tuck's music journal

I write about local music stuff in West Virginia and nearby Ohio. I post lots of information about the Greens and musical benefit events I organize for my non profit organization. Americana music focused.

Thursday, December 31, 2009

Greens put on a great show last night in their debut at the Thirsty Turtle

The Greens did a show last night at the Thirsty Turtle in Parkersburg; a pre-New Years Eve show, with a good celebratory feel to it. They worked through a different sort of set list than the previous show last Saturday at 6 Pence, where they were strong on the dance numbers and songs featuring Aaron Phillips on saxophone. Last night was a lot of the more "listening" songs- the ballads and such. For instance, I hadn't heard Tuck's Riff for a while, or Chinaski. So, yet another marveling experience of knowing how versatile the Greens music is! They are on to Huntington tonight; undoubtedly a more lively dance numbers night in honor of New Years Eve, and of course, Apocalypso!!!

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Tonight! The Greens at the Thirsty Turtle!

Come on out and see the Greens in Parkersburg tonight at the Thirsty Turtle. This is a benefit for Children's Home Society of WV-Parkersburg in its work with area children and families. The $5 cover at the door supports this work. There will be door prizes and more chances to support the work of the agency, but primarily it will be a chance to enjoy the music of the Greens here in the holiday season. They play further and farther between in the Mid Ohio Valley, so every chance is an exciting opportunity!

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

No Depression Community top 20 albums of the decade

1. Gillian Welch- Time (the Revelator) (buy)
2. Wilco - Yankee Hotel Foxtrot (buy)
3. Drive By Truckers - The Dirty South (buy)
4. Ryan Adams - Heartbreaker (buy)
5. Bruce Springsteen - The Rising (buy)
6. Mary Gauthier - Mercy Now (buy)
7. Alejandro Escovedo - A Man Under The Influence (buy)
8. O Brother, Where Art Thou? (Soundtrack) (buy)
9. Radiohead - Hail To The Thief (buy)
10. Broken Family Band - Welcome Home Loser (buy)
11. Patty Griffin - 1000 Kisses (buy)
12. Bob Dylan - Love & Theft (buy)
13. Buddy and Julie Miller - Written in Chalk (buy)
14. Buddy Miller - Universal United House of Prayer (buy)
15. Laura Veirs - Triumphs and Travails Of Orphan Mae (buy)
16. Ray Wylie Hubbard - Growl (buy)
17. Slaid Cleaves - Everything You Love Will Be Taken Away (buy)
18. Thad Cockrell & Caitlin Cary - Begonias (buy)
19. Wilco - A Ghost Is Born (buy)
20. Wilco - Sky Blue Sky (buy)

Monday, December 28, 2009

Greens holiday show at 6 Pence Pub last Saturday night

The Greens had a rollicking show Saturday at the 6 Pence Pub for the day after Christmas. Aaron Phillips was in town for the holiday and sat in for the show. There was a very large crowd of revelers. The signature sound of Aaron's saxophone and flute from many of the Greens songs was great to hear. Songs such as Cars and Horses, Beekeeper, High Country Blues, Psychedelic Sky, were in fine form, and brought the crowd into great "nostalgic" heights, and the dance-able numbers were the dominant requests and kept the crowd going for 4 hours of contentment. The Greens gift to their audience, and back to the Greens from the audience was great to experience. It will be a fine music memory to keep for many a fan. The Greens turn right around and perform for a benefit for CHS this Wednesday at the Thirsty Turtle on Rt. 47 in Parkersburg. They are then on to New Years Eve at Shamrock's in Huntington. Canton OH on the weekend!

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Little Green Stocking benefit re-scheduled for next Wednesday the 30th of December

The Greens have been able to re-schedule the Little Green Stocking benefit for the Thirsty Turtle for next Wednesday the 30th at 10 pm. Come out and support the Children's Home Society of WV and hear some good music and celebrate the new year's a day early.

Americana Music top albums of the year

Nashville, December 23, 2009. The Americana Music Association announced its year end Top 100 Albums of the Year. The Top 100 albums are based on those records reported during the period of November 17, 2008 through November 16, 2009.

The Top Ten most played albums, as charted on the Americana Airplay Chart are:

1. Buddy & Julie Miller
2. Steve Earle
3. Slaid Cleaves
4. Flatlanders
5. Willie Nelson and Asleep At The Wheel
6. Gourds
7. Tejas Brothers
8. Levon Helm
9. Justin Townes Earle
10. J.J.Cale

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Todd Snider, Loretta Lynn at Nelsonville Music Festival in May

One of my "must see's" Todd Snider is returning to the Nelsonville Music Festival in May of 2010- and the headliner for Saturday is Loretta Lynn. You can already get tickets for the festival; at great rates- they progressively go up closer to the event. Go to Stuart's Opera House website for information!

