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C. Eric Banister | Americana Roots

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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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The Council of Smokers and Drinkers- Grizzled Nashville, Austin, Memphis......Anchorage??  Last year we wrote about Alaska band The Whipsaws on our site.  I'm happy to report that we have another tasty musical export from the Cold North.  Ladies...

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Cash For Kenya – Johnny Cash

Category : DVDs, Reviews

Johnny Cash is generally remembered in one of three phases of his career. The first phase was his introduction to the public with his Sun records and Opry debut. The second phase starts as the 1960s ends with his chart topping prison recordings and his television show. The third phase comes much later, in 1993 with his American Recordings with producer Rick Rubin.

The space in between the second and third phases saw Cash struggling in his career and although he continued to record, only a handful broke the top ten album charts and No. 1 singles came few and far between. Cash stayed in the public conscious with his annual Christmas Specials and roles in television shows and movies throughout the 1970s and ’80s.

In the ’80s Cash joined forces with fellow aging outlaws Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson and Kris Kristofferson as the Highwaymen and returned to the charts with a song of the same name. The group toured internationally while a second single barely cracked the top15.

As the ’90s began Cash was in a spot unlike any he had been in before. Chart reaction to his albums was slow or non-existent. He was touring consistently, but was reduced to taking bookings in much smaller venues and reducing the size of his road shows.

The early ’90s also saw the boom of country artists moving to Branson to remedy this problem by building theaters where they could guarantee a given number of shows per year. In 1991 Cash entered into a contract to build his own theater to be called “Cash Country,” although the plans would never come to fruition as the developer was in over his head.

It wasn’t that the public, or the industry, had forgotten him entirely. In 1991 he was honored by the Grammy organization with the Living Legends Award. (He would be honored the next year with induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame)

The Cash For Kenya DVD takes place during this time period, recorded live in Johnstown, Pennsylvania on September 17, 1991. The concert was a benefit put on by Cash’s longtime friend Jack Shaw. Shaw, a minister in Johnstown, often traveled with Cash and wanted to raise money to build a hospital and education center in Nakuru, Kenya to help in the fight against AIDS. Cash volunteered to headline a concert to help raise money for the cause.

The concert, which took place at Greater Johnstown Christian Fellowship Church, leans, as would be expected for such a setting, a little more to the gospel-tinged songs in Cash’s catalog. The show is essentially divided into three sections. In the first section Cash is joined by the Carter Family, June, Helen and Anita, as he runs through a few “venue appropriate” selections including “A Thing Called Love,” “Peace In The Valley” and “The Greatest Cowboy Of Them All,” which he had recorded a few years earlier with Waylon Jennings on their album together, Heroes. Cash also performs “Man In White,” a song he suggests hadn’t been performed live before that.

At the conclusion of “Man In White” Cash notes as the Carter Family leave the stage that he generally starts a show with, “Hello, I’m Johnny Cash” and with that the band launches into “Folsom Prison Blues.” The band runs through a funky version of “Get Rhythm” before Cash tells the story leading into “Five Feet High And Rising” and segueing into “Pickin’ Time.” Cash is then joined by June for “Beautiful Life,” “Jackson” and “If I Were A Carpenter.”

For the next section, Cash turns the stage over to the Carter Family who run through several family classics ending with “Will The Circle Be Unbroken” joined by John Carter Cash. The finale comes as the crew run through “Angel Band.”

It is interesting to watch Cash in this period of his life, a period of transition between an artist who had recently released his last album on Mercury (The Mystery Of Life) and wouldn’t record again until his “re-discovery” and critically acclaimed American Recording.

But even with these business pressures he must have felt, Cash appears in good spirits, joking with the band and June throughout the show. One poignant moment comes as Cash is segueing from “Five Feet High And Rising” to “Pickin’ Time” by talking about advice given to him by his mother, Carrie. A constant source of encouragement and moral guidance, she had passed away only months earlier, in May of 1991. The loss fresh on his mind and heart, you can tell there is a void left in his life just from the fondness in his speech.

In light of other Cash releases of late, this concert stands in stark contrast with the recent Legacy Edition release of the concert at Folsom Prison. The fact that Cash is equally comfortable in front of an audience of hardened convicts and an audience of churchgoers speaks volumes about the appeal of Cash as an artist and a man.

Hot Burritos by John Einarson with Chris Hillman

Category : Reviews

The roots of the genre now referred to as Americana are varied and deep, but one band is often cited heavily in that long list of originators – The Flying Burrito Brothers. Or more specifically, one member is cited more often, that member being Gram Parsons.

But the band never really was that successful (“We’re more popular now than we ever were in our time,” co-founder Chris Hillman says in the book), and never really had a consistent line-up. More myths about the band, and, again, specifically Gram Parsons, seem to spring up each year. This is one of the reasons Hillman felt it was time to set the record straight.

