Tag Archives: Bluegrass

Manassas: Pieces

Manassas_PiecesGreat vault finds from Stephen Stills’ post-CSN/Y band

As CSN/Y’s initial rush of productivity and fame led to a split in the early ‘70s, Stephen Stills followed up his two self-titled solo albums with a pair of albums backed by Manassas. The group, formed with Chris Hillman and others in the Stills orbit, recorded a large number of tracks across a range of rock, country, blues, bluegrass, folk and salsa styles. Their self-titled 1972 debut was a 21-track double-LP nominally divided into four sections, but cross-pollinating the styles throughout. Their followup, 1973’s Down the Road, despite its single-LP concision, had neither the spark nor focus of the freshman effort.

Rhino’s new collection offers fifteen vault selections, drawn from the original sessions, that include alternate takes, reworked solo tunes, cover songs, and live tracks. As on the group’s debut, the styles vary from straight bluegrass to tightly harmonized country, electric folk and rock, and a taste of salsa. The soulful rock of “Like a Fox” (with backing vocal by Bonnie Raitt) is interlaced with pedal steel, Chris Hillman’s “Lies” is layered with organ and slide guitar, the electric folk of “My Love is a Gentle Thing” is filled out with CSN-styled harmonies, and Stills’ “Word Game” is sped along by fast shuffling drums.

The salsa instrumental “Tan Sola y Triste” and the blue soul original “Fit to Be Tied” close the first half of the album, and give way to earthier country sounds that open with Chris Hillman’s twangy country-rock “Love and Satisfy.” A pair of acoustic bluegrass covers includes Leon McAuliffe’s “Panhandle Rag” and Bill Monroe’s “Uncle Pen,” and while Stills’ “Do You Remember the Americans” is sung high and tight, Joe Maphis’ “Dim Lights, Thick Smoke (And Loud Loud Music” is harmonized mournfully.

Perhaps the group recorded too much material for the pipeline, but it’s surprising that any of these tracks failed to see release at the time. Not only are the performances and recordings generally up to par with the group’s released works, Stills’ originals are as good as anything else he wrote at the time. Reworked versions of “Sugar Babe” and “Word Game,” originally waxed for Stephen Stills 2, and a smoking live version of “High and Dry,” give a further taste of what this band had to offer. This is a superb complement to the band’s debut, and perhaps a more rightful heir to their legacy than Down the Road. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

Adam Steffey: One More For the Road

AdamSteffey_OneMoreForTheRoadAll-star solo album from bluegrass mandolinist

Grammy® winning mandolinist Adam Steffey is best known for his tenures with Union Station and Mountain Heart, and his current gig in the Dan Tyminski band. On this second solo album he’s surrounded himself with bandmates past and present, showcasing not only their instrumental prowess, but their harmony as vocalists. Surprisingly, given his years as a sideman, Steffey is both an interesting baritone lead vocalist and a canny band leader. Rather than crafting a showcase for his sizeable instrumental talent, he’s pulled together friends for sessions that trade off between fiery hot-picked solos and ensemble playing, solo lead vocals and close harmonizing, and original and cover tunes. The result is less a stage-center spotlight for Steffey himself than a group effort reflecting his lengthy experience as a musician.

Alison Krauss sings the bluegrass classic “Warm Kentucky Sunshine,” but despite the beautiful, instantly identifiable singularity of her voice (and a harmony from Dan Tyminski), the result isn’t an Alison Krauss track. Similarly for Tyminski’s lead on “Let Me Fall,” on which Steffey, Ron Stewart and Stuart Duncan trade solos on mandolin, banjo and fiddle. Steffey sings three-part harmony with Barry Bales and Ronnie Bowman on “A Broken Heart Keeps Beatin’,” and a cover of Kris Kristofferson’s “Please Don’t Tell Me How the Story Ends” is sung slowly and beautifully. Steffey’s musicality informs this album, making it a subtle, but quite gratifying “solo” release. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

