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Joel Schwelling | 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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Fred Eaglesmith – Tinderbox

Category : Reviews

I had heard the CD described as gospel for the unbeliever. After listening over and again and again, I disagree. Fred Eaglesmith believes in something, but, in his own words:

Fancy God

That God you got is a fancy God

And he’s not the one I know

He don’t live in parking lots

Outside of monster homes

My God ain’t in the government

He don’t put on a big show

That God you got is a fancy God

And he’s not the one I know

My God lives on gravel roads

And goes down into hollers

Goes down and saves the souls

Of your very sons and daughters

Your crystal meth

And your cocaine breathe

And your tingling to your toes

That God you got is a fancy God

And he’s not the one I know

Fred has gone through major changes recently. Last year his right hand man and long time band mate, Willie P. Bennett suffered a heart attack. Then early this year, Willie died. I don’t know how much of the changes in Fred’s music can be attributed to his friend’s passing, but to be sure, Tinderbox is a departure from the sound and style I am accustomed to hearing from Fred.

Spare, primitive sounds dominate songs with the beat and rhythm you’d expect from old negro spirituals sung out in the fields, perhaps set to the pace of a hoe clawing at the ground. Gospel themes dominate, but Fred’s version of gospel is more like that Jesus offered—that of someone reared in the real world, not the words of some priest or preacher—part of the accepted establishment.

Fred sings of a dark, forbidding world, a world that is killing him, day by day. He cries for rain, for mercy, for justice, a farmer on bended knee in a worked up field, a soldier back from war, a desperate outlaw, someone’s crying from the very back row in a failing church; the world’s about to end and everyone knows. He prays, and prays and prays. Yet evil men sit in high places and prey on those below. Once again, Fred’s own words:

You Can’t Trust Them

Well out on the corner

Of third and green

They’re dealing prescription

Amphetamines

And you count your fingers

When you shake their hand

Cause they steal your wealth

As fast as they can

(Chorus)

You can’t trust em

Their souls are lost

They keep taking Jesus

Back off of the cross

Lightning won’t strike em

And the cops won’t bust em

And all I know

All I know

Is you can’t trust em

And their ivory towers

They swing and they sway

As they count up the hours

Until you can’t pay

And your worth is figured

And your presence is rated

And all of their interest

Is calculated

(Chorus)

Bells softly ring

Beneath their steeple

They’re selling souls

And they’re dealing people

And the choirs sing

The coyotes laugh

And quietly they take

Everything you have

(Chorus)

Tinderbox is an exceptional CD – the best I’ve heard from Mr. Eaglesmith and crew in a long time. And that my friends, is saying something.

Mark McKinney

Category : Reviews

Anyhow, when it’s a musician, given time, I listen to a song or two to see it is suits my fancy. Mark McKinney’s songs immediately captured my attention. The music was loud with a rough edge in the mold of the better southern rock bands but the lyrics reminded me of John Mellencamp. Rooted in real soil.

I noticed Mark lives in Austin but was raised in Big Spring, just down the road from my place of birth. There ain’t a hell of a lot to do in a place like Big Spring. On a Friday night there’s football, but Big Spring always gets its ass kicked, having the misfortune of sharing the same district with Odessa Permian, Midland Lee, and a few other perennial powerhouses. Stinking-ass oil refineries with lots of lights and plumes of billowing smoke pollute already desolate countryside and there’s not much to be had in the way of entertainment in the town itself. It’s no small wonder that a bright young man like Mark McKinney would want to liven up the place.

A year or so later I noticed Mark was playing down the road from me at the River Road Icehouse. Leah was out of town. I was bored and alone so I decided to catch his show.

Mark has a full band, complete with lights and smoke—not one but two lead guitar players—both of which have chops, a red-headed cousin playing the bass and a good drummer to back the band. The sound is good, the energy high, the visual aspect of the band fun to watch.

Mark played songs he wrote, aside from one very good cover of Mellencamp’s Authority Song, which I think pretty much sums up the attitude of Mark and his band. These are the boys pushing the limits of the law, yet rooted in working class goodness: farmers, construction workers, oil filed workers and general laborers who love their country, love their families, work hard at jobs five days a week but then take the time to have fun on the weekend.