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Greens benefit had to be canceled for tonight- due to snow/ road conditions

Sorry to report the Greens benefit at the Thirsty Turtle tonight had to be cancelled- the roads from Morgantown were just too treacherous for andy and ben to travel down here. I am working with Rick (the promoting guy from Thirsty Turtle) and the Greens about a possible re-schedule. Sorry for any inconvenience; but this storm was just a little too daunting.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Dangerous Miscreant's gathering

There will be a gathering of Dangerous Miscreants (in spite of dire weather forecasts) tomorrow night on Rt 47 in Parkersburg. The Thirsty (read Green) Turtle will be the locale. 9 pm - ish will be the time; with a West Coast Miscreant kicking out the jambs first- giving us backeasters a taste of Felsen. If Chinaski decides to venture out of his lonely writers garret, somebody is bound to buy him a holiday drink. If anyone ventures down from the High Country, we will sure to help them drive their blues away (which will probably be brought on by 20 inches of wet, powerline breakin' snow). If "Its not Enough" then some folks will want to Power Forward. Layer your clothing with fashionable thunderwear. Drive your "white ghost" (of a car) down the Mexican coast. Let's Go Mountaineers." A country maestro will be rosin up his bow for a little do-see-do' ing. Ain't too proud to beg? Good, cause when you make a request, you might want some of that ol' Motown. There WILL be a time when soul music comes back, I know there will. (When the tide turns again?)
Catherine Zeta Jones or Sharon Stone in town for the holidays? Makes me feel just like a European. Man with dirty hands, at least. Quirky Turkey. Hey Horse why the long face? Tell me this town ain't got no heart- c'mon just tell me- I dare ya. Someone who HAS sat on the dock of the bay, just might have to tell us what its like. Zeppelin. Allman Bros. Hendrix. Back to: Big Ol Betsy, rumblin' along. What is Today? Flyin' Solo. Drag yourself through the day. Who's buried somewhere in New Jersey? Feelin' Low Down on High Street. Five Card Forlorn Blues.
Kenya Dig?

Traveling music yesterday to Wheeling

Ken reminded me I neglected to document my traveling music yesterday up to Wheeling and back. Dave Alvin (and the Guilty Women) - Robert Earl Keen, the Rose Hotel, DADDY (the second time around) and Todd Snider (the Excitement Plan) I was zipping along Rt 7 on the Ohio side up to Wheeling and back; singing along all the way.

Friday, December 11, 2009

The Greens performing a benefit for Children's Home Society of West Virginia next Saturday

The Greens will be performing in a holiday season show as a benefit for Children's Home Society of West Virginia, Saturday December 19th at 10 pm at the Thirsty Turtle in Parkersburg (out route 47, just out of town, toward WVU-P) Aaron Phillips, the ace instrumentalist and fantastic "Renaissance Man"- will do an opening set for the Greens starting around 9 pm, and most likely sit in for some saxophone work with the Greens throughout the evening. Aaron has been in the Bay area of California for a number of years, completing a PHD in his science fields, while playing music in all sorts of combinations out there. A group he is in is worth checking out through his facebook page- you can get a listen to his west coast music that way. The Greens have been wanting to do a benefit for CHS for some time, and we thought this holiday season was a good time; we are billing it as the "Little Green Stocking" benefit (in conjunction with our Little Red Stocking campaign during the holiday season) where we raise money for our agency, through the sale of "stockings" at area businesses, which supports our work with area children and families. The Greens are wrapping up a successful 2009, in which they traveled a bit to spread their great sound and live show, and solidified their WV reputation as one of the outstanding bands in the state. Their hardworking performances, and creative musicianship, and Andy's fantastic songwriting continue to win fans, and amaze the loyal throng. Come out and see them next Saturday, and support a good cause.

Wednesday, December 09, 2009

From the No Depression Archives- Lloyd Sachs story on John Prine

The Long Way Around - Feature from Issue #57 May-June 2005
John Prine
To believe in this living • John Prine's songwriting legacy ain't the story of a genius, it's just a hard way to go
By Lloyd Sachs

I’m floating through an outmoded Chicago newspaper database that gets used these days about as frequently as rotary phones, looking for bits and pieces about one of the Windy City’s favorite singing and songwriting sons. The keywords “John Prine” bring up the expected reviews and articles, some co-billing him with his dear buddy Steve Goodman, as in “Prine, Goodman Battle Show Biz Tradition” from July 20, 1978. There are featurey parsings of personality like “Behind Prine’s Woes Lurks Lot Of Humor” (from the same week), and articles you would pursue if you thought they lived up to their promise, like “Why Is John Prine Singing?”, a Chicago Tribune query from January 21, 1979.

And then, interspersed among the links, are a number of seamy tabloid headlines, including “2 Hurt In Fire, Mother Charged” and “Bond Set In Murder, Arson Plot” and “Cabdriver, 18, Shot To Death.” Why they come up is of less interest than what they evoke. Prine may be the guy who wrote “It’s A Big Old Goofy World”, but as anyone who has spent any time with his songs knows, mundane violence, mainly emotional but sometimes physical, seeps through them. He’s an intrepid reporter on silent sufferers who have been cut out of life’s rewards, who can’t fit in, who are neglected by fathers and mothers and Big Brother, who don’t have that fifth season to explain the other four.

Sometimes, the violence is front and center. “Lake Marie”, one of Prine’s masterpieces, was inspired in part by a series of grisly murders he remembers the Chicago news media having a field day with when he was a kid. “Saw it on the news, on the TV news in a black and white video,” he sings. “You know what blood looks like in a black and white video? Shadows. Shadows, that’s exactly what it looks like.” And that’s what it sounds like when the Vietnam veteran in “Sam Stone” shoots all that money in his arm, or when the kid with two first names in “Six O’Clock News” ends up with his brains on the sidewalk.

“I felt I had to tell funny stories before I went into those songs, just to, you know, let up on the crowd,” says Prine, reflecting on his early days of performing. “I thought they were so sad or something, that they were in such a miserable place. That’s why I came up with some of the humorous songs, too, just so I could get back to the sad ones.”

None of this is to say it isn’t a big old goofy world. On a sunshiny March day in Nashville, where Prine has lived for 25 years, it was Meat Loaf Friday, meaning Prine’s favorite food was one of the specials at a local eatery. Yesterday, somewhere else, was Meat Loaf Thursday. He keeps track of where there’s a meat loaf special every day of the week. Sad to report, the place he went to on Meat Loaf Tuesday closed up shop recently, but hey, it’s a big town. Unlike Los Angeles, Nashville may not have a restaurant that serves potatoes eleven different ways — have I mentioned he’s also big on spuds? But it does know how to fry. Everything.

Prine moved here in 1980, after his first marriage ran aground. His career was in a serious rut, and he was on the verge of a permanent split from the major labels. Perched on a chair in the office of his longtime business partner, Al Bunetta, in the modest Music Row headquarters of Oh Boy, the independent label of which he is “nighttime president,” Prine was in a low-key mode. Could be he was saving up energy for his dinner-hour assignment: taking his kids, who are 9 and 10, to Vin Diesel’s The Pacifier.

Fatherhood dropped in on him after he married his third wife, Fiona, whom he met during a trip to Dublin, where she was the business manager of a recording studio. They conducted a long-distance romance over five years before getting hitched (they planned to celebrate their anniversary by attending a Bob Dylan/Merle Haggard concert in Chicago). She and her son moved to Nashville. The Prines spend as much time as they can on the old sod, in a small cottage they bought on Ireland’s west coast, near Galway.

“It all happened at a great time,” Prine said. “I was 49 when the first kid came along. It just, like, keeps me off the street, that’s for sure. It also makes it legitimate for me to go to toy stores. Used to be, I could never buy anything because I had no one to buy anything for.

“I don’t know if I would have appreciated it as much in another time of my life. The stuff I thought was interesting and all the stuff I did, all the partying I did — I would have hated to miss it being with my kids. It used to be all I’d do was sleep late, walk around and think about ideas for songs. Now, I’ve got a family, a wife, a whole thing going on. I have to put aside time to write.”

The originals on Fair & Square, Prine’s first album of new material in nearly a decade (released April 26 on Oh Boy), were written over a period of five years. That’s quite a different pace from early in his career, when he turned out four albums in a little more than four years for Atlantic, having signed to deliver an impossible ten in ten. (”They were looking for publishing,” he says. “Whether anyone was gonna become a James Taylor or not, they were getting in on it somehow.”)

If the early songs that stopped people in their seats with their quick-cutting insight and genius turns of phrase had a certain airtight quality, his new efforts have a more relaxed, ruminative quality. On the sunset-streaked “Taking A Walk”, which boasts radiant harmony vocals by Mindy Smith and Pat McLaughlin, and the infectious, easy-rolling opener, “Glory Of True Love”, Prine brings a graceful, dyed-in-the-bone wisdom to themes of love, loss and dislocation. There’s resignation in the songs (which include a cover of Texas legend Blaze Foley’s “Clay Pigeons”), but no small amount of resolve: “Radio’s on/Windows rolled up/And my mind’s rolled down,” he sings on “Long Monday”, written with one of his longtime cronies, Keith Sykes. “Headlights shining/Like silver moons/Rollin’ on the ground.”

Sunday, December 06, 2009

Invitation to have input on the 2010 Americana Music Tribute Series of Children's Home Society of WV-Parkersburg

I am gathering anyone who is interested in having input/ participating in, the planning of the 2010 Americana Music Tribute Series for CHS on Wednesday, December 16th at 6 pm here at our offices (3rd door) and I’ll probably throw in PIZZA too. Please invite anyone else you think might be interested in brainstorming any ideas.



