California Report: Lisa Berman from the Crooked Jades

Bay Area based Lisa Berman is a multi-instrumentalist and vocalist, known as a pioneer in bringing the Hawaiian slide guitar back to old-time music, and redefining its sound. She also performs on clawhammer banjo, dobro, guitar, harmonium, and baritone ukulele. Berman co-founded the Crooked Jades with Jeff Kazor and the renowned all-woman old-time string band Stairwell Sisters.

Hi Lisa, lets start at the beginning. How did you come into the roots music fold?

My dad is mostly a piano player, but he also played the banjo and learned from a Pete Seeger book while he was on the Navy ship heading to Okinawa in the ’60s. After we moved from Chicago to San Diego in 1970, he would drag us to Southern California bluegrass music festivals. Then he started asking me to back him up on guitar while he played banjo. Our house was always filled with music, mostly my dad playing and hamming it up with friends and neighbors stopping in, often unannounced, to play or listen, alongside all the weekly lessons and practicing. And when the music wasn’t live, the record player, 8-track, or radio was always on.

What was your first instrument and do you still have it?

Besides the shared family piano where my sisters and I took lessons, I had a small classical nylon-string guitar that I started playing at age 9. I do still have it.

It sounds like the entire family was musical.

Yep. Our dad played the most, and our mom played a little piano too. Us kids (three sisters) played piano starting at age 7, and got to choose what to play at age 9. I switched to guitar. Our Grandpa Harry, my dad’s dad, made a one-string fiddle out of an old oil can and a broomstick. I don’t know where he got the idea. He used a light pink powder puff for a chin rest, and it had optional bridges—either an almond shell or a walnut shell for tonal variations. I ended up with his actual violin/fiddle. 

I’m guessing you were exposed to a variety of styles.

My dad was basically a human jukebox, with a great memory for lyrics. On the stereo, our dad played a lot of show tunes, Harry Nilsson, Liza Minnelli, folk, rock, and bluegrass. My mom always played the Beatles and Neil Young, and funky aerobicize music like the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack, Peaches and Herb, and the Bee Gees. My parents could only agree on a few random albums like Neil Diamond, Herb Alpert’s Tijuana Brass, the Moody Blues, and James Taylor. The record player, 8-track, or radio was always playing. 

Funk and soul, Soul Train and American Bandstand often on TV, wacky parties with cocktails and singing. One of my dad’s bands opened for BB King at the Stardust in Las Vegas where I got to meet BB, around age 13. Our parents were also involved in local theatre and “Village Vaudeville.” Dad also played for dancers (his sister/our aunt was a ballet dancer), and we all performed in plays.

When did you start playing guitar?

I went through phases of playing the guitar, starting with acoustic at 9-12 and electric in high school, with a short stint with classical guitar in college. I really re-caught the bluegrass and old-time bug after going to Strawberry Music Festival for many years. While living in Big Sur, I picked up the guitar again and started learning some Peter Rowan and other finger-style guitar songs, like Dust Bowl Children. With all that guitar picking and doing graphic design with a mouse, I got bad carpal-tunnel and had to lay off for a while. 

What about slide guitar?

I went to Strawberry Fest with my dad one year, saw someone playing a slide guitar on stage and I asked my dad, “Who is that and what is he playing!?” He said, “That’s Jerry Douglas, and he’s the King of the Dobro.” I knew then and there that that’s what I wanted to play. It also looked like I’d be able to keep my wrist straighter and it might not hurt so much. I raised the nut up on my guitar and went to Sally Van Meter’s dobro workshop at the 5th String in Berkeley. She said to me, “You’re gonna be a dobro player.” I started practicing every day, and soon after was playing with Jeff Kazor and the Jades from 1994 to the present, and the rest is history, I guess.

As a side note, when I was in high school, long before I started playing dobro, my mom took me to see the film Paris, Texas at an art museum. The theme song with Ry Cooder’s slide got into my soul and bones that day, and re-awoke when I heard the dobro years later. I love the soulful, vocal, moving/traveling quality of the slide.