I bought Get It On, the band’s only CD and listened on the way home. It delivers. Later I contacted Mark via his MySpace page and he scratched out this bio. Note that this is done on the fly without spell check. Obviously, the boy can write:

I was born in Big Spring in 1973, grew up in the same old rock house on 10 acres that my dad was born and raised in, built by my grandfather. Started my first band with my older brother Eric, who still plays lead guitar for me, when we were in 6th and 8th grade. Recruited Rob Dennis as my drummer who quickly became my best friend. Played all through high school all over Midland, Odessa in rough bars while we were only 14 or 16 with my Dad there to take up the slack, haha.. Graduated half a year early from high school to head down to Austin to get into a real music scene. Had falling for a beautiful girl in high school, that I had to leave behind while she finished 2 more years of time at BSHS. We had a 2 year long distance relationship, lots of letters and speeding tickets making that long drive, she finally moved to Austin and we married in Wimberly in 1995. We are still together and have 2 kiddos, a little boy 4, named Jagger Lee, and a 1 year old beautiful girl named Cypress Grace. Well my buddy Rob moved up to Nashville, where he has done very well. My brother and me played in several bands in Austin, one called the McKinney Brother Band, we shared a drummer with Kevin Fowler and his band “Thunder Foot”, an old buddy of Kevins from Amarillo, Me and my brother Eric dig lots of giggin around. Then formed a band in 2000 called the Cosmic Cowboys, with my old buddy Rob back on drums. We went back and forth from Austin to Nashville. Cut an album for Virgin Nashville that never came out as they closed their doors. Stopped playing for a few years and worked on my song writing. During all this music stuff, I had to work to make real money. I always worked for myself, I did construction, built decks, painting, hung sheet rock, etc…, paid the bills to support my music habit.

These days I do some work in Real Estate on the side for an Investment Co, helping them locate little homes to sell owner finance. Just got my Real Estate License.

Rob and I got Excited about some of the songs I had written and we made this album, “get it on” I was really ready to make the hardest push at this I had ever made in my life. I put together my band, calling on my brother and my cousin Ryan Coggin to play bass, he played bass in Cosmic Cowboys…

Have had lots of good things happen this first year and a half…

Ask any questions you want, I just ran into my office to escape the hollerin kids for a moment, and just started typing to ya, guess I felt like writing a little…

Word of warning: if you don’t like your music loud, buy a set of earplugs on the way to the show. I didn’t. It rained that night so the show was forced inside and I paid the price. Nevertheless, I’m glad I did.

Mark McKinney and his band is one of the bright new bands out there. Check him out if he comes your way. 

Bleu Edmondson – Lost Boy

Category : Reviews

There’s heart, soul, and substance in this CD and great sound too. It’ll grow and grow on you, or at least it has with me.
On my list, Bleu is one of the top five young acts to come out of Texas in recent times. There�s not much country about Bleu; he hails from young Springsteen, John Mellencamp, Rick Springfield rock and roll territory. But if that isn’t Americana then what is?
Bleu searched his soul for this one. Then he took an axe to a frozen heart and found a strong warm pulse beneath the ice. Many of the songs document battles and wounds suffered in the strange battlefield fought in the bars and honkytonks or our land�a place where those that lead with the heart get savaged.
For any that accuse Bleu of getting soft, you’d have to be brain dead not to realize that this world and our country in particular is in bad shape. People look but don�t see, they listen but don�t hear. We live in a dark time where prayers hardly make it though the haze and answers are not always forthcoming: a time and a place where people have been raised with the best the planet has to offer, are surrounded by luxury, yet have become little more than hollow shells, almost soulless in their selfishness. Bleu is blessed (or cursed, depending on how you look at it) with seeing and hearing everything and trying to make sense of it. It may be the only world he has known, but down deep, he knows something�s wrong and he�s doing his best to describe how he feels.
It’s no wonder he feels lost sometimes.
On Lost Boy, Bleu Edmondson doesn’t sing Rock and Roll, he bleeds it.