The story of the Byrds and their contributions to what became country-rock have been told many times and in several books. Gram Parsons himself has been subject of a few books. But not until now has the story of the Flying Burrito Brothers as a band been told in full.

Author John Einarson has authored twelve books, many of them associated with the California country-rock scene of the 1960s and ’70s, including Desperados: The Roots Of Country-Rock and books on Buffalo Springfield, ex-Byrd Gene Clark, Neil Young and others. He is an acknowledged expert on country-rock and its origins and influence, but to tell the Burritos story he enlisted the help of co-founder Chris Hillman.

While many people think strictly of Parsons when they think of the Burritos, Hillman was an equal partner in the forming of the group and in fact had a much deeper pedigree when it came to country and roots music.

Born in 1944 in Los Angles, Hillman grew up listening to folk and rock ‘n’ roll until he came across records by The New Lost City Ramblers and Flatt & Scruggs. He quickly fell in love with the sound of the mandolin and began to study instrument. In 1962 he joined the regional bluegrass group The Scottsville Squirrel Barkers, based in San Diego. Around a year later the group began to break apart and Hillman was asked to join the Golden State Boys with Don Parmley on banjo and Rex and Vern Gosdin on bass and guitar, respectively.

In late 1964 Hillman was invited to try out for a new group called the Jet Set and included Jim McGuinn, David Crosby, Michael Clarke and Gene Clark. After he joined the group they changed their name to the Byrds and their popularity soared with songs “Turn! Turn! Turn!” “Eight Miles High” and “Mr. Tambourine Man” and the band was labeled the American answer to the Beatles.

After some member turnover, the group was stripped down to McGuinn (now called Roger, following a religious conversion) and Hillman in 1967 and they released the country-tinged The Notorious Byrd Brothers. Just after the albums’ release Hillman had a chance meeting with Gram Parsons. Months later Parsons showed up at an audition for Byrds band members and Hillman found he has met a musical kindred spirit.

The group went on to record Sweetheart of the Rodeo, an album now considered a masterpiece, but was at the time the poorest selling Byrds album to have been released. During the recording and promoting of the album, Parsons ego and selfishness began to show through in little ways. After he had sung several tracks on the album, the record label was informed that Parsons was under contract to a small label owned by Lee Hazelwood, something Parsons failed to tell the group. As a result all of his vocals had to be taken from the album and hastily replaced. At an appearance at the Grand Ole Opry, a rare opportunity for a band still considered by most to be a rock band, Parsons changed the song they were to sing after Tompall Glaser had already announced the scheduled selection. Hillman notes in the book that this was very insulting to Glaser and very poor etiquette on Parsons’ part.

But those flashes of self-involvement would pale in comparison to Parsons next stunt. After meeting and opening for the Rolling Stones, the group went to visit them in England before the Byrds were to tour South Africa. On the day they were to embark, Parsons decided he was not going, citing apartheid as the reason and claiming that he was opposed to it after growing up in the South. Hillman calls that argument “ridiculous” and claims, “He wanted to stay with the Rolling Stones.” And with that, Parsons was out of the Byrds.

Einarson and Hillman take the reader through the good times and the bad leading up to the founding of the Burritos. Like the excellent researcher that he is, Einarson doesn’t rely simply on Hillman’s voice but interviews many other people, from label staff to band members to critics, to round out the story.

The story continues as Hillman and Parsons cross paths again and slowly begin to get together to play music and write songs. It seems that all is forgiven, but maybe not completely forgotten. The duo begins to slowly assemble a band and is signed to a label. Even in this early stage, history has been tainted to tell that it was Parsons vision of melding country and rock that got them their break, but as Einarson tells us, Parson was at that time a virtual unknown and it was Hillmans name that opened the doors.

The book reminds us that Hillman had been playing country and bluegrass for years before he met Parsons, who had only discovered country music in the past few years of his life. Perhaps it was because Parsons had the zeal of a new convert that he is remembered as being such a passionate catalyst.

As the story unfolds, it is easy to see that Parsons was often times more interested in being the “rock star” than with being part of a group. After their first album, Gilded Palace of Sin, was released and didn’t meet with huge sales numbers, Parsons began to drift, losing interest in what they were doing. He began to drift away from his bandmates and further into drugs and alcohol. Hillman admits that he was no angel, (indeed the book doesn’t paint Hillman as a saint or hide any warts) only that he knew where to draw the line and was always able to maintain a level of professionalism, two things Parson couldn’t always do.

During the recording of the second Burritos album, Burrito Deluxe, Parsons sank even further, eventually missing practices and recording sessions. The story goes that Parsons outgrew the band and left them behind to spread his wings and create his “Cosmic American Music.” But Hillman tells the story of a Parsons that was so wasted that he would sing a ballad after the band had started an up-tempo number. One night it came to a head and Hillman fired his partner. And with that, Parsons was out of the Burritos.