Who do you include as your biggest musical influences?

I’d say my first big influence was Elton John and Bernie Taupin’s songwriting! I would lie on the floor with my head by my dad’s big speakers, playing Elton’s LPs over and over and over, looking at the artwork and following along with/learning the lyrics. There was so much emotion and storytelling, including many stories that piqued my teenage brain about love, sex, drugs, country living, life and death, prostitutes… you name it. Elton’s music included slide. It was very layered and cinematic, with some mandolin and even some banjo. My very first concert was Elton John’s Goodbye Yellow Brick Road tour at age 12. I sometimes think about doing a show of EJ songs…and I think it needs an illustrated movie, too. And there was the constant backdrop of my dad playing music on repeat, especially the Beatles’ White Album.

What about from this side of the pond?

I had/have so many. I’m not really good at picking faves, but here are some: Fiddlestix at Strawberry Fest, and so many old-time influences like the Freight Hoppers, the Wandering Ramblers, Red Hots, Ralph Stanley/Stanley Brothers, George Jones, Hazel Dickens & Alice Gerrard, the Louvin Brothers, Ola Belle Reed, later Gillian Welch and David Rawlings harmonies, Jerry Douglas, Josh Graves, the Horse Flies and Richie Stearns’ rhythmic banjo, Rhiannon Giddens, the Heartbeats (with Rose Sinclair), Townes Van Zandt, Tom Waits, Joe Thrift/Red Hots, Jerron Paxton. 

Of course I love all the older generation old-time players like Tommy Jarrell and Fred Cockerham, Nathan Frazier and Frank Patterson, and other black string bands that were too rarely recorded or acknowledged, the Carter Family, Doc Watson, Benton Flippen, Dock Boggs, Arthur Smith—way too many to name. I studied some fiddle with Earl White. I’ve learned so much from and with my bands and bandmates, especially from Jeff. 

This list isn’t surprising, given what I’ve seen and heard at many Jades shows.

Also, one of my faves is Richard Buckner, a deeply soulful, heartfelt musician and creative songwriter who also co-produced a couple of Jades’ albums. I love his traveling vocal style. I also spent many years studying Congolese dance and drum with Titos Sompa and a big community of musicians from the Congo, I did a bit of West African and Afro-Brazilian dance, and later I learned some Jarana and Zapateado from the Son Jarocho music tradition of Veracruz (with Spanish and African influences, including polyrhythms, percussive dance, and call-and-response vocals). I traveled for nine months through Latin America in 1987 and heard a lot of music, including Peruvian bamboo flute music, Huaynos, and high voices of the women singing. Growing up, I’m certain that hearing minor and mournful choir songs from going to Jewish services got in there too.

Do you do any composing?

I do some and would love to do more. I used to fill journals with lyrics and song ideas, later sometimes adding melodies. Sometimes the melodies come first. I’m also interested in cinematic/soundtrack shorter sound bites. I’d love to do something with that some day.

How did you meet Jeff Kazor and start the Crooked Jades?

Jeff and I first met when we were both planning to go to Sound Acoustic Music Camp on Vashon Island in Washington in 1994. We decided to travel up together, but first Jeff invited me to a weekly jam in Oakland. We’d cross the bridge from San Francisco to Oakland every week and I continued with that jam for a year. I’m so grateful that the guys there were super kind and encouraging. I sat on the outside of the circle and learned and practiced, and slowly took more chances and built up the courage to move into the circle. I was still too shy to sing publicly at that point. A friend asked us to play a party, and later we had a steady gig at Radio Valencia in San Francisco just after it was repaired after the fire truck crashed into it. At the beginning, Jeff and Erik Pearson and I went by the Kitchen Pepsteppers for a while, mostly playing on the street by the crepe place in Glen Park, SF.

The Jades are not your typical old-time band. Was it conceived that way or did it naturally evolve into this innovative unit?

It started with more bluegrass and some old-time and quickly moved toward mostly old-time. Later, we kept adding more layers and instruments. Jeff has a great record collection and a lot of vision. He encouraged bringing in a bunch of other influences (Asian, Vietnamese jaw harp, etc.). I would bring in some songs, add my voice, suggest arrangements, write new lyrics to old songs, etc.

How you do approach finding and adding new material?

Whatever moves me or makes my jaw drop. Sometimes it’s just really fun, rockin’ music that makes one get up and dance or more, or “shouters” (rockin’ tunes with lyrics popping in and out). Usually I (and my bands) gravitate towards songs and tunes with some kind of a twist that hasn’t been done too many times—crooked tunes, funky tunes with surprises (like White Face, or Tie Your Dog Sally Gal where we’d throw in extra chord now and then), funky rhythmic banjo with texture and/or polyrhythms, etc. 

Slide guitar is not your typical old-time instrument. What have you done to adapt it to the band?

I started by learning all those fast bluegrass tunes on the dobro, and I can do it, but it’s not what I want to do all the time. I’m not so great at music theory or knowing my fretboard by heart, so I’m not a flashy solo-taker (which tends to be more in bluegrass than old-time anyway). I tend to play by ear and by feel and what moves me. Mostly I end up being more of a rhythmic or slide support to a group with pops of color and mood. That said, if I took the time to learn more theory, I think I could bring out more of what I hear in my head.

Are you active other bands?

I co-founded and played with the Stairwell Sisters for about 12 years, plus the occasional duos, trios, solo. I play around the house with my sweetheart, Mark Schatz…who knows, maybe we’ll do some small shows at some point.

Do you have any recent or upcoming recordings?

Not at the moment, but hopefully 2022 will start some kind of new album. Jades? Other? Time will tell. I miss playing music with like-minded friends so much!

Congrats on your IBMA Graphic Designer of the Year nomination. Tell us about some of your projects.

Thank you! I’m grateful to have been able to combine two passions—art/design and music. I’ve designed and/or art-directed countless CD covers/albums/posters for bands. I’m doing more and more photography and hope to have my new photo website up soon. If you want to take a peek at my design and photos you can look at my design site.

I’ve been helping facilitate and do graphics for anti-racism workshops related to the music we play—its history, song titles and lyrics, appropriation issues, etc. Learning and growing a lot, with still so much to learn and do.

You recently worked on a project with renowned chef Alice Waters. Can you talk about that? Does she dig old-time music haha?

I didn’t work directly with Alice Waters, but I’m pals with Shawn Lovell who’s a metal worker/blacksmith. She makes Alice’s Egg Spoon (for cooking eggs in an open fire). I’m an aspiring photographer and I asked Shawn if I could practice on her working in her studio. She said, sure! C’mon by my studio. I had a lot of fun doing it, and hopefully Alice will use some of my photos someday—I think they already have a photographer they like to work with. You can see some of these photos on my website.

What inspires you the most when creating art or music?

Soulful, unique, layered, boundary-pushing, moves your soul, outside the lines, good stories, good messages, brave stuff.

What interests you when you’re not playing music or designing music-related collaterals?

Photography, dance (Zumba), cooking/food photography/farm, Zen meditation, and of course spending time with my son.

Do you give music lessons?

Yes! In fact, I just started teaching someone again in person last month. I forgot how much I enjoyed it. I don’t consider myself a full-time teacher and really only teach beginners or advanced beginners. Give me a shout if you’re interested in lessons in slide/dobro/clawhammer banjo or vocals/harmonies.

Are there any upcoming shows you’re looking forward to?

I’ll be playing with Jeff and Erik Pearson as a trio at Bull Valley Roadhouse for their Sepia-Toned dinner & music show in Port Costa. Mark Schatz has been touring for Béla Fleck’s new bluegrass album. They’ll be playing at Carnegie Hall and the Ryman in January and I plan to go. Mark will also be playing music with his new duo with Bryan McDowell. I’ve only been out to a few shows/fests since the pandemic hit, but I’m certainly looking forward to more. 

Can you share some musical challenges youve had and how you conquered them?

Well, some I’ve conquered and some I haven’t. I learn by ear and I’m not so up on my theory. I’d like to learn more theory, as it would make me a better player with more tools for getting what’s inside my head to come out with ease. It limits me in certain way, but I’m also grateful to be someone who plays by ear. Also, staying brave, finding supportive folks to consistently play with, and sticking with my passion to practice, play and get better.

Tell us more about your singing influences.

Elton, Richard Buckner, Hazel & Alice (low harmonies), Louvin Brothers (strong duo harmonies—hello hitting octaves!), George Jones, Gillian/David (again, those low harmonies), Stanley Brothers harmonies (high lonesome Ralph harmonies), Tim O’Brien (unique, soulful, relaxed traveling vocals), that son jarocho singer!

I love duos (preferring them to trios as it gives one more room to spontaneously “travel”), call-and-response (African, son jarocho, community). I especially love singing harmonies with Jeff Kazor, and Susy Pomon (Sue Sandlin) of the Stairwell Sisters. I love when harmonies have that buzz and blending and mixing magic, and when they can push up against each other—coming together and apart.

What fiddle tunes do you love?

I especially seem drawn to modal tunes (the 1 and the 7),  ones that knock your socks off. Definitely crooked tunes. Things with a unique twist or unexpected chords.

Finally for the geeks out there, what instruments do you have, play and love?

  • Scheerhorn dobro (#110) played in GGBDGBD
  • Wood slides – Oahu slide, and a 1930s Slingerland Maybelle, which arrived from eBay with a cigarette-stained mother of toilet seat fretboard, and cigarette ashes inside! I play these in low C – CGCEGC
  • Mike Ramsey clawhammer banjo 12-inch pot with cutaway
  • Fretless banjo with a new new fretboard added by Kevin Enoch. Thanks to Mark Schatz.
  • My grandpa’s violin/fiddle
  • Gibson Marauder electric guitar maybe from the ’70s
  • Vietnamese jaw harps and jarana made by Mike Melnyk. Thank Mike!

The Jades work with choreographers and filmmakers. Tell us about that.

I love playing many genres of traditional acoustic old (old-time) music from around the world, and also love mixing things up—collaborating with dance groups, or playing different styles of music, but with typical string band instruments.

Kate Weare + ODC Dance Co. – Bright Land and World’s On Fire and Decameron – this combo of us Crooked Jades along with some solo shows I did) playing old music alongside modern dance has been some of my favorite work to date.

Another project I worked on that I really enjoyed being part of was Kenny Feinstein’s Loveless: Hurts to Love (acoustic remake of My Bloody Valentines’ project). This was such a fun project to work on with Kenny, Jeff Kazor, Bruce Kaphan, Richard Buckner, Erik Pearson, and Charlie Rose. Produced by Jeff Kazor with Bruce Kaphan.

Thanks so much Lisa.

California Report: Jeff Kazor on the new Crooked Jades release, Empathy Moves the Water

Jeff Kazor co-founded the groundbreaking band, The Crooked Jades, in San Francisco in 1994, recording nine albums and touring the US and Europe. A producer, musicologist and composer, Jeff is also a multi-instrumentalist, and magnetic vocalist and performer. He created the soundtrack to the award-winning PBS film, Seven Sisters (2000) and produced music selected by Sean Penn for the film, Into the Wild (2007). Kazor also co-founded the grassroots San Francisco Bluegrass & Old-Time Festival in 1999.

Congratulations on the new Crooked Jades release Empathy Moves The Water. Are there any new sounds the band is exploring?

I think from the start, exploration in sound has always been the prime directive for playing material and producing a Crooked Jades album. I encouraged the amazing skills of our producer Bruce Kaphan on pedal steel especially, in the tune Feather Bed where he is playing the melody at breakneck speed in tandem with the fiddle. This layering created almost a ghostly overtone to particular notes. More than any other Jades album the focus on layering sounds to create new soundscapes or instrument tones was enthusiastically explored, and the same intention was applied to the vocals. Experimenting with doubling, tripling, or even quadrupling vocals and then sculpting away for the desired effect gave a lot of dimension to the vocal terrain on Down to The River and Wade in the Water. It was a very tedious and time consuming process combing through vocal improvisations to find the best bits.

I feel gratitude for producer Bruce Kaphan’s wisdom in all of these great adventures in creation and soul mining. With the many great producers out there like Brian Eno, John Leckie, Tom Dowd, Nile Rodgers, and George Martin, Bruce is one of the pioneers not afraid to lean into some dark corners, embracing venerability and willing to crawl out to the skinny branches of the heart where those hard to craft songs live. The Crooked Jades and I are so fortunate to have his important contribution on Empathy Moves The Water and not to mention his beautiful playing on this album! When he sent me the first instrumental version of Yellow Mercury 4. I melted away and was moved to tears. His pedal steel playing is so damn heartbreakingly beautiful. 

Tell us about this incarnation of the Crooked Jades.

This talented group is anchored by the Jades core, myself, Lisa Berman, Erik Pearson, and on bass an important former member who has recently rejoined, Megan Adie. Megan is back in San Francisco after a decade of living and playing 17th and 18th century double bass in Europe, and various chamber groups in Denmark and southern Sweden. A key member of the Crooked Jades evolution, touring and recording with the Jades for several years, Megan’s iconic (arco) bass can be heard on the band’s acclaimed album, Worlds on Fire. The newest member of the Jades is Emily Mann, a young up-and-coming fiddler who is also half of the folk duo Paper Wings.

There are a couple videos to support this release aren’t there?

Yes, we just released Down to the River, the second video produced by my 10 year old son Tristan working his magic. About half of the footage is recorded on his phone during the recording sessions at Saul Zaentz Media Center, Fantasy Studios in Berkeley. The rest is his imagination. We are huge Mississippi Fred McDowell fans, and Down to the River is a tribute to him. Towards the end of the video Tristan superimposed the map of the Mississippi river and tributaries over Lisa’s head.

Lisa Berman’s haunting slide guitar and vocals really define this track.

I love Lisa’s slide work on Down to the River, so reminiscent of Fred McDowell’s style but also her own unique voicing’s throughout the song. Lisa, co-founder of the Crooked Jades, and I have been working together on and off for the past 25 years. Her revival of the Hawaiian slide back into the old-time instrumentation has been an important contributor to the evolution of what old-time music means in the modern day.

The CD cover has intriguing art work. How do you see that being connected to the music?

The imagery of the album cover somehow captures empathy for me, releasing empathy into this world without discrimination (the water ribbon obscuring her vision). This album is inspired by new trends in the lack of empathy in younger generations, our leaders and how humanity is becoming more and more inconvenient. Humans and the planet are mostly water.

There are several versions of that first song titled Ryland and Spencer, where did you get this one from?

We got our version of Ryland and Spencer from a Fields and Wade Ward album where I first heard it, and also Tommy Jarrell’s version. The arrangement and added lyrics are by the Crooked Jades. The funny thing is this track may not have ever made it on the album. On our last day recording at Fantasy Studios we had 3 more hours left in the studio B, and Bruce our producer gave us our marching orders, “this is an opportunity to play some tunes or a songs you haven’t prepared or rehearsed.” There was some reluctancy but those songs and tunes we recorded live in the last hours ended up being some of the strongest material on Empathy Moves the Water, including Ryland and Spencer which was inspired by Trump.

Do I hear a little more of a spiritual sound to this release?

This album reflects what is going on in our community, country, and world and is about how humans and mother earth are mostly water and how that has become compromised. The religious themes around water: cleansing, rebirth, and life and the inconvenience of humanity in a modern world of automation! We are calling out to the great Empathy spirit for salvation! 

What is your personal connection to this music?

My family connection to old-time music was from my dad’s harmonica playing. He was the son of Polish immigrants who arrived in Canada during World War ll. He grew up in a farm in the prairie province of Saskatchewan. Saturday nights brought the legendary Wheeling Jamboree, a country music variety show out of West Virginia that carried over much of the continent on WWVA’s powerful radio signal. 

Cool, so the WWVA signal made it up north then?

Yes, the Jamboree also broadcast square dance tunes, and that’s where my father learned Anglo-American fiddle tunes on the harmonica, alongside old-world folk melodies he gleaned from his parents. I remember when I was about nine years old I would try to back him up on the guitar, and one of my favorite tunes I would always ask him to play was Money Musk.

What instruments do you play now?

Guitar, harmonium, tenor ukulele, and Vietnamese jaw harp.

Tell us about your first instrument.

My dad passed on to me his 1970 Yamaha FG 180 Nippon Gakki Red Label acoustic guitar. 

Interesting, first instruments often are not keepers.

The intonation on that instrument is the best of all my guitars, and the action on the neck is still true after all these years. Although I record with my other guitars, I usually write my songs on the Yamaha and take this rock-solid guitar to outdoor festivals.

What other musical influences did you have growing up? 

Besides my father and his harmonica tunes, my education continued through my family’s record collection. This included everything from the Stanley Brothers to Hank Williams, and the Cajun music of the Balfa Brothers to the sad country tunes of George Jones, but what proved to be my biggest influence was the Folkways album The Watson Family. Its essence was a primitive mountain music sound that appealed to me because it couldn’t really be categorized. It was all over the map and blurred the edges between genres. This was the genesis that formed the foundation of the Crooked Jades. 

When did you start exploring other sounds?

When I was in college, I found myself immersed in the alternative-music scene, but after a while I realized that old-time music was more alternative than anything I was listening to on college radio. I decided I wanted to start a band and turn other people on to it, especially folks my own age.

How do you approach a new song or tune?

When I compose my original music I tend to have the melody in my head first and then come up with the lyrics. My creative new arrangements of traditional tunes come from deep listening across genres that I’ve done over the years, from traditional Americana to post-punk German wave to South East Asian Java street bands.

Are there any other styles that you explore?

I’m an old-school DJ spinning vinyl records several different nights a month, including an alternative ‘80s show, a funk, soul and disco night, and Frigo International discotheque, which is international dance music from all over the world spanning the 1930s through the 1970s. I continue to gravitate to international inspirations, including use of the harmonium, the Vietnamese jaw harp, and the Southeast Asian bao. 

So you connect to international styles.

Definitely, I find myself going across continents and going further and further back, seeing all these influences, melting pots that happen through time. I’ve been listening to old, old recordings from the Secret Museum of Mankind series, wax cylinder and wire collections, a lot of Middle Eastern, Asian, and African music, and you can’t believe how close it is to some Anglo fiddle tunes. And obviously the banjo comes originally from West Africa.

Can you describe the Southeast Asian Bao?

On a trip to Vietnam I picked up a one-string zither [the bao]. It was like the pedal steel guitar of the Orient, or the one string dobro of Southeast Asia. I knew I had to figure out some way to incorporate it into our music. So on the Shinning Darkness album we figured out a way to add it discreetly. It was a bear to play though! The dan bao’s estimated origin is over 500 years ago, and the technique requires a great deal of precision. You use your fifth finger of your right hand resting lightly on the string and the other hand plucks the string. Then the right hand finds the harmonics positions to perform the melody. The really cool part of the instrument is the flexible vertical rod that you can push away from the instrument to pitch the notes higher and towards to lower the pitch or you can just use it as a whammy bar to add vibrato to any note.

What interests you when you are not playing music?

I enjoy curating and collecting music from all over the world. I have a vinyl collection that’s in the thousands and continues to inspire me musically. My college degree is from San Francisco State University in film, and I love watching movies, especially silent film, science fiction and film noir.

You’ve worked with some dance choreographers as I recall.

Yes and this is unprecedented modern dance/old-time music collaboration. The Jades and New York-based Weare first made a connection when the choreographer caught one of our shows at Café Du Nord in San Francisco while she was on tour. I have to admit; at first it’s a strange pairing. But Kate and I share a fascination with the ritual around old-time string band music, how it emerged and how it was a staple during the 1920s in rural mountain communities for social gatherings and worship – songs that reflect the hard times and make them go by easier with song and dance.

What eras of American music are your favorite?

The dark-blurred and hypnotic sound of pre-radio is the era that I’m particularly drawn to, from the late 1800s up to 1926, just before the Bristol sessions and the invention of radio. Radio and the ability to record musicians started categorization of music into genres for mass consumption, and homogenized much of what I find to be beautiful, strange and unique. 

It’s interesting how radio changed the music.

Right, before radio and recording devices there was much more diversity. In certain regions of Virginia within a hundred mile radius, for instance, you could come up on three different styles of fiddling and clawhammer banjo playing. More isolation existed before radio and recording, and across the board there was just more blur, more swerve, more shadow, and more odd time-signatures. 

What southern Appalachian styles or regions grab you?

Oh Boy! There are so many hidden pockets and cracks in American music during the turn of the last century and the sad part is very little of it was documented, especially the black string band tradition. But as much as I love to listening to Tommy Jarrell and the amazing syncopation between Fred Cockerham and Oscar Jenkins from Mount Airy Region, North Carolina, I find myself digging deeper in the old weird America, going across to Arkansas in the remote Ozarks Mountains with the amazing rhythm section featuring the reed organ and the percussive fiddle sticks in the Reaves White County Ramblers (Drunkard’s Hiccoughs), and also another band that had a similar kinship first reported to be from the Ozarks, The Weems String Band, who were actually from Perry County, Tennessee. The band’s unusual style featured ultra-staccato phrasing and highly creative melodic variations usually led by two fiddles with two finger banjo and more uniquely a chugging cello (Greenback Dollar).

Are there any other states or regions you have studied?

Yes, the rich heritage of the Magnolia state, the more obscure fiddle band traditions of Mississippi that interestingly enough did not include the banjo in their instrumentation: Narmour & Smith, Nations Brothers, Leak County Revelers, and the wild and primitive fiddling of Floyd Ming and His Pep-Steppers. Their version of Indian War Whoop is an energetic up-tempo crooked tune (odd number of measures) featuring the rhythm of stomping feet and the tradition of vocal whooping in sync with the fiddle.   

What are some of your favorite fiddle tunes?

Sally Johnson – Lewis Brothers, Girl Slipped Down – D. Dix Hollis, White Face – Joe Thrift (Red Hots), Indian War Whoop – Hoyt Ming and his Pep Steppers, Tie Your Dog Sally Gal – Will Adam, and Rye Straw – Ace Weems and the Fat Meat Boys. 

What California Bluegrass Association (CBA) events have you played?

I played the main stage Fathers Day Festival in 2001 and 2003. The Jades played the main stage in 2018 and Vern’s stage in 2015. I had a GREAT time! 

You have been regulars at the upcoming Berkeley Old Time Music Convention (BOTMC). Tell us about that event and any other shows coming up.

We are very honored to playing the Berkeley Old Time Music Convention September 19 with a great line up including Jerron Paxton, plus Thomas Maupin and Daniel Rothwell and band! We will also be playing September 12th at Arcata Playhouse, September 13-15 at the McCloud Mountain Bluegrass Festival, and Auburn State Theatre special double bill with Rita Hosking November 8th.

What instrument makes and models do you have?

My tour guitars: 1952 Gibson LG -2 and 1938 Kalamazoo Sport. Both guitars are fitted with internal condenser mics and pick-ups in the saddle. I can blend between the two sources with my D-Tar Solstice blender pre amp mixer. This set up gives me more flexibility in venues with challenging sound support.

Is there any thing else you have for us?

The Crooked Jades are excited to be releasing, for the very first time ever, vinyl for our new release: Empathy Moves The Water coming out the end of September! 

Thanks for your time Jeff.

Thanks for this opportunity Dave.

Portions of this interview were previously published in the California Bluegrass Association Bluegrass Breakdown members magazine.

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