MP3 | One More for the Road
Adam Steffey’s MySpace Page

Lou Reid & Carolina: My Own Set of Rules

LouReidCarolina_MyOwnSetOfRulesVocal-rich bluegrass

Lou Reid developed his bluegrass legend over several decades and several key engagements. He began as a bassist for Doyle Lawson’s Quicksilver, played multiple instruments and sang backup for the Ricky Skaggs Band, and signed on to play guitar and sing lead with the Seldom Scene. He moved on to session work in Nashville and in 1992 formed the first version of Carolina with his friend Terry Baucom. Baucom departed after a pair of albums and Reid took up a second stint with the Seldom Scene, but has kept Carolina going as a parallel concern. The current version of the group includes Reid on mandolin and vocals, Christy Reid on bass, Shannon Slaughter on guitar, and Trevor Watson on banjo. Their sixth album, the second with this lineup, continues to focus on clear, compelling vocals and multipart harmonies. Which isn’t to suggest the players are instrumental slouches, as they show otherwise with the mandolin opening to an up-tempo pass through the Stanley Brothers’ “She’s More to Be Pitied,” and the jaunty instrumental play of “Beat the Train.” The album’s song list revisits a few bluegrass chestnuts, including Bill Monroe’s “In Despair,” and offers a generous helping of faith-related songs through which the group harmonies really show their impact. Reid, Slaughter and Watson supply original tunes, including the a cappella “It’s Hard to Stumble (When You’re Down on Your Knees)” and the siren’s call of hometown love, “Blueridge Girl.” Lou Reid and Carolina’s music focuses on singing and songs rather than strings and picks, and they retain tradition while creating their own contemporary voice. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

MP3 | Left Handed Dreamer [Clip]
Lou Reid & Carolina’s Home Page
Lou Reid & Carolina’s MySpace Page

Tommy Webb: Heartland

TommyWebb_HeartlandBluegrass album of both substance and form

If you’re wondering what happened to the protest and social commentary that once pervaded popular music, you can still find plenty of it in the non-mainstream margins. Such is the track, “Heartland,” from Tommy Webb’s third album of bluegrass. This open letter to the president provides a moving plea from America’s working men and women. The societal disconnection between Midwest farmers and Wall Street bankers stands in contrast to the American economy’s impossibly arcane web of financial interconnections, and provides poignant subtext to the song’s simple wishes.

The bulk of the album is more standard country fare, starting with the opener’s story of lies, heartbreak and murder. The murderous intentions of “Teardrop Inn” are magnified by lazy fiddle and easy-going vocals that sound like the last drops of emotion wrung from a warm heart turned cold. The lack of an overt breakdown in Webb’s voice makes lyrics like “I’d rather see a cold stone above you, than to see you in the arms of Tina at the Teardrop Inn” all the more chilling.  In addition to five originals of love celebrated and lost, Webb picks up the traditional “River of Jordan” and bluegrass staple “Little Sadie,” and terrific fiddle-and-harmony tunes from Wayland Patton (“Something in My Heart”) and Robert Braddock (“She Told Me”).

Webb expands upon his concern for the family farmer with Ricky Skaggs’ “A Hard Road to Hoe” and reworks Daryl Worley’s blue collar lament “Good Day to Run” into a winning acoustic arrangement. The original “If It Weren’t for Bluegrass Music (I’d Go Crazy)” arrives just in time for the summer circuit, where the group’s low-key approach will be a restorative moment amongst the typical festival program’s parade of fireworks. There are plenty of tight bluegrass harmonies and dexterous string picking here (check out the synchronized and syncopated playing on, “Clinch Mountain Backstep”), but it’s Webb’s naturally sincere lead singing that really sells these performances. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

Listen to “Teardrop Inn”
The Tommy Webb Band’s Home Page
The Tommy Webb Band’s MySpace Page

Brandon Rickman: Young Man, Old Soul

BrandonRickman_YoungManOldSoulLonesome River Band lead vocalist’s superb solo debut

Brandon Rickman joined a reconstituted Lonesome River Band as guitarist and lead singer in time for their 2002 album Window of Time, and like many of the band’s members, he’s stepped out for a solo album. Rickman departs from the band’s multipart harmonies and full instrumental arrangements, singing solo or with a single harmony, and stripping many of the tracks down to guitar with fiddle or mandolin. He paces the songs more leisurely than the hot-picking tempos of festival-bound bluegrass, and shorn of the typically bluegrass instrumental interplay of guitar, mandolin, banjo, fiddle and bass, the arrangements have a looser country-folk feeling.