From there Gram went on to a brief solo career and is credited with discovering Emmylou Harris, but Hillman recounts the real story of Rick Roberts and Kenny Wertz, both playing with the Burritos at that time, seeing Harris sing and bringing Hillman in to see her. Later Hillman told Parsons about her (they had made amends by then, but were not working together) because he knew Parsons was looking for a girl singer to join him.

But the story of the Burritos doesn’t end with the departure of Parsons. Hillman soldiered on and with new ensembles released two more Burritos album, The Flying Burrito Brothers in 1971 and the live set Last Of The Red Hot Burritos in1972. Hillman then joined Stephen Stills in the country-rock forerunner Manassas.

Hillman’s side of the story differs at many points with the popular myth that has become fact in many circles. Hillman says that is because certain people in those circles stand to make money off of the “Parsons as originator” story. Bernie Leadon, who played guitar in the second incarnation of the band and would go on to co-found The Eagles, puts it bluntly: “How can you compete with a dead guy? You just can’t. It’s a martyr thing.”

But Hot Burritos isn’t a book slamming Parsons or looking to diminish the contributions he might have made to the music. Hillman and Einarson, give plenty of credit where it is due. What this book sets out to do, and does wonderfully, is give a balanced account of a band that stood at the forefront of a new movement in music. A movement that still has repercussions today be it in the Americana genre and even the mainstream country genre.

Einarsons well-researched approach gives a fantastic overview of the music the band made and of the scene from which it came from and to which it eventually contributed. He was able to speak with nearly all of the principles involved with the obvious exception of Parsons. The book stands as a cornerstone in the written history of the country-rock movement and the eventual Americana genre.

A Hundred Miles of More: Live From The Tracking Room – Alison Krauss

Category : Reviews

Throughout music history there are the rare artists that transcend the genre in which they got their start. In doing so, they often become thought of as an artist without a home or an innovator, depending on your point of view. One artist who has done just that is Alison Krauss.

Starting out in the bluegrass festival circuit at a very young age, she soon joined the Missouri based Sally Mountain Show replacing Rhonda Vincent while Vincent pursued a solo career in country music. Krauss began to stand out amongst the crowd with both her fiddle work and her singing and at age 12 recorded her first album with her brothers band. She moved then to Union Station and began to blossom into an artist in her own right, recording her first album with the group for Rounder Records in 1987, at 14 years old..

As she became more of a prominent feature of Union Station, her material began to broaden and her cover of the Keith Whitely song “When You Say nothing At All,” reached No. 3 on the Billboard country charts and became the surprise hit of 1995.

While keeping roots in the bluegrass genre, Krauss and Union Station began to explore a hybrid of bluegrass, country and Americana. At the same time, Krauss was becoming a sought after harmony vocalist and duet partner, making her mark on many songs including the No. 1 country song “Whiskey Lullaby” with Brad Paisley.

Never one to pay much mind to genre borders, Krauss teamed up with Led Zeppelin frontman Robert Plant and producer T-Bone Burnett to record the Americana Music Association Album of the Year Raising Sand.

A Hundred Miles Or More: Live From The Tracking Room is a DVD recorded to celebrate the release of last years Krauss greatest hits collection and was originally aired on the GAC network.

The nine songs included on the DVD are recorded live in the studio with members of Union Station (Ron Block, Dan Tyminski Jerry Douglas and Barry Bales) and augmented by Abraham Laboriel, Greg Morrow, Gordon Mote, Stuart Duncan and others.

Also joining Krauss in the studio is Tony Rice, who plays guitar on “Sawing On The Strings” and “Shadows,” Brad Paisley and James Taylor, with re-recordings of their songs “Whiskey Lullaby” and “How’s The World Treating You,” respectively.

Interspersed throughout are interviews with both Krauss and many of the musicians as they discuss the songs and the artistry of Krauss. For the fan of Krauss this will be a must-have DVD and companion to the CD collection. For more casual fans this offers an excellent look at performer and a chance to sample a range of her material.

Country Music Humorists and Comedians – Loyal Jones

Category : Reviews

At one time country music and comedy went hand and hand with many bands carrying a comedian with their band to act as a comic relief between the songs of life. As radio barn dances grew out of the vaudeville tradition many of the routines stayed with the musicians to keep the crowds entertained and interested.

Over time some of those comedians stepped out on their own to make names for them selves and became as famous, and in some cases more famous, that the artists they accompanied. Comedians like Minnie Pearl and Rod Brasfield, to name but two, became stars in their own right appearing weekly on the Grand Ole Opry through the ‘40s and ‘50s.