Steve Earle – Washington Square Serenade

Category : Reviews

Steve starts off with a decent sounding song dissing Nashville. My first thought was similar to Lynyrd Skynyrd�s reply to Neil Young in "Sweet Home Alabama" � the South don�t need you around anyhow. And I�m not even from the south unless you consider Texas part of that mess. Then the man kisses the asses of those in his new home�New York City. There�s a tolerable song about the new job on the satellite radio.  Then back to New York City.  Living in a "City of Immigrants." So what?
Cut five and six are two disgusting bitch songs�in the first one he tells me how his current squeeze sparkles and shines and everyone knows she�s his, then he grovels around in cut six like some love-smitten school kid. By this time, I don�t know whether to stick my finger down my throat and puke or toss the disc out the window.
What the hell, dude?
Thank God (and Steve) for the rest of the CD (aside from cut 11, another mandatory piece of crap for the new squeeze).

"Jericho Road," "Oxycontin Blues," "Red is the Color." Damn. Red is the fucking color. Now here�s what I came looking for. No one does it like this. No one, aside from Steve. "Steve�s Hammer" and "Way Down in the Hole" convince me his heart still beats and the spirit living in his soul is still alive and well.
Now if I can just find a CD player that�ll skip cuts 5, 6, and 11. (Or am I the problem here?)
One thing for sure, both Steve and I are strong-willed opinionated bastards and don�t take well to being edited. To our own detriment sometimes.
 

Mescalito by Ryan Bingham

Category : Reviews

Lost Highway records picked up Ryan Bingham, re-tooled some of his previously released songs (that almost no one has heard anyway), and added new works to come up with one hell of a good CD.
Following is an article I wrote on Ryan for Mavrik Magazine (now LoneStarMusic Magazine) last year. And here�s an interview by Michael Devers, from the Lonestarmusic store web-site.
Ryan really is that good.
Ryan Bingham
Since I began writing for Americanaroots.com, I get opportunities to write about lots of musicians. I pass on most of them. It�s not that the artists don�t deserve my time. But they are many and my schedule is full. The truth is, unless someone really moves me, I can�t do justice to them. Ryan Bingham�s music came along and speared me through the heart. I was left with no choice but to drop what I was doing and try to understand why.
Maybe it was the common ingredients Ryan and I share: we hail from the same geographical region and a similar background, but I think there�s more to it than that. I daresay others will also find a note of commonality with this man and his music. Ryan reminds me of another poet�the young Bob Dylan. Unlike Dylan, Ryan wears boots, a cowboy hat and jeans with traces of desert wind, dirt, sweat and maybe even a distant whiff of cow shit and spent oil. His roots go back to arid plains of Eastern New Mexico, dry desert mountains of far West Texas and the hardscrabble border region of Northern Mexico. But a gravely voice similar to young Dylan�s: similar depth, vision and feeling lives in Ryan�s songs. There�s something cool about the guy. Hard to put a finger on what it is, but it�s undeniable. For whatever reason, the good Lord chose this young man and blessed him with a spirit wiser than even he realizes. His words are not entirely his own.
In Ryan�s voice, I hear a spokesman for a generation. Such a gift is rarely bestowed on those from privileged background and carries with it a curse of equal weight. To see and understand the human condition to the degree he does comes with a price. Ryan, like my own children, suffered in the land of plenty. He had a front row seat to a world of hard drinking, drugs, sex, and wild and reckless lifestyles as a young man�some would say as a child. Remnants of those trials and experiences find their way into his music. But unlike others, Ryan was not consumed by this fire but instead distilled by it. What�s left is a concentrated spirit�hearing him sing is not unlike taking a shot of moonshine whisky�hard to ignore.

 