Already on the books is the (5th?) annual Johnny Cash Tribute for February 27th (Sat) at the 6 Pence Pub. I’ll be buying the obligatory 7 inch action figure Johnny Cash soon. (we have to finalize if a certain agency program will be the beneficiary of this event and help with the promotion and event- Mid Town Family Resource Center gets first crack)



The “Whole Lotta Hank” tribute and possible second “Cajun Cookoff”- needs a new venue ( I think we will all agree……) and the time it is held is totally open to input (it does not have to be in April again). I would like to organize a local group to go down to Charleston on January 9th to see how they do a Hank Williams tribute in Charleston, led by John Lilly- I went last year and it’s a classy event.



The Bob Dylan birthday tribute SHOULD be around Bob’s birthday in late May; but there are no certain limits to this event!



The longest standing event: The John Prine Tribute SHOULD be in October- (around the 10th or 11th).



We are having some initial discussions of an outdoor event down at the Rowing Club boat house (by the toll bridge, on the river) and maybe this would be a “safe” (???) venue to bring the Weedhawks to; being as I’ve got myself banned from bringing them to the 6 Pence, and about every other good venue to bring them to P-burg has closed down. (But this is open to any brainstorming).



I will want to have some coffee houses at our storefront on St. Mary’s Ave. again this year. I have an offer out to a fellah from the southern part of the state to come in January. And I have been offering Fred Shreve and his Mckinley All Stars a slot sometime before their big whingding in February at the Worthington Golf Club ball room. I figure Mark Stuart (and Stacey Earle) might give me a shout sometime this year, when they would be passing through. I have an invitation out to Jason Wilber (John Prine’s ace guitarist, and fantastic singer songwriter in his own right) to come back this year. I am trying to get some of my musical idols (Will Kimbrough and Tommy Womack) (who have a fluid band, DADDY) to stop through on their travels.



I still am trying to formulate MY OWN PERSONAL NEXT concept : a tribute to The Band.



As far as raffles and such: I would like to organize a second annual raffle for tickets to the Americana Music Festival (probably in September in Nashville), and have it extend a little longer in the lead up time. I wouldn’t mind going to the International Folk Alliance festival in Memphis in February, where many of my similarly favorite musicians gather.



Coming back from San Antonio (at a conference there in November) I would like to organize a “dueling pianos” event as a fund raiser sometime in 2010. Ask me about it; but many of you have probably bumped into these at resort towns, etc.



My new years fantasy would entail pooling everybody’s resources and forming a cooperative / collective that could purchase the Boreman Wheel House and run it as a mid Ohio Valley music co-op venue. I am a little dismayed at the venue options for all these ideas.



I’d like to revive the commemorative 2010 series t-shirt if anyone has contacts with shirt makers or potential sponsors for that.



If you can’t come out on the 16th, but want to feed me a stream of consciousness missive, with your own thoughts or reactions, please do. (CHS employees- you should weigh in on which events your programs would like to be involved in for promoting and benefiting from- you don’t need to attend to do this!!!)



I will do some calculating, but I think this whole Americana Series brings in over $5000 for the agency; but I have to admit that I personally have contributed a pretty significant in-kind contribution to make this happen. I don’t mind keep doing this, but additional sponsors or other ideas to cut the expenses would definitely be appreciated)



OH and Vinyl record sales- don’t forget ideas about this wild monstrosity!!!!!!!!!!

Friday, December 04, 2009

Stay tuned (hopefully later today) for a hoped for announcement

I hope to announce a holiday benefit music event later today; stay tuned.

Listened to a bunch o music on the trip to DC and back

Time has slipped away for me, but I listened to a carload of music going to DC and back over the Thanksgiving holiday, and then three work trips earlier this week to Clarksburg, Clarksburg and Morgantown. Malcolm Holcombe, Daddy, The Steve Goodman tribute (his daughter organized) John Prine and Mac Wiseman, Robert Earl Keen, Dave Alvin, Jackson Browne, Lucinda Williams.

Blake's recordings of the john Prine birthday tribute

I listened to the full length of both CD's that Blake has compiled from his recording of the John Prine tribute we held in October at 6 Pence. It is a very charming CD as we worked our way through the performers. There are a lot of great renditions of John Prine songs, and lots of heart and soul put into the production; not only the performers but Blake's efforts. We are trying to get them out to the musicians and if anyone else wants one, see Matt Starcher or me.

Songwriter Night tonight in Pomeroy

I got word from Todd Burge that there is a songwriter night tonight in Pomeroy at the Court Street Grille. Hope they have a good turnout; check out the www.songwriternight.com website for details.