In the mid- to late-‘60s, country music made its way onto the small screen with a shows like The Wilburn Brothers Show featuring comedian Harold Morrison and The Porter Wagoner Show featuring Speck Rhodes. These comedians acted as special guests, as in the case of Morrison, or members of the band, as the bass playing Rhodes.

As the years wore on, fewer and fewer comedians were utilized in country music acts. In 1968 CBS aired the summer replacement series Hee-Haw, which was modeled after the popular Rowan and Martin Laugh-In and utilized both comedy and country music to reach audiences. Many of the comedic performers on the show were ones who had been involved in earlier comedy shows that had been phased out, such as Grandpa Jones, Stringbean and Sheb Wooley. Many of the routines these comedians were either straight from or adapted from early comedy routines, some of them reaching back to minstrel tent shows.

While country comedy was still alive in the 1970s and ‘80s, it was no where near as popular as it had once been until the late-‘80s/early-‘90s when Jeff Foxworthy began to gain popularity. His assembled tour, The Blue Collar Comedy Tour, where Foxworthy teamed with Bill Engvall, Ron White and Larry the Cable Guy, is one of the highest grossing touring acts going.

Loyal Jones has written several books on the topic of rural and country humor, including some joke books. He is the retired director of the Appalachian Center at Berea College and an acknowledged expert in Appalachian studies.

What Jones has put together in Country Music Humorists and Comedians is really a two part volume. The larger part of the book is made up of an encyclopedia-like reference pulling together entries on country comedians and humorists from the early days of country radio to the present day. As the title states, both comedians and humorists are covered in the book. Biographical sketches of comedians range from the early Grand Ole Opry pair of Jamup and Honey and Pete Stamper to Larry the Cable Guy and Etta May.

The addition of humorists broadens the scope from just those that stood before audiences as comedians to those that were primarily artists (like Jim Stafford or Little Jimmy Dickens) but included humor in their songs and shows to writers and actors like the late Lewis Grizzard and Andy Griffith.

The other part of the book is Jones’ less than 50 page introduction to the subject. In those 40-some pages he covers the history of comedy in country music and its importance to the development of country in growing a connection between artist and audience. This brief introduction packs in so much information and history that it alone would be worth picking up the book to have.

Jones’ writing style is easy going and he is able to easily convey the importance of the subject without ever coming across heavy-handed or too academic. His research is extremely thorough and he strives to bring the subject to life for the reader. Throughout the book he includes examples of the humor from many of the comedians so that the reader might get a better understanding of what they did as a performer.

They say that music is a hard topic to write about, but it is even harder to write about a topic as subjective as humor. Jones does a highly commendable job of giving the subject its due.

Legendary Performances – Merle Haggard

Category : Reviews

When I first read about the Legendary Performances series to be produced by a joint venture between the Country Music Hall of Fame and Shout! Factory, I mentally assembled a want list. One of the top five of that list turns out to be the third release in this excellent series.

Merle Haggard’s story has been told many times over in numerous articles and a few books. Born in Bakersfield, a child in trouble leading to incarceration, turns his life around through music and becomes one of the most influential singers and songwriters of our time.

Following the format of the previous two volumes, this DVD contains 15 performances by Haggard on a variety of programs beginning in 1968 through 1983.

The first three performances come from the syndicated 1968 program Country Music Holiday, hosted by longtime Grand Ole Opry performer Wally Fowler. Joined by The Strangers, Haggard runs through three of his top five hits from the previous three years, “Branded Man,” “The Bottle Let Me Down” and “Swinging Doors.” Strangers Telecaster master Roy Nichols shows why he has been an influence to most country guitarists as he trades licks with steel guitar player Norm Hamlet.

The late 1960s and early 1970s was a boom time for syndicated country music television. That year, in addition to appearing on Country Music Holiday, Haggard also appeared on Billy Walker’s Country Carnival. Here Haggard gives us three more of songs, “Mama Tried,” a No. 1 hit that year, “I Started Loving You Again,” a true Haggard classic that never charted for him and “I Take A Lot Of Pride In Who I Am,” which reached No. 3 the following year. In a rare event, he performs these with the house band made up of Nashville studio aces rather than the Strangers. Putting the tracks side by side with those cut by the Strangers it is easy to see why the Strangers became one of the most revered bands in country music. The band alone would record five albums for Capitol Records between 1969 and 1973.

(Haggard would also appear on two episodes of the CBS summer replacement show Hee-Haw where he would lip-synch his hits in various settings like a front porch and a train yard.)