Nowadays most kids live pampered lives in a chrome and plastic world plugged into electronic gadgets. Many learn to play instruments, write songs and sing but few have lived a life worthy of writing or singing about. The lessons Ryan delivers aren�t taught in school; no college degree bestows the wisdom he has found; no amount of money creates the bearing with which he walks, nor does a big time recording contract provide the authority with which he sings. His gift can�t be bought. It has to be earned and the cost is more than most are willing or able to pay.
You scoff? How about this? Eat out of a tip jar and a bucket of change. Sleep without a roof to call your own. No steady girlfriend because most of them can�t accept the lifestyle. What do you mean no bathroom? Crawl on man-killing bulls in Mexican rodeos for enough Pesos to buy a bottle of booze. Then laugh as you spit out your own front teeth or drive from one hospital to another to get the shattered bones in your hand reassembled. Fix broke down vehicles on the side of the road without proper tools or parts, maybe in the rain or the cold. Strand yourself in a foreign country thousands of miles from home with no money. Play for tips so you can buy enough gas to get a few more miles down the road and hopefully another gig. In search of what? Who knows, but there�s something out there. Has to be. Maybe right over the next hill or across the next desert. Ryan is a nomad in search of answers. Instead he finds more questions. So the search continues. Then there�s the matter of hormones and youth. Most of the stuff on the wild side of town involves at least some fun. Otherwise, why would anyone go?
There are other integral ingredients in Ryan�s recipe for writing songs: Good vision: we all look, but few see with the clarity he does. Good hearing: we all listen, but we don�t all hear the same thing. And empathy for others: can you really feel what it�s like to be someone else in this world? Because if you can�t, you�re not going to connect with listeners. For whatever reason, only those that suffer develop empathy. It�s the victim of cancer than raises money to fight the disease, the mother that loses a child to a car wreck that fights drunk drivers to protect the child of another, the parents of a soldier lost in battle that stop a president cold in his tracks as he plans a war without regard for the soldiers that have to fight it. It�s he or she that has suffered heartbreak, been abused by the world, and battled insane thoughts that can connect to and help lead others out of those dark areas. Most great songs are written from a desperate place. Ryan has seen his share of desperate places. In the midst of hardship, sometimes self-imposed, Ryan manages to smile through the adversity.
Ryan�s latest CD, Dead Horses, consists of ten songs. There�s not a throwaway in the bunch. You�ll hear the calling of the highway and see the stops along the way. You�ll feel the pull of a good looking woman�s ass as she saunters by and then taste the sweetness of her lips underneath moonlight�truly one of God�s great gifts to mankind. A truck-stop waitress will offer kind words when no one else notices. Mexico will beckon. You�ll know the frustration of a laborer toiling in the sun just to make another rich and consider shortcuts like growing your own marijuana money tree. You�ll hear a higher calling and find hope and a longing for something better. All set to masterful licks on acoustic instruments with real roots sounds.
Ryan�s supporting cast call themselves the Dead Horses. These young men have to be made of stern stuff to hang with this traveling soul. If he�s eating out of a tip jar, then so are they. When he has a wreck, they will too, and Ryan will have his share of wrecks. I daresay if they aren�t forthcoming, he�ll go out and find a few. Mathew Smith plays drums, Corby Schaub the mandolin. Ryan plays an acoustic guitar and a harmonica. Between the three, they produce quite a variety of sounds. Doug Moreland, another West Texas native, added a nice touch on a fiddle for the Dead Horses album and also joined Ryan the night I caught his live show at Gruene Hall.
I am told there�s another CD in the works. I�ve heard a few tracks and it is good stuff.
Ryan is a diamond in the rough, not completely polished or refined, a trend setter. His style is uniquely his own. Some of the lyrics in his songs didn�t quite work for me at first pass. Next thing I knew, I�m talking and singing like he does, making the same �mistakes� until these mistakes become the new right way of saying things and I wouldn�t have it any other way. That�s how natural all of this comes to him. Dylan spoke of this, how at times it was though he heard things from another place, wrote them down, and then passed them along to the rest of us. No big deal. Except years later no big deal altered history and has become part of the fabric of our culture. Dylan was branded a visionary but couldn�t understand why. Woody Guthrie, Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings and Steve Earle all shared this trait. They looked into the mirror and demanded sight. They did not flinch or turn away when things got ugly. And in each case, they did get ugly. Ryan also sees and understands his own flaws and shortcomings. Burdened with the knowledge of who and what he is, he�ll rebel against expectations society places upon him once lifted into an honored and revered place (I�d think less of him if he didn�t). With the raw talent he possesses, that is a place he�s almost sure to find.
I found Ryan to be a man comfortable in his own skin, without pretense, an easygoing type with a nice smile and a good manner. He�s a class act. But the man behind the song is what he is, and that�s not necessarily what you will want him to be. Billy Joe Shaver sings a song called "The Real Deal." In a business ripe with phonies and imitations, ready to sell their soul for a buck, Ryan is the real deal. He isn�t almost as good as the big name acts that preceded him. He�s better. He inherited what they had and is taking it to the next level. You�ll be doing yourself a favor by buying his CD�s and checking out his live show.
Note to Ryan: In Ray Wylie Hubbard�s words, what you�re searching for, you�re searching with.

