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.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Greens this coming Friday night- 6 Pence Pub

The Greens bring their high energy good time music to 6 Pence Pub in Parkersburg this coming Friday night. Hope to see many good Greens fan/friends there. Andy has been playing a good number of solo shows too, in the Morgantown area, on time slots when the Greens aren't playing. I don't think he's exactly "dragging himself through the day" nor "feeling low down on high street" but he's using his "natural voice" to reflect on looking "down" on some of the scenic towns of West Virginia. Many music lovers feel "its not enough."

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Greens last night in Marietta

The Greens played a late set during the Marietta Brewing Company Festival last night. They sparked a strong crowd reaction to their danceable tunes, and re-connecting with some fans who hadn't been able to see them for a while. Lots of hard rocking guitar work by Andy on the Gibson. A very enthusiastic crowd urged them on. An appreciation of the diverse styles and creativity of their songs.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Americana Music Festival

I was fortunate to be able to attend the 2010 Americana Music Festival in Nashville on September 9-11. We arrived at the Nashville Sheraton mid afternoon, and checked into the hotel, noting the bustle of musicians and music fans already well underway. We picked up the wristbands (for the three nights of music) and the tickets to the awards ceremony that evening at the Ryman. There were lots of gatherings of musicians and music business folks going on in the lounge and lobby areas. We checked out maps to get an idea where things were in downtown Nashville. We walked on over to see what kind of walk it was to the Ryman, and took in some of the flavor of Nashville. We found the honky tonk area of Broadway, too, on this first outing. We ate at a downtown restuarant, and connected up with the winners of the trip to Nashville raffle we had been conducting as a fund raiser through most of the year. They were ecstatic about having won this great trip.
That evening was the 9th annual Americana Honors and Awards at the Ryman. We got there early enough to check out some of the historic displays around the edge of the theater, about Grand Ol Opry history, and particular musicians. The show was fantastic with album of the year, artist of the year, duo/group of the year, instrumentalist of the year, new and emerging artist of the year and song of the year. There were 5 lifetime achievement award honorees, too. There were performances interspersed throughout, by individuals, and combinations of musicians. Jim Lauderdale was the main host, and Buddy Miller led an all star house band. Lots of legends introduced the winners and honorees. At the end of the ceremonies, Robert Plant was re-introduced and did a set featuring his new album Band of Joy. He had Patty Griffin, Buddy Miller, and Darrell Scott featured in a line up of songs.
That night after the event, I went to the Rutledge and took in David Olney, Tommy Emmanuel, and Will Kimbrough.
The next night we went to The Basement, and saw Minton Sparks, Chip Taylor, Peter Case. We visited Grimey's briefly and got a in store show there.
The last night we opted for The Station Inn, and saw the Cherryholmes, the Cole Porters, Paul Burch. Earlier that day, at the Country Music Hall of Fame, we saw a performance by Jimmy Webb, and then an interview with Sid Griffin, who is not only a musician, but a writer of books about music.
The whole festival was a wonderfully organized and boggling immersion in great music. More later!

Greens in the MOV upcoming

its been a dry spell since I have been able to announce some upcoming Greens shows in the Mid OHio Valley. They are playing at the Marietta Brewing Company's fest this weekend, Friday night around 10 pm; you can go on their site for a full lineup with two different stages going at once. Next Friday the Greens return to 6 Pence Pub after a long gap (October 1st) Then, October 23rd the Greens will play the new(er) Adelphia in Marietta (next to the Galley). Then it swings into the holiday season with some Thanksgiving weekend, and December shows. It will be good to see the Greens here locally, and to renew some fan connections.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

I've neglected to post on our fantastic trip to Nashville for the Americana Music Assocation festival

I've been back a week from Nashville, but had too busy of a week at work to post anything about this great trip to the Americana Music Association festival. In short, it was fantastic, and everything I anticipated- it is well organized, very positive and upbeat, and a real treat to attend. I will try to summarize things, and then add some individual accounts of events over the next few days.

Stacey Earle and Mark Stuart here last Thursday

We had Stacey Earle and Mark Stuart for the third time here to Parkersburg this past Thursday. For this show we arranged to use a room at the Blennerhassett Hotel (since we were having a work related conference there). We had a good enthusiastic crowd - several who had traveled to see Mark and Stacey, and several who have been to the previous shows here locally. They put on a great show, working off of different eras of their songs. We hope they'll keep coming back as they keep up their troubadour wanderings. They are great people, along with being inspiring musicians,and singer songwriters.

Will Kimbrough's show at Court Street Grill Friday night

I traveled down to Pomeroy Friday night to catch Will Kimbrough's solo show. Jackie does a great job of bringing acts like this in, with his enthusiasm and commitment to a wide variety of music. Will put on a great show; two solid sets of songs from throughout his career; weaving some good stories and humor, and great guitar work in this solo configuration. Will moves through some different paces and styles to his songs in a way that captures a lot of my favorite music. He has a great outlook on our culture and society; he has very versatile guitar work. He is an approachable guy for an audience. He has connected himself to some really intriguing mix of fellow musicians. A very enjoyable night of music!