The 1970s are represented on the DVD with a performance on the 1972 CMA Awards (“Daddy Frank (The Guitar Man),” which had reached No. 1 in 1971), two separate appearances on the Porter Wagoner Show (“The Fightin’ Side of Me” and “Okie From Muskogee,” both No. 1 hits, in 1970 and “The Roots Of My Raising,” a 1976 No. 1, in 1977). Three appearances on the Ralph Emery hosted Pop! Goes The Country show Haggard in good spirits. Although all are good, the best track of the three is the extended version of his 1969 No. 1 “Working Man Blues” from 1974 guest spot that features solos from Roy Nichols, Tiny Moore on electric five-string mandolin and piano player Mark Yeary.  Also included are a 1975 performance of “Movin’ On” and a 1977 rendition of “Ramblin’ Fever,” which reached No. 1 in 1975 and No. 2 in 1977, respectively.

The two closing tracks come from 1983 where Haggard pays tribute to two of his heroes. He takes the CMA Awards show stage for a great rendition of Lefty Frizzells’ “That’s the Way Love Goes,” a song he took to No. 1. The final selection is taken from the 1983 Johnny Cash Christmas Special where Haggard and band, dressed in cowboy duds, run through Bob Wills’ “San Antonio Rose.” Haggard had recorded the excellent Bob Wills tribute album in 1970.

Two bonus clips are included on the disc. The first is Haggard’s 1994 induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame, back when they still honored the legends during the awards show. The second clip is an interview conducted in 1981 on Hags tour bus as he is accompanied by then wife Leona Williams as he talks about family, touring and recording.

This is another great addition to the Legendary Performances series and offers fans a rare glimpse at live footage of a true living legend that wouldn’t be seen without the efforts of the people at the Hall of Fame.

Something to Keep Me Going – A Conversation with Chris Knight

Category : Features

We recently had the opportunity to talk with Knight about songwriting, playing live and what’s next.

Americana Roots: Aside from “Crooked Road,” which you’ve been playing for a while, had you been playing any of the new songs live before you recorded the album?

Chris Knight: Not with the band. I play “Miles To Memphis” and “My Old Cars” occasionally, but not very often.

AR: Do you have a preference of playing the band gigs or the solo shows?

CK: Well, right now I’m likin’ the band shows, but I’ve got a string of acoustic shows coming up. Me and Chris Clark are going out doing those starting next week.

AR: The songs that ended up on the album, did you have all of those written or did you write any in the studio?

CK: No, I had a list of songs. We cut about 15 songs and picked 12. It’s always struck me as kind of strange, making a record before you have the songs done.

AR: A lot of the reviews for this record mention that the content of these songs aren’t maybe as dark as some of your early songs. Do you feel like people, especially critics, tend to forget about the middle albums and focus too much on the first album?

CK: I don’t know. I never thought my first album was dark. I don’t think any of them are that dark. I mean, people that like to read, I write songs like I would write books if I was a novelist. It’s never been something that is that big a deal to me to write a story song with something real happening in it, but everybody got off on all this dark business.

AR: It seems like the people that talk about that pick out a song or two on the album and disregard the rest as far as themes go.

CK: The only ones I can think of are “Framed,” and “Framed” is not really dark. There’s “William” and the rest of them are just songs. Nothing too bad happens in them, I don’t think.

AR: Another theme that seemed to pop out at me was there seemed to be a little more of a spiritual light to a couple of the songs, like “Go On Home” and “Hell Ain’t Half Full.” Is that something that comes from your upbringing or was it a conscious decision to work that in? Even going back to “Saved By Love” from Enough Rope.

CK: Yeah, I guess it goes back to my upbringing. I guess “Hell Ain’t Half Full” and Go On Home”… well, you go back to Pretty Good Guy it’s got “The Lord’s Highway” on it and “Send A Boat.” It’s just easy for me to put a little religion into what I write. It’s part of life. “Hell Ain’t Half Full” is kind of like a sermon put to music. That’s what I think. It’s a preacher just hammering on it. Basically if you went into a Pentecostal church you’d probably hear the same thing. Or a Southern Baptist church, that’s what you’d be hearing. It’s another one of those things I think about, so I put it in a song.

AR: I had read before the album came out that you said that the topics on this album were directed a little more inward…

CK: Yeah, I guess I did, especially on “Go On Home” and “Hell Ain’t Half Full.”

AR: Was that a conscious decision to move away from the story songs a little bit into a more topical area?

CK: Yeah, a little bit. Also, I had been writing some songs and got them together and looked at them and said this is the best 12 songs I’ve got, right here. I went into the studio and recorded them with the same spirit in mind and come out with a cohesive record.

AR: Do you ever run into a problem of people associating you and the characters in a song a little too closely?

CK: It’s not really a problem. Some people tend to believe that I’ve done everything in my songs. I don’t care, let ‘em believe.

AR: I had wondered because, and this is kind of the opposite case, but I’ve heard people that didn’t care for “Home Sick Gypsy” because in it the character says he has a different girl in every town and that didn’t fit with the image that those fans had of you as a person.