Shut up and Sing

Category : Reviews

Prior to the Dixie Chicks fall from grace I was not a huge fan of their music. The reason: I rarely listened to mainstream country radio. My wife Leah on the other hand loved their songs and their music. So it was through her I discovered how talented this trio is. Then came the infamous day Natalie Maines told a group of British fans at a concert that she was ashamed George Bush is from Texas.
The backlash was huge. Country radio stations quit playing their songs, groups boycotted their concerts, sponsors abandoned them, other groups staged events to destroy their CD�s in public displays. Right wing pundits lined up to criticize the Chicks. Who are these three young performers, women performers no less, to criticize our commander in chief during a time of war? The Chicks fan base was largely in the South and rural America, for the biggest part it died overnight.
Shut up and Sing follows the Chicks through this time with actual footage of the events as they happened, interspersed with songs off of their latest CD.
Natalie Maines may have been ashamed of Dubya. I�ll tell you what I am ashamed of. I am ashamed of the people in my own state and my own country for bullying and vilifying these women for having the courage to speak their mind. Especially now that it turns out they were right to question Mr. Bush and his cohorts. Perhaps the words she used could have been chosen a little more wisely. I support the people�s right not to buy their music or attend their concerts, but to threaten harm to them or to pressure them into silence in order to protect frat boy�
It�s not politics that makes the movie work though. It�s the incredible talent of these three women. There has never been a trio of women from the country music scene anywhere near as good as these women. This talent is on full display throughout the movie.
Another thing that makes the movie work is the wonderful portrayal of the Chicks in their everyday lives as wives, mothers, and dear loyal friends to each other. Each one is an exceptional person, as a group they are unparalleled.
Please go watch this film if you can. You�ll be doing yourself a big favor. And you�ll be supporting a talented group of courageous Americans while you�re at it.

Chip Taylor: Relief From The Madness

Category : Reviews

Chip Taylor has released an extraordinary double cd. Both CDs are good, but the first of the two was for me like taking a healing vitamin. The first song, I Don’t Believe in That contains truth that washed over me like a spiritual wave. Chip was connected, had to be connected, to come up with this one. Inspired is the world I’m looking for.But the good work doesn’t end there. One song after another, masterfully written and performed, full of life lessons and heart felt lyrics fill the first CD. The second CD is good as well, but deals more with matters of love and loss and pain.Chip is unknown to many by name, but some of the songs he has previously written are classics and known by all. Songs like Kiss an Angel Good Morning, and Wild Thing. He’s brother to Jon Voight and uncle to Angelina Jolie. With this CD, Chip Taylor has surpassed anything I’ve heard him do. This is hands down the best album I’ve heard this year. http://lonestarmusic.com/album.asp?aid=’3813‘ Don’t waste your time listening to me. Buy the cd and listen to Chip here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XVK3yLIDieI&mode=related&search=He says it so much better than I.

Johnny Cash: Americana V: A Hundred Highways

Category : Reviews

My granddad wrote a note in a bible he gave me when I graduated from high school. It said: Upon reaching the mantle of life, one�s effectiveness does not diminish, but grows and grows, while loving God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Ghost with faith, hope, and charity. Then the world is yours. My Granddad was old and nearing death when he wrote those words.
 
I took the bible and assumed I was close to reaching that mantle he described. But as years went by, the mantle proved an ever-illusive place. I have come to believe the mantle was territory my granddad occupied at the time, not me, a place where his body was weak and little more than a source of pain and suffering, a hollow shell hardly resembling the strong house it had once been.
 
But in weakness of the flesh, strength of spirit can be found. Little did I know, but my granddad left a blessing upon me that survived in spite of my reckless ways, a spiritual seed of sorts.
 
Johnny Cash completed American V just hours and days before his death. He stood squarely upon the mantle of life and his words carry the weight of centuries of collective wisdom. In places his voice sounds weak, in other places it�s strong, but everywhere it testifies to the strength of the spirit that lived in Johnny. A few are songs he wrote, others were written by others, but when Johnny sings them, I hear songs I�ve never before heard.
 
John R. Cash withstood a trial by fire and was not consumed, but instead was perfected by the flames. While wild and reckless as a young man, he redefined dignity and honor in his later days and saved his best and most effective work for last. John stands among the great that walked this earth.
 
He left a piece of his spirit in this cd. Buy the cd. Open your heart. Open your ears. Find your blessing.

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