Rickman’s co-written several songs of pining lovers and broken hearts, but he connects most deeply with lyrics of approaching mid-life, including the wizened “What I Know Now” and the blink-of-an-eye youth in “So Long 20’s.” He memorializes vanishing small town geographies and digs into songs of faith, including The Stanley Brothers’ “Let Me Walk Lord” and a superb three-part harmony on “Rest for His Workers.” Rickman’s a compelling singer, and framing himself in stripped down arrangements not only differentiates these tracks from those of the Lonesome River Band, but truly highlights the qualities of his voice as an individual. Those who enjoy his singing and guitar playing with the band will love this disc; those who gravitate more to country than bluegrass should also check this out. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

MP3 | I Bought Her a Dog
Brandon Rickman’s Profile Page
Brandon Rickman’s MySpace Page

Sarah Jarosz: Song Up in Her Head

SarahJarosz_SongUpInHerHeadTalented bluegrass teenager transcends “prodigy”

Having traversed bluegrass circles for five years, this seventeen-year-old singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist is ready to transcend the “prodigy” label. Yet the fluidity of her singing, the depth of her songwriting and the confidence in her picking are still preternaturally poised for a high school senior. Her debut features eleven solo compositions played with a band that features legends of the acoustic string scene such as Jerry Douglas and Darrell Scott, and up-and-coming peers Samson Grisman and Alex Hargreaves. Jarosz doesn’t trade on her youth, singing in a voice richer than a teenager’s and writing lyrics whose poetry is that of a songwriter, rather than a high school class. The unbridled yearning in her songs is the only real mark of her age, as she dreams of finding love and aches with the opportunities she encounters. She turns into a jazz chanteuse for covers of the Decemberists’ bloody “Shankill Butchers” and Tom Waits’ “Come on Up to the House,” and picks mandolin and clawhammer banjo on a pair of original instrumentals. Jarosz avoids the precociousness of youthful talent by guiding listeners to focus on her talent, rather than her youth. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

MP3 | Song Up in Her Head
Sarah Jarosz’s Home Page
Sarah Jarosz’s MySpace Page

King Wilkie: King Wilkie Presents- The Wilkie Family Singers

kingwilkie_singersAudacious pop concept by former bluegrass wunderkind

If you caught King Wilkie’s bluegrass debut Broke, and somehow managed to miss their break with orthodoxy on 2007’s Low Country Suite, you’re in for a really big surprise. With the original group disbanded, and founding member Reid Burgess relocated to New York City, the band’s name has been redeployed as the front for this stylistically zig-zagging concept album. The Wilkie Family Singers are an imagined co-habitating, musically-inclined family fathered by shipping magnate Jude Russell Wilkie, and filled out by a wife, six children, a cousin, two friends and two pets.

In reality the assembled group includes Burgess, longtime collaborator John McDonald, multi-instrumentalist Steve Lewis, and guest appearances by Peter Rowan, David Bromberg, John McEuen, Robyn Hitchcock, Abigail Washburn and Sam Parton. And rather than constructing a storyline or song-cycle, Burgess wrote songs that give expression to the family’s life and backstory. As he explains, “Jude Russell Wilkie, Sr. had success with a Great Lakes shipping business, and becomes the father to a great family, whose normal familial roles aren’t neatly defined as they grow older. Their insular lifestyle and wealth has them in a sort of time warp. They’re wedged in limbo between past and future. Too big to hold mom’s hand or ride on dad’s shoulders, but still somehow too small to leave their childhood house.”