CK: That’s the character in the song, that’s the “Homesick Gypsy.” That’s the cliché of being on the road. If you’re going to write a road song, why don’t you write that? Why don’t you write the cliché of the rock star being on the road? And I’ve written lots of road songs.

AR: You co-wrote a couple of the songs with Dan Baird?

CK: Yeah, “Heart of Stone…” and going back to our previous thing, our Daddy didn’t leave us either, like “Heart of Stone.” I ain’t never been in jail, except for five hours one time, so “Maria’s” not true either. The records just a bunch of lies, I guess.

AR: Well, I wouldn’t say lies. When I listen to your stuff I think of the quote by Merle Haggard where he said to him good songwriting is just good reporting. That to me is what you do.

CK: There’s just all kinds of stuff that you write about. You don’t write about every single thing you do or every single thing you think. Sometimes you write about what somebody else thinks, what you think somebody else thinks or what you’ve seen somebody do or heard about somebody doing or something you thought about doing but never did or you think you could do it in the right circumstance. You write about that.

AR: You also co-wrote one of the songs on Dan Baird’s new album (“Well Enough Alone” from Baird’s recently released Dan Baird & Homemade Sin). Did that come out of a writing session or your time in the studio?

CK: It was right before Dan went in to cut his record and right after we wrote “Heart of Stone.” He had a title and we wrote about a verse of it then he told me to take it home and finish it. I went home and wrote two or three more verses to it and a chorus and he liked it, took it in and recorded it.

AR: When you go out on the road solo, do you work up different arrangements for some of the songs?

CK: Yeah, some of them I’ll finger-pick instead of strumming or whatever. It just depends on what I think. Songs like “Devil Behind the Wheel” or “Old Man,” a lot of times I’ll just fingerpick those songs just to break up the monotony. Sometimes I’ll play a song half time. Chris Clarke is going out with me and he’ll be playing mandolin and accordion, acoustic guitar, so I’m looking forward to that.

AR: Does that take a little more time to arrange or…

CK: Naa, we’re not arrangin’ nothing, we’ll just get out there and play. He plays the same stuff full-band, too. He’ll grab his accordion and play, and he plays mandolin on a few songs.

AR: Last year you released Trailer Tapes. Were you surprised at the response you got to that?

CK: Yeah, I guess. I just never thought much about those recordings being that big a deal, myself. But I’m glad people liked them. I can see why they did. I’d be all over something John Prine or Steve Earle did back before they put out an album. Like a live show or something they recorded before their first album; that would be real interesting to me.

AR: Do you think you’ll ever record a live album?

CK: I’ve been thinking about it. Hopefully in a year, year and a half I’ll be going into the studio for a new album, but I’m also thinking about the live thing. I wouldn’t mind to have someone out recording here and there to possibly get some real good full-band stuff, to have some stuff to pick and choose from.

AR: Since you’ve been on your own does it feel easier than when you were on Dualtone?

CK: Yeah, I guess it has. I mean, Dualtone was pretty easy, too. They were pretty laidback and wanted me to go do whatever it was that I wanted to do. Same thing here. We just leased those records to Dualtone so we have those all back. Me and my manager own those records, but after the two records we decided that we could do anything an independent label can do, so we kind of cut out the record company. We cut out the third party ‘cause we had access to everything – publicity, distribution, everything. There was really no reason to go on a smaller label whenever we could do it ourselves.

AR: And you’re still getting cuts by mainstream country artists…

CK: I’m still getting a few. I think the last one I had was Blake Shelton, “It Ain’t Easy Being Me.” There might be some more in the works out there, I don’t know.

AR: What did you think of Blake’s version?

CK: I thought it sounded good. Didn’t sound like a hit, didn’t sound like a radio song, but I liked it, it sounded good.

Cowboy Copas and the Golden Age of Country Music – John Roger Simon

Category : Reviews

The name Lloyd Copas is virtually unknown to many country music fans today. The name Cowboy Copas doesn’t generally register much higher on the recognition chart. In fact, many people only recognize the name as a footnote of trivia in a story that’s been told over and over – the death of Patsy Cline.

On March 5, 1963, the plane carrying Cline crashed in the mountains of Tennessee. Not to trivialize that loss, but Cline wasn’t the only passenger. Also on that flight was Grand Ole Opry member Hawkshaw Hawkins. The pilot of the flight was Cline’s manager, Randy Hughes. Hughes was also the son-in-law of the fourth passenger, Cowboy Copas.

Born in southern Ohio in 1913, Lloyd Copas grew up playing music with friends and family. He decided to try his luck at being a full-time musicians and he moved to Cincinnati, Ohio accompanied by his friend Lester Vernon Storer, who adopted the character Natchee the Indian. The pair became a popular regional act both at live venues and on local radio stations.

But Copas wanted more and soon struck out on his own. He fronted his own band and recorded for King Records charting with “Filipino Baby” and “Tragic Romance.” Soon he came to the attention of Grand Ole Opry star Pee Wee King who asked him to consider joining his band. Copas signed on and became a regular on the Opry playing with Pee Wee King and his Golden West Cowboys.

Copas still recorded his own songs for King Records and left Pee Wee King after a few years to again strike out on his own. His records were selling well and he became a member of the Opry. His career was doing so well that Billboard magazine featured him on the cover with King Records owner Syd Nathan and Opry manager Harry Stone as they both offered him ten-year contracts.

As the years wore on Copas’ music began to fall out of favor with radio audiences as the new Nashville Sound began to take over the airwaves. His records weren’t selling as well and he took many low paying solo gigs just to pay the bills. It was then that Don Pierce, owner of Starday Records, entered the picture.

Starday was the “Real Country Alternative” label of the day, sticking with the steel guitars and fiddles that many Nashville Sound artists put aside. Copas was used to recording for a small label with King and felt it would be a good fit.

While at Starday, Copas recorded one of his most well known songs, “Alabam,” a song his father Eldon used to play for him as a boy. The song went to #1 on July 4, 1960 revitalizing Copas’ career and putting him back in the spotlight. Record sales dramatically increased and he became a sought after, and better paid, live act.

On the day of the plane crash in 1963, Copas, at age 50, was experiencing a career resurgence. He was back on top where he belonged.

There are dozens of artists whose stories are similar to Copas’ in that they are unfortunately being lost to time.

John Roger Simon, a southern Ohio native and professor of music at Shawnee State University, has taken on the honorable task of producing a thoroughly researched and enjoyable biography of a deserving artist. In the first several chapters, Simon takes a keen and personal interest in the conditions under which Copas grew up. He interviews many people who knew Copas and his family and draws a portrait of the community that contributed to the character of Lloyd Copas.

The theme of community that is established early in the book in talking about the small communities in which Copas was raised carries on throughout the book as those communities are replaced by the community of country music singers. In hearing the stories of country stars of this time, the late-1940s through the 1960s, there was a sense of community that appears to be lacking in today’s music world.

The subtitle of the book, “And The Golden Age of Country Music,” is covered in the book through interviews with and anecdotes concerning stars like Ralph Emery, Johnny Wright, Kitty Wells, Jimmy Dickens, Lazy Jim Day, Pee Wee King, Hank Williams and many other country music stars of the 1950s and ‘60s. Several of the artists interviewed have passed on and it is good to have their stories and recollections recorded for posterity.

Simon has written the only full-length biography of Cowboy Copas. With much detail and style he has captured the story of one of country music’s stars that runs the risk of being forgotten by today’s fans. Fans of country music history will want to have this book in their library for the firsthand tales of the road from many of the stars of yesteryear and to honor the memory of a great artist.

Johnny Cash – Christmas Special 1978 & 1979

Category : Reviews

Even though his record sales were not stacking up to his past achievements, Johnny Cash was still sought after entertainment personality in the mid- to late-1970s. He had dabbled in acting in the late ‘50s with the film Five Minutes To Live, but in the ‘70s he began to make more guest appearances on networks staples like Columbo and Little House on the Prairie. It was during this time that he also made a series of Christmas Specials for CBS, beginning in 1976.

Through the joint agreement between Shout! Factory and the Country Music Hall of Fame’s Archive Series, the first two Christmas specials, from 1976 and 1977, were released in 2007. This year the venture brings us the specials from 1978 and 1979.

Breaking from the pattern established in the two previous years, the 1978 Christmas Special was filmed in California rather than Nashville. Guests for the show include long time Cash friend and associate Kris Kristofferson and his then-wife Rita Coolidge. Comic relief for the show was provided by Steve Martin who had had his own television special earlier in the year on which Cash had guested.

In 1979 the Christmas Specials return to Nashville. Also returning is the biographical portion of the show featuring clips of Cash’s father Ray and brother Roy visiting their old Dyess, Arkansas home and reminiscing about the 1937 flood as Cash performs “Five Feet High and Rising” on the stage of the Grand Ole Opry House.

The shows musical guests are the popular Anne Murray and singer-songwriter Tom T. Hall who joins Cash for a medley of his hits. The role of comic relief for 1979 is filled by Andy Kaufman, who inexplicably stays in his Taxi character of Latka Gravas (except for his Elvis impersonation) for the entirety of the show.