Monday, September 06, 2010

Couple of good interviews lately

Robert Earl Keen and Ray LaMontagne both had good interviews I read recently. Good delving into the songwriter craft. I've since lost track of where I read them, but if I hunt them down, I will transfer them here.

Greens last Friday

Andy reports on a good show in Morgantown for the Greens last Friday. Maybe there will be some other reports come in, from folks who were there.

Kayla Ward lets me know about a nice CultureFest down at Pipestem

The same weekend I am going to Nashville, Pipestem, down in the southern part of the state, is having a CultureFest, which looks very good. Check it out through facebook or google. Sorry to be missing it; but the Nashville trip is one I have been anticipating for a long time!!

Will Kimbrough at Court Street Grill in Pomeroy- September 17th

I hope to make it down to Pomeroy where Jackie has brought Will Kimbrough back for a Friday night, September 17th show.

Mark Stuart and Stacey Earle return to Parkersburg next week

For the third time, we are hosting Mark and Stacey here in Parkersburg for a coffee house/ house concert setting. They are a great evening of music. This year we are having the event at a room at the Blennerhassett Hotel (seats 40) to try for a little classier setting! We've got a room for them at the Hotel as a little nice touch to keep them coming back! The show starts at 7 pm on Thursday September 16th. Tickets are $15, and I would prefer to sell advance tickets so I don't end up with some disgruntled people at the door if it sells out.

Venturing to Nashville this Thursday for the AMA Festival

The long anticipated trip to Nashville will be this week. I will be attending the Americana Music Association Festival; including the awards event at the Ryman Auditorium on Thursday night, and three nights of lots of great musicians playing at various venues around town. We'll be "hosting" and taking along the winners of the raffle for the trip that we held throughout the year as part of our 2010 Mid Ohio Valley Americana Music Tribute Series. We hope everybody has a great time, and that we can then begin planning another big trip for next year.

Friday, September 03, 2010

yet another attempt to define "Americana"

The hive mind of Wikipedia describes the genre as "an amalgam of roots musics formed by the confluence of the shared and varied traditions that make up the American musical ethos," which says everything and nothing.

"I don't really know what Americana is," Miller says with a shrug. "It's just the music I like. I don't understand why some people aren't Americana and some people are. I don't really get it, I'm just glad I fit in."

article from the Nashville Scene about Americana music

As Americana's identity takes shape — and boosts sales — the fledgling genre revels in its new momentum
Roots Take Hold
by Edd Hurt

You could spend a lot of time trying to come up with a working definition of Americana without succeeding even halfway, and it wouldn't be for want of musical examples that could bolster your case. Not exactly a genre and certainly not a style, Americana is probably best viewed as a series of connections in time and space — the apotheosis of various philosophies of American music. But for all the confusion the term engenders, Americana in the past year has achieved the visibility and critical mass its adherents have been seeking for over a decade.

Not only did the Recording Academy add a brand-new Grammy category for Americana, it stocked the nominations with a veritable continuum of American roots music, from Bob Dylan, Levon Helm and Willie Nelson to Wilco and Lucinda Williams. What's more, for the first time the coalescing genre can say that it is breaking artists. Americana adherents point to briskly selling recordings by otherwise unclassifiable acts such as the Avett Brothers — a pop-country-folk-rock ensemble of ex-punks who refuse to abide by the industry's no-size-fits-all categories, yet who played to tens of thousands of eager fans at this year's Bonnaroo.

It's a story that seems new, but its oppositions — rebellion and selling out — are as old as pop music itself.

As it has for the past 11 years, Nashville's Americana Music Association holds its yearly conference and festival this week, with dozens of artists playing its showcases. There are also Americana labels, publicists and other business people in attendance. It's a well-run trade show with a homey atmosphere, and the range of performers — everyone from country singer Elizabeth Cook to punk-rocker Jon Langford — is impressive. Attending the festival is a bit like time travel, since Americana artists are often well-established artists who have settled into comfortable mid-level careers, or new artists who work within the grooves of styles popular decades ago.

That means it's tempting to dismiss Americana as another name for what used to be called alternative country, country-rock, or roots music. And indeed, AMA Executive Director Jed Hilly has a simple enough definition of the music.

"I would say our definition is whole lot more clear than the current definition of country music, or the current definition of rock," he says. "Our definition is really simple: It's contemporary music that honors and/or derives from American roots music, period."

For example, the Mississippi singer and songwriter Paul Thorn has done well in the past year with a combination of story-songs about the South and a savvy variation on rock 'n' roll. His latest full-length, Pimps and Preachers, sat on top of the Americana chart — which, by the way, tracks radio play on Americana stations, not sales — and has seen action in Billboard as well. He writes songs such as "Ray Ann's Shoes" and sings them in an artless voice that puts one in mind of a Tupelo Graham Parker.

"I had a record deal on a traditional label, and having been through that, I think the big difference now is that I actually get to sing songs that mean something to me," Thorn says. "I'm 46 years old, and I don't want to be singing songs about holding hands with a girl on the front porch." He makes mature, well-observed music that holds its share of surprises — the strings and mordant melody of "Ray Ann's Shoes" reveal a subtle artist.

