaacs answered truthfully, �14.�  At this Hay told Isaacs to return home and when he became old enough, he would be welcomed back to the Opry and given a spot.
Disappointed, but not defeated, Isaacs made his way back to Bedford where he played local dances until, at age sixteen when he was given the opportunity to travel to San Antonio, TX to play.  Homesick, Isaacs returned to Bedford after just six months, but he continued to play locally.
Isaacs fascinating journey takes him at that point to a more regional fame at Indianapolis� WIBC, before moving to barn dances in Michigan and then to Cincinnati, the site of his inspiration to take up his instrument.  While in Cincinnati Isaacs began to do session work with the locally based King Records.  His session work and ability to be a reliable sideman on the road lead Isaacs back to Nashville where he appeared on records with Hank Williams, Red Foley, Patsy Cline and others.  He would eventually leave the Opry for the Ozark Jubilee in Missouri as a member of Red Foley�s band. 

During his time in Nashville, one of his best friends was influential guitarist/producer Chet Atkins, appearing on Atkins� first album A Session with Chet Atkins.  With Atkins encouraging both sides of the deal, Isaacs signed a recording contract with RCA Victor.
The new Bear Family release Bud�s Bounce reissues Isaacs long out of print solo session work and a few rarities.  The album starts with the 1954 recording of �Hot Mockin� Bird,� which is most often played by fiddlers as a showcase for their prowess.  Using the pedal steel, Isaacs does the same here.  Of the 25 selections on this reissue, five are previously unreleased while the remaining twenty were originally released on 78 or 45 format in the years 1954-1956.  The album ends with perhaps Isaacs� most enduring legacy (aside from �Slowly�), the pedal steel showcase of the albums namesake, �Bud�s Bounce.�  Steel guitarists to this day use the song to showcase their skill on the instrument.
Country Music historian and Grand Ole Opry announcer Eddie Stubbs contributes extraordinary liner notes to the project, including quotes from his interviews with Isaacs himself.  Also included in the liner notes is a painstakingly researched discography of the tracks on the album which was contributed by producer Richard Weize.
Bud Isaacs is one the many Nashville sidemen whose contributions to Country music risk tragically fading into obscurity.  Bear Family does a great service in bringing together collections such as this and I hope they continue it for many years to come.

Layla… by Jan Reid

Category : Reviews

Take for instance two categories: ‘Classic Rock’ and this thing we love and call ‘Americana.’  If you tune in to a �Classic Rock� station, you might hear a 1970�s cut from Bob Dylan or a 1980�s tune from Eric Clapton.  But rarely will you hear their new stuff, but you will find it on the Americana stations and sales lists.
I guess, to a degree, it makes sense; these artists need an outlet and studies show that the Americana audience more than likely grew up hearing those songs from the �Classic Rock� stations when they were new releases.  The music of the 60�s and 70�s, not just Country music, but also Pop and Rock had its influence on the Americana artists we hear today.
Artists like Clapton and the Allman Brothers are often cited by bands from all genres as primary influences.  And I mention those two specifically to serve and a handy tie-in to the book I present to you now: Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs by Derek and the Dominos.
Of course, Derek was Eric Clapton and the Dominos consisted of keyboardist Bobby Whitlock, bassist Carl Radle and drummer Jim Gordon.  The band came together and began to rehearse songs written predominately by Clapton and/or Whitlock.  The songs were beginning to take shape, but at times, obsessed with the desire for the love of his best friends� wife, Clapton seemed to need that spark to get him back on track.
That spark, as we know, came in the form of Duane Allman, who contributed, among other things, the memorable intro lick to the albums most successful song, �Layla.�
Jan Reid, who has also written on Country and Southern Rock music as well as for Texas Monthly, weaves the story from the formation of the band with the improbable love triangle between Eric Clapton, Pattie Boyd and her husband, and Clapton�s best friend, George Harrison and takes both up to their ultimate demises.  Reid provides great insight and his research uncovering interviews with the main subjects those surrounding the project is terrific.
The book is part of the new Rock of Ages Series from Rodale Books.  Layla is the second volume in the series (see sidebar for the first release) which will cover some of the greatest recordings in Rock music.  The next scheduled release will be the Rolling Stones Beggars Banquet and will be released in March.

Western Soul in Spades: The Hacienda Brothers

Category : Features

A timeless town in many ways, even the public clocks can�t seem to reach a consensus on the hour. Cultures blend and merge, becoming spicier, better, than when they arrived.
Perhaps only in such an enchanted borderland could the Hacienda Brothers come to be. The band is the brainchild of two journeymen musicians: Former Paladin front man/guitarist Dave Gonzalez, and accordionist/guitarist/singer Chris Gaffney, who led the band Cold Hard Facts and plays sometimes still with Dave Alvin�s Guilty Men.
What�s Wrong With Right, the Hacienda Brothers� strong sophomore release, scored a spot on any number of �best of� Americana lists in 2006.  Driven by accordion and guitars, punctuated by keyboards, the group deftly blends spaghetti Western tremolo riffs, soulful vocals, classic and fresh love songs, boot-scooting honky-tonk energy and border instrumentation into a brew as potent as mescal.
�{quotes}Tucson, just the way things are there, is a part of how we sound, no doubt about it{/quotes},� said Gonzalez, calling from his home in San Diego County, Calif. �It�s such a beautiful, inspiring place. We made our original demos there, trying to capture that.�
�Western Soul� is what producer Dan Penn dubbed their sound when he heard those Hacienda demos.
Penn is a legendary producer and songwriter of the old soul school, producing classics for such artists as Aretha Franklin and Solomon Burke.  A couple of his best, �It Tears Me Up� and �Cry Like a Baby,� are revisited by the Haciendas on �What�s Wrong With Right,� along with several new compositions by Penn, Gaffney, Gonzalez and other �Brothers.�
Gonzalez confesses to a fierce case of nerves when he first sent Hacienda demos to Penn. The two met years ago in Europe when Gonzalez was playing a festival with the Paladins, and Penn was playing with his songwriting partner, Spooner Oldham. Gonzalez and Penn hit it off nearly instantly with a shared love of old music and vintage vehicles.