Both shows follow nearly the same format. Although they are Christmas shows, they include only three or four Christmas songs with the rest of the set lists being made up of the current or past hits of the guests. On the ’78 Special, Cash revisits “Ballad of a Teenage Queen,” a song he didn’t perform often, but was one of his biggest early hits. He also performs “Sunday Morning Comin’ Down” as a duet with the songs co-writer. He performs two gospel oriented songs (“Fourth Man” and “The Greatest Cowboy of Them All”) and a new song, “I Will Rock and Roll With You,” released on 1978’s Gone Girl. He ends the Special joined by his daughters for “Silent Night.”

The ’79 Special sees Cash include the recitation “The Ballad Of The Harp Weaver” and joined by wife June to reprise their 1970 hit “If I Were A Carpenter.” June takes the spotlight on the bluegrass classic “Back Up And Push,” joined by Marty Stuart on mandolin and Vassar Clements on fiddle.

These shows come at an interesting time in the life of Johnny Cash. The family had lost Mother Maybelle earlier in 1978 and was facing their first Christmas without her. While his concerts were still selling well and his work with Billy Graham was growing, Cash’s record sales were waning and Columbia’s support was weakening.

According to Marshall Grant, Cash’s long time bass player, Cash began using drugs again around 1976 after over five years clean. His addiction worsened as the years progressed. Watching these two Specials back to back it is easy to see subtle changes in Cash’s movements and demeanor.

It would be easy to dismiss these DVD releases as trying to capitalize on the name of Cash in the name of cash, but they fulfill the mission of the Country Music Hall of Fame’s agreement with Shout! Factory in releasing rarely seen archival footage from the vaults of the Hall of Fame. These Specials (the previously released 1976 and 1977 Specials are also being re-released in a boxed set that also includes the two newly released Specials) show Cash reminiscing about his past, interacting with stars of the time and using his platform to write his own biography and speak on his faith. While they may not be essential purchases, like the recently released At Folsom Prison: Legacy Edition, they are great additions to the library of Cash fans.

Duke Robillard – A Swingin Session with Duke Robillard

Category : Reviews

Duke has been on the music scene for years, working steadily since his conception of Roomful of Blues in 1967. He has won the “Best Blues Guitarist” award from the Blues Music Awards (previously W.C. Handy awards) four times in the last eight years. He received a Grammy nomination in 2007 for his Guitar Groove-a-rama CD. His discography takes up multiple pages on his website.  A National Treasure he certainly is to the music world!

Duke Robillard and Jim McCarty at Callahan’s on 8-24-08

Longtime Detroit DJ Gene Elzy had a long running show on public radio on which he played what he called “the bluesy side of jazz and the jazzy side of the blues.” This aptly describes what Duke is now doing with the new CD, although his career has revolved more around all shades of the blues. The new disc has 10 tunes, 8 of them covers. He digs way back for some of the tunes, such as the great opener “‘Deed I Do,” written in 1926 and made famous by Perry Como in 1957. This version is a very jazzy version laced with sax, guitar and organ. The next tune is the standout one for me, a traditional called “The Lonesome Road.” This tune comes essentially in two parts. The first is a slow melancholy bit of acoustic guitar and horn that gives the feel of a slow lonesome journey, but something happens in the middle. The tempo picks up and the mood electrifies as if to say, “if I’m going down a lonesome road at least I might as well dance!” The disc is worth it for this track alone! Another standout is “Meet Me at No Special Place” (and I’ll be there at no particular time), a 1944 composition. One of his two originals, “Red Dog,” seems to show Duke tipping his hat to his jazz forefathers. The tune is an upbeat instrumental that definitely borrows heavily from Miles Davis’ classic “So What.”

What you have here is a classic performer playing some classic music while at the same time honoring the writers and players who have inspired and influenced him. If Duke comes to your town do yourself a favor and go see him. Better yet, bring along a young musician who Duke could influence and help carry the spirit of this music on to another generation!

Hayward Williams – Another Sailor’s Dream

Category : Reviews

While mom may have provided the musical spark for Hayward, that spark can only ignite if there is something to burn inside.  Successful singer-songwriters have something inside that cannot be taught that allows them to take life experiences and turn them into music and verse.  Hayward’s tunes range from sparse but rich sounding acoustic tunes, such as Ballad of Benson Creek, to high energy Americana tunes such as Redwoods, which starts with a harmonica and guitar bang.

Hayward’s deep tenor voice definitely belies his true age and appearance. He is joined on the CD by another artist with a new CD out, Peter Mulvey, who adds guitar, dobro and classical guitar.  Dan McMahon also adds guitar, piano, accordion, banjo lap steel and drums.  Hayward built up his live performance resume touring with popular Milwaukee band Exit during which time he began crafting his own tunes. Another Sailors Dream features ten originals and one cover, a very sparse version of Springsteen’s Thunder Road. There is enough good music and variety on this CD to surely please anyone “tuning in” to this Web site!

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