Much as the Beatles used Sgt. Pepper as a backdrop to inform the mood of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, Burgess works from his sketch to conjure a family photo album rather than a written history. There are snapshots of togetherness, isolation, and stolen moments of solitary time, there’s lovesick pining, unrequited longing for the larger world, lives stunted in adolescence, violent dreams and medicinal coping. The band ranges over an impressive variety of styles that include acoustic country, blues and folk, rustic Americana, Dixieland jazz, ’50s-tinged throwbacks and ’70s-styled production pop. There’s even some back-porch picking here, but this edition of King Wilkie has much grander ambitions than to embroider the bluegrass handed down by Bill Monroe. The festival circuit’s loss is pop music’s gain.

Burgess paints the family as lyrical motifs and musical colors rather than descriptive profiles. The latter might have been more immediately satisfying but would have quickly turned stagey. Instead, the family’s dynamic is spelled out in small pieces, fitting the broad range of musical styles to create an album that plays beautifully from beginning to end. The songs stand on their own, but the family’s presence is felt in the flow of the album’s tracks. Casa Nueva hits a homerun with their maiden release, and King Wilkie proves itself a daring band whose next step should be highly anticipated. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

MP3 | Hey Old Man
King Wilkie’s Home Page
King Wilkie’s MySpace Page

Michael Martin Murphey: Buckaroo Blue Grass

michaelmartinmurphey_buckaroobluegrassCountry-folk rides onto bluegrass

Michael Martin Murphey is forever lodged in the memories of pop fans for his 1975 hit “Wildfire.” And those who checked the credits of the Monkees’ Pisces, Aquarius, Capicorn & Jones Ltd. would have found him as the writer of the Mike Nesmith-sung “What Am I Doing Hangin’ ‘Round.” In contrast to this brief flirtation with the pop charts, Murphey’s career, before and after “Wildfire,” has been extensive. He co-founded the Lewis & Clark Expedition, recorded an album for the same Colgems label that produced the Monkees, and supplied songs to Flatt & Scruggs, Bobbie Gentry, and Kenny Rogers. He recorded a string of country-rock albums throughout the ‘70s, and after peaking with “Wildfire,” returned with “Carolina in the Pines.”

Murphey’s success on the country charts took off in the ‘80s, stoked in part by re-recordings of his earlier works. “Carolina in the Pines,” originally a modest hit in 1976, became a full-fledged country top-10 with a 1985 reworking. As the ‘80s waned, so did Murphey’s country chart success, and in 1990 he waxed Cowboy Songs, the first of several albums mixing Western standards with original contributions to the canon. On 2001’s Playing Favorites he took yet another pass at “Wildfire” and “Carolina in the Pines,” setting in place a pattern of reinterpreting fan favorites. This time out, Murphey sets two new tunes (“Lone Cowboy” and “Close to the Land”) and nine earlier works to acoustic bluegrass arrangements, once again discovering new layers in the fan favorites.

Thirty years after his first pass at “Carolina in the Pines,” Murphey’s voice adds an appealing edge. Dropping the ‘70s drums and guitars leaves the banjo, guitar, bass and fiddle to create an earthier mood. The same is true for “Cherokee Fiddle,” whose 1976 original was turned into a hit for Johnny Lee on the Urban Cowboy soundtrack; as reworked here it’s a twangy concoction of fiddle, guitar, mandolin and banjo. Murphey reaches all the way back to 1972 for “Boy from the Country,” adding a fiddle and mandolin to the original singer-songwriter arragnement.

Others have taken Murphey’s songs for a bluegrass spin, such as Dwight McCall’s recent take on “Lost River,” but it’s a joy to hear Murphey cut his own mountain groove through the song with Rhonda Vincent singing harmony. His new version of “What Am I Doing Hanging Around,” written from life at the age of 19, is now a terrifically nostalgic memory at age 63. Murphey’s fans already know what a treat it is to hear him add perspective to his catalog, and those who lost track after “Wildfire” will find this a terrific reintroduction. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

Listen to Buckaroo Blue Grass
Michael Martin Murphey’s Home Page

Audie Blaylock and Redline: Audie Blaylock and Redline

audieblaylock_redlineStellar album of hard-charging bluegrass

Not being a bluegrass aficionado, I always find myself cataloging the quintessential elements in my head: banjo, check; fiddle, check; mandolin, acoustic bass, and guitar, check, check and check; high-tight harmonies, ballads and hot-picking, check, check and check. And it’s right about that last check that I start to get the feel of a bluegrass record, sinking into its joys and loneliness, sensing the country roots beneath the Kabuki-like constrictions laid down by the genre’s founders. The checklist comes to life with harmonies squeezing out tears and musicianship advancing from a display of expertise to an emotional outpouring. And so it was with Blaylock’s second album as a group leader, his first release for Rural Rhythm.