�Dan told me he wasn�t into emails or calls or letters,� said Gonzalez. �He said what he was into was hanging out. So I didn�t quite know how he�d react to getting these demos. But Dan called me up and said, �Wow, this thing knocked me out. I would be glad to invite you to Nashville. But I�d rather come to Tucson, because there is a sound you guys got that is not West Coast, it is not Nashville. What it sounds like it Western Soul.� And that sounded right to us.  So he came to hang out with us in Tucson.�

Soulful and gritty
Gonzalez and Gaffney first met in Los Angeles in the ‘80s, through their friend, Dave Alvin.
�I dug Chris. He was a cool accordion player, and he was kind of gruff and had some real soul,� said Gonzalez. �Yeah, he sounded soulful and gritty, but he knew just how not to overdo it. And he’s funny as hell, too. Not like a comedian, but he just gets off these lines that keeps everyone laughing.�
Gaffney and Gonzalez performed together a few years ago at mutual friend Jeb Schoonover�s birthday party. Schoonover is a Tucson-based music promoter and radio programmer, and now the band�s manager and the executive producer of �What�s Wrong With Right.�
�Jeb and I had been friends since I started going there in the �80s with my other band,� said Gonzalez. �We were always kicking this idea of doing a country thing around. We�d both said, �You know who could nail this stuff?  Chris!� He has the perfect voice for what we had in mind.�
The three decided they would at least make a great album. Gonzalez said, �Whether we became a full-fledged band, sticking together years and years, that I did not know. I just wanted to do songs with Chris, and play and produce and do all the other stuff I couldn�t really do with my other band. I wanted to make at least one great album, whatever else we did.�
So far, they’ve made two great albums, and have, said Gonzalez, �… Become a pretty damned good road band, too.�

{mospagebreak}

Hacienda sound
Gonzalez�s California home, which Schoonover dubbed �The Honky-tonk Hacienda,� played a part in both naming the band, as well as shaping their sound.
�We really are like family. We called each other �bro,� you know, and one day, looking for a name, I said, �We�re the Hacienda Bros.� And Dan said, �If you change that to Hacienda Brothers, it might just stick. It did.�

Gonzalez says The Honky-tonk Hacienda has two turntables on the living room table, as well as a Seeburg Jukebox in the parlor, crammed with fine 45s.
�I�m probably going on 20 years with this old Seeburg juke,� Gonzalez said. �For a time, it was my only turntable. The way it sounds, the way it plays those old records, is the way they are supposed to sound—the way the bass sounds on there, and those vocals up front?  That is a big inspiration for the songs I write, that juke sound. Dan made records that way, too.�
Also helping to shape their eventual sound were the road trips Gaffney and Gonzalez took together across the desert between Southern California and Tucson.
�I had this old DeSoto then, with only an 8-track, and we�d go between California and there, cruising at 55, listening to Waylon or �Super-Fly� or �The Good, the Bad and the Ugly,� depending what we were in the mood for, depending where the sun was at in the sky at the time. Just me and Chris, on that road together in that old car, singing together, figuring the harmonies out, tossing these songs around.�

Border music
The band recorded its demos, as well as its first two albums, at the Cavern Recording Studios in central Tucson.
�It�s a good room,� said Gonzalez. �When I first saw it, I just walked in there with an old nylon-string guitar, walked around strumming, hearing how it sounded. I saw the big analog board and old tape deck and knew it would be good.�
�It worked in there, Chris laying down a lot of accordion, and me using a lot of baritone guitar. … {quotes}But you know, for a of blues people we�re too country, and for a lot of soul people were too country{/quotes},� said Gonzalez.  �I�m back in the same old bag as I was with my old band � too bluesy for the rockabilly crowd, too rockabilly for the blues crowd.  But that�s part of what we want to do � work between those cracks and find what�s good.�
Gonzalez planned to spend time with Gaffney in Tucson at he end of 2006, to write and pick songs for a third album.
�We did 20,000 miles this year,� said Gonzalez. �Not bad.  But eventually, we�d like to settle in Tucson, maybe have a residency gig there or something. At least for now, we want to get out there with a couple of guitars, cruise around, hang out, and get inspired.

�Dan�s talking about our doing the next album in Nashville, or someplace back East,� Gonzalez added. �But even if we do record back there, there�s no doubt that this music begins out there in the desert.�

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