If Thorn's music recalls anything, it's the roots-rock of Little Feat, right down to the slide guitar. But it could be that bluegrass and acoustic music stand as Americana's ultimate signifiers. If jazz was one American musical style to which '70s artists looked for inspiration — one has only to think of proto-Americana artists such as Little Feat and Randall Bramblett — bluegrass has become the method by which contemporary artists assert their authenticity.

Born in Texas and now in her sophomore year at Boston's New England Conservatory of Music, Sarah Jarosz is a 19-year-old mandolin player and singer who is taking time from her studies to appear at the AMA. Much like predecessors such as Tim O'Brien, Jarosz is equally at home with Bill Monroe and progressive pop groups such as The Decemberists.

"Bluegrass was the result of trying to be different," Jarosz says. "I know there are a lot of bluegrass purists who want to keep it straight and preserve the music's history. But Bill Monroe was kinda breakin' the rules, you know, in creating bluegrass music." Jarosz isn't afraid to be arty, and her impressive instrumental skills carry you through some of her more callow moments.

Jarosz's eclecticism puts her in the tradition of the '70s and '80s artists upon which the edifice of Americana rests — Gram Parsons, Doug Sahm, David Grisman, Waylon Jennings, Guy Clark, The Mekons, Elvis Costello and all the rest of that ragtag collection of cosmic cowboys, punk-rockers and disaffected rock 'n' rollers. Like Jarosz and other Americana artists, they developed a vision of American music that combined traditional values with modernist sensibilities. This sort of experimentalism can seem alien to the average fan of pop music or the mainstream country follower — not to mention advertisers.

Still, radio seems to be lending support to Americana, with Nashville's WSM adding such artists as Justin Townes Earle to its playlists. As WSM program director Joe Limardi says, "I still believe that Americana is what country was before it became a big money machine and hit-making giant." Meanwhile, Sirius/XM's Jeremy Tepper programs that station's Outlaw Country channel, which features music that shows up on the Americana charts, along with Dylan and Tom Petty.

Americana does seem to be about these kinds of purely musical connections. Barry Mazor, a veteran music journalist who has covered both Americana and country music for such publications as No Depression and The Wall Street Journal, takes the long view. "In some ways, you can trace it all back to Capitol Records in the '40s," he says. "They had a whole set of records they started calling Americana. It was a little out there at the time. There's still a tension to American music. You can track it and place where it came from, in time and in history."

If those tensions produced rock 'n' roll in the '50s and '60s, the tensions that arose in the '70s produced the roots of Americana, which may well produce its own set of oppositions down the road. The great Nashville singer and songwriter Marshall Chapman will be talking about her career at one of the AMA conference panels, and she has been mixing rock, country and whatever else tickles her fancy since the mid-'70s. As she muses, "What if a young Jimi Hendrix arose in our midst? Where would he find a home? Probably Americana. Or a young Elvis Presley? Americana.

"Hank Williams? Definitely Americana."

I'll be seeing some of these great Americana acts next week in Nashville!!!!!!

Performing Showcase Artists confirmed so far include:


18 South ~ Abigail Washburn ~ American Aquarium ~ Cadillac Sky ~ Charlie Louvin ~ Chatham County Line ~ Cherryholmes ~ Chip Taylor ~ Chuck Mead ~ Corb Lund ~ Courtney Jaye ~ Dale Watson ~ Danny Barnes ~ Darrell Scott ~ David Olney ~ Dex Romweber Duo ~ Don Schlitz ~ Elizabeth Cook ~ Exene Cervenka ~ Fairfield Four ~ Frazey Ford ~ Frontier Ruckus ~ Greg Koons & The Misbegotten ~ Guy Clark ~ Hans Rotenberry & Brad Jones ~ Hayes Carll ~ Holly Williams ~James Intveld~ Jim Lauderdale ~ John Oates ~ Jon Langford & Skull Orchard ~ Kevin Gordon ~ Langhorne Slim ~ Larkin Poe ~ Madison Violet ~ Manda Mosher ~ Mary Gauthier ~ Micky and the Motorcars ~ Mike Farris ~ Minton Sparks ~ Nora Jane Struthers ~ Otis Gibbs ~ Over the Rhine ~ Paul Burch and the WPA Ball Club ~ Paul Thorn ~ Peter Case ~ Peter Karp & Sue Foley ~ Railroad Earth ~ Randy Kohrs Band ~ Raul Malo ~ Ray Wylie Hubbard ~ Rayland Baxter ~ Richard Julian ~ Sara Storer ~ Sarah Jarosz ~ Shannon Whitworth ~ Shelby Lynne ~ Steeldrivers ~ Stone Honey ~ Stone River Boys ~ Susan Cowsill ~ Sweetback Sisters ~ The Black Lilies ~ The Chapmans ~ The Defibulators ~ The Infamous Stringdusters ~ Todd Snider's Rock and Roll Revue featuring Jason D. Williams, Dan Baird and Friends ~ Todd Thibaud ~ Tommy Emmanuel ~ Tony Joe White ~ Tristen ~ Troy Cassar-Daley ~ Wanda Jackson~ Will Kimbrough