Blaylock’s played with Jimmy Martin and Rhonda Vincent, is a four-time nominee for IBMA guitar player of the year award, and an IBMA instrumental group award winner with Michael Cleveland and Flamekeeper. His band is a quartet of young hotshots who dazzle listeners with their instrumental prowess and surround Blaylock with old-soul harmony singing. Though the group can sing traditional high-low duets, it’s the four-part harmonies, such as the a cappella gospel “Who’ll Sing For Me?” that really show what they can do. Blaylock’s selected songs from country, gospel and bluegrass, emphasizing up-tempo fiddle and banjo tunes, but providing balance with ballads and mid-tempo waltzes. The band’s high-energy tunes are sure-fire festival favorites, but it’s the ballads you’ll savor.

Blaylock opens Lester Flatt’s tearful “My Darling’s Last Goodbye” with a plaintive solo vocal before finding comforting harmony on the chorus, and the call-and-response of Jimmy Martin’s “Goodbye” provides the warmest of send-offs to the hereafter. Better yet are the rich harmonies that underline the wishful memories of Roy Acuff’s “My Blue Eyed Darling.” The album’s upbeat tunes harbor dark tales of cheating lovers, estranged affection, suicidal thoughts and death, and are sweetened with chipper harmonies and energized picking. Blaylock’s a fine vocalist with ears that are superbly tuned for both fetching material and extremely talented accompanists. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

Listen to Audie Blaylock and Redline

The Abrams Brothers: Blue On Brown

abrams_blueonbrownYouthful country-harmony salute to Dylan and Arlo

The Abrams Brothers – a duo that sings and plays violin, viola, guitar and mandolin – take their place in a long line of sibling country harmony acts. They also join the family of precociously talented youngsters who play and sing with a preternatural ease, and an artistic vision that belies their youth. How many teenagers would think to record a tribute to the songs of Bob Dylan and Arlo Guthrie, and how many of those could reach deep into the two artists’ catalogs for songs that are amenable to bluegrass harmonies and string band arrangements? Well, these two, at least. Accompanied by their cousin on bass and studio hands that include Anton Fier (drums), Rob Ickes (dobro), Will Parsons (banjo), and Mickey Raphael (harmonica), the Abrams’ run through a half-dozen Dylan songs and a half-dozen songs written by or closely associated with Guthrie. The youth in their voices adds an arresting innocence to the iconic Dylan tunes “Mr. Tambourine Man,” “Shelter From the Storm,” “The Times They Are A-Changin’.” The latter, lingered over at a slow tempo is especially effective. Their bluegrass fervor is a perfect fit for Dylan’s born-again hit, “Gotta Serve Somebody.”

When coupled with a full backing band, the duo is overwhelmed by over-thick productions, such as on Guthrie’s “Cooper’s Lament,” Woody Guthrie’s “Oklahoma Hills,” and Dylan’s “Going, Going Gone.” Anton Fier’s plodding drum beats are particularly distracting on these tracks. Much better are the light shuffle, tight harmony and slide guitar of “City of New Orleans,” the interplay of the Abrams’ guitar, mandolin and fiddle with Will Parsons’ banjo on “Every Hand in the Land,” and a superb reading of Guthrie’s wistful “Last to Leave.” The brothers’ gospel harmonies are well spent on Guthrie’s “Last Train,” with Mickey Raphael’s harmonica taking the song home. Dylan and Guthrie’s songs dovetail naturally, especially as selected by the Abrams from both hits and album cuts. The resulting fan portraits transcend smoothly into brotherly harmony. [©2008 hyperbolium dot com]

Hear “City of New Orleans”