Bluegrass Beyond Borders – Pharis and Jason Romero

Canadian duo and Juno Award winners Pharis and Jason Romero may produce their music in the Great White North, but their sound is rooted in the traditions of the American south, a mix of vintage genres that encompasses bluegrass, blues, jazz and grassicana. The couple’s songs are drawn from real life encounters, played on home made instruments, fashioned with authenticity, and sans pretence. That won’t surprise those who have heard their earlier efforts — Passing Glimpse (2011), A Wanderer I’ll Stay (2015), and Long Gone Out West Blues (2016) — and indeed, even novices will note that their album titles strongly hint at the prevalence of those archival influences.

“Jason played banjo and sang in bluegrass and old-time bands in Arcata, Canada before we met, playing dances and regular bar gigs,” Pharis recalls. “I was in a few folk/Americana bands, with a thriving roots music scene in Victoria, British Columbia. Folks here at home connect with the stories, instruments and harmonies in our music. There’s a lot of early country and folk music appreciators here.”

Nevertheless, Jason admits that their original influences differed early on. Both grew up on a diet of classic rock and vintage country. Pharis absorbed the added elements of folk and classical as well. Like most teenagers, Jason was preoccupied with Led Zeppelin and Rolling Stones in high school, which, in turn, led him to Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee and classic blues. Pharis found singer-songwriters like Joni Mitchell and Bob Dylan to her liking and eventually migrated into the festival scene, where she discovered a fondness for bluegrass, Doc Watson, old time tunes, and the oldest vintage recordings she could lay her hands on. 

The two met through a mutual friend, dobro player Ivan Rosenberg. “He had been talking us up to each other for about a year prior, after Jason built a banjo for a bandmate of his,” Pharis recalls. “Then Jason showed up in Victoria, BC on his way to a fly-fishing trip, and eventually made it to an old time fiddle jam I’d attend every week. We got married about three months later. The first thing we did was play music together, and that mutual interest in old music was electric.”

“We played primarily old time tunes at first, together and as trio called The Haints with fiddler Erynn Marshall,” Jason adds. “Gradually, we started learning some of Pharis’ original songs, performed a couple songs as a duo, and then started thinking about our first record.”

The two opt to make their own banjos, which, Pharis insists, “is a wonder in itself. Jason can make a custom instrument to express a new sound or tone he has in mind. Our banjos are woody, natural and warm sounding, and that seems to go with our overall musical vibe. We both play vintage Gibson guitars, again with that woody, mid-range feel. Because we’re playing all acoustics — and because most of the time there’s just two of us — we’re always stacking the instruments in different tonal worlds with banjo tunings, playing positions on the neck, picks versus no picks, etc., to best accompany the singing and occupy the most sound.”

The Romeros won their Juno, Canada’s most prestigious music award, for Traditional Roots Album of the Year, an honor Pharis describes as “Surreal, amazing and empowering.” 

“We were out for an evening walk in the back field, and came back in the house to a very excited message from a friend who was at the awards ceremony,” Jason remembers. “We weren’t able to attend as we were expecting our second child the weekend of the awards. He came about a week later. It was quite an incredible week!”

An incredible week perhaps, but enduring effect as well. The impact of winning that award had a profound effect on their forward progress. 

As Pharis tells it, “The experience that comes from building instruments for over 15 years now, and winning a Juno, gives us a solid footing to keep building our work and life on as we try out new songs, new instruments and new approaches.”

Ultimately, it’s the couple’s passion for sharing the seminal sounds of an older era which finds them keeping those influences intact, both in their music and through their mantra.

“We both crave connection with the people around us — me maybe a little more than Jason — and bluegrass and old-time music is incredible for that,” Pharis says. “Transfer that experience to music camps, evening jams, backyard concerts, and you have a community builder that has the ability to bypass lines that might be otherwise drawn. Music is pretty magical that way no matter what, but music that feels accessible, relatable, like a common language — that’s what we’re both drawn towards. Playing music with other people is as close to as good as it gets — and that 4:00 a.m. jam, where everyone is so zoned out on the groove, is impossible to resist.”

Sweet Old Religion video from Pharis and Jason Romero

Canadian old-timers Pharis and Jason Romero have released a video for the debut single from their upcoming project, Sweet Old Religion.

It’s for the title track, which finds the duo harmonizing with guitar accompaniment.

Pre-orders for the new album, on CD, LP, or download, can be placed now from the Romero’s web site.

Fire destroys Romero Banjos

Sad news from British Columbia for fans of J. Romero Banjos and old time musicians Pharis and Jason Romero.

Fire destroyed the instrument shop adjacent to their home in Horsefly, BC located in a remote rural area well away from emergency services. The couple was awakened by the sound of flames coming from the shop just after 3:00 a.m. local time on Sunday, and were able to escape with their two young children before the building and the cabin where they had been sleeping while their home is being renovated were engulfed by the fire.

Not only was Jason’s banjo shop destroyed, so were all the instruments he had recently completed and those in process, plus all the couple’s personal instruments. Beautiful custom banjos were reduced to ashes and warped metal parts when the Romeros visited the shop after firefighters arrived and quelled the flames.

Pharis told the CBC that her husband took a stab at putting out the shop fire with their garden hose, until the flames took out the power lines to their water pump, rendering the hose worthless.

Jason’s banjo are known for their intricate inlay and custom metal engraving, both tedious and time consuming skills that would test the patience of even the most stoic of artisans. Imagine the grief in seeing so many hours of your life wiped away in a moment.

But Jason and Pharis remain upbeat, recognizing that their lives and those of their children were spared in this tragedy. Both their business and their home were fully insured, but they will have many months of paperwork, claims forms, and restoration before their lives can get back to normal.

Pharis posted earlier today on Facebook, thanking friends and fans for their well wishes and offers to help.

“Thank you so so much for all the love folks. It means the world to us. So many thanks to those already offering or sending on tools, building supplies, wood, inlay materials and the big one – time.

We haven’t set up a crowd funding account, as we’re waiting to hear what our insurance will cover. But in the meantime, as we deal with these next months and anticipate rebuilding costs, folks have been sending money to our PayPal account to jason@romerobanjos.com (via family/friends transfers – no fee), buying digital albums (we have no physical ones left), and sending e-transfers, and we are incredibly grateful.”

I’m sure that new banjo orders would be most welcome as well.

Best wishes to the Romeros as they move forward following this most tragic and fearful event.

Making of mini-doc from Pharis & Jason

The “making of” video is becoming a standard promotional tool in the acoustic music world, offering fans a little peak into the process of recording. They generally offer snippets of audio from an upcoming project, some behind the scenes footage of the artists at work, and maybe a funny segment or two to humanize the artists a bit.

But rarely does one present such a detailed look as this new mini-documentary from Matt Miles, capturing the recording of A Wanderer I’ll Stay with Pharis and Jason Romero.

Part of what makes it different is that the Romeros brought the process to their home, deep in the interior of British Columbia. With a new baby to care for, they decided to have all the accompanists travel north to them, along with recording engineer David Travers-Smith and all his gear. Miles joined the merry band to get it all on film, and the result is riveting viewing, set against the winterscape of northern Canada.

 

You can sample all of the tracks from Pharis and Jasson’s new album online.

Long Gone Out West Blues – Pharis and Jason Romero

Some of today’s most enjoyable folk music comes from British Columbia husband-and-wife duo Pharis and Jason Romero. Their 2011 debut, A Passing Glimpse, was a beautifully understated album of old-time tunes, and their new release, Long Gone Out West Blues, is just as good. The couple has created their own style of melodic, gentle roots music, and to put it simply – it works.

Pharis has penned seven of the album’s thirteen songs, including one co-write with her husband and one rewrite of an older tune. I Want to Be Lucky, which shares thoughts from a man who just can’t win, is one of the more radio-friendly tracks on the album. It’s a little bit bluesy, a little bit folky, with pensive instrumentation that matches the song’s mood perfectly. Come on Home is an old-timey, Gospel-tinged number that urges troubled listeners to “come forward with your worldly weight, come on home to no other’s place.” The blues mixes with an old West sound on Lonely Home Blues. Pharis seems to have fun with the vocals, taking on the role of a woman stuck at home, desperately waiting on her man to come back.

As this song shows, the Romeros seem to be a bit more influenced by the blues on this album than on their previous effort. In addition to Lonely Home Blues, they also cover the classic Truck Driver’s Blues (which is given a laidback treatment with great harmonies) and Waiting for the Evening Mail, modeled after a 1930 recording by Riley Puckett. The latter tune is a prototypical jail song, with simple phrases that convey the frustration of being locked up. It Just Suits Me, a traditional number the couple learned from an Alan Lomax recording, is an old spiritual with sass and more of a bluegrass sound than most of the album.

Even the most familiar tunes here have been given the couple’s special touch. Wild Bill Jones is one of the album’s best songs, somehow peaceful-sounding and urgent at the same time, with great banjo and lead vocals from Jason. Jason also offers two instrumentals: a lovely, slowed-down banjo version of Sally Goodin, and the haunting, sorrowful original Lost Lula.

The album is nicely balanced between the two artists, as Pharis and Jason share lead vocals and combine for nicely-matched harmonies throughout the project. Most would consider the instrumentation to be stripped down, as it is confined to Pharis’s guitar playing and Jason’s banjo, guitar, and resophonic guitar. However, they work together in the style of old-time brother duets, giving listeners a well-rounded and thoroughly pleasing listening experience.

More information about the couple’s music, as well as their banjo company (J. Romero Banjos), can be found at www.pharisandjason.com. Their new album can be purchased from several online music retailers.

A Passing Glimpse – Pharis and Jason Romero

One might think that a cabin deep in the Canadian wilderness may be an unusual place for masters of old-time southern music to live and work, but Pharis and Jason Romero prove this idea wrong. Not only does this husband-and-wife duo have the reputation for creating some of the finest handmade banjos in North America, they also sing and play old-time and early country music beautifully. In A Passing Glimpse, their debut project on Lula Records as a duo, their talents are fully expressed in a 15 song compilation of both previously recorded and original material.

Unlike many artists who choose to create recordings filled with extra instrumentation, the material Pharis and Jason have selected for their first duo project is performed brilliantly by just the two of them.  This album’s stripped-down, bare bones style gives a unique flavor. Their harmonies blend just as well as the sparsely included solos by Jason mix with Pharis’s superb rhythm guitar accompaniment. Pharis contributes four new original compositions, while the first track, Forsaken Love, is the first piece this couple wrote together.

Pharis’s penning of five distinct pieces within this project has placed her own creative measures comfortably beside melodies derived from decades-old recordings which she and her husband credit for their interpretations of public domain works. For instance, the new song and title track, A Passing Glimpse,  which deals with the subject of reflecting upon one’s past, fits well before My Flowers, My Companions, and Me, which they learned from a circa-1958 recording of an unknown singer. Other standout songs include Where is the Gamblin’ Man, an upbeat yet alarming story taken from a recording by Alan Lomax, the obscure Out on the Western Plains, and the Carter Family’s Engine 143.

Jason’s excellent banjo work, played without the use of picks or synthetic heads on his own brand of instruments, is exemplified by his take on the traditional instrumental Cumberland Gap, while his talents on lead guitar are also displayed throughout the project. His vocals are also displayed alongside his wife’s as the two perform in a fashion similar to early brother duets to create a sound reminiscent of a 1930s record, only without the crackle and hiss of old phonographs. Pharis does not take a backseat to her husband, however. Instead, the efforts of each performer combine to create a soothing listening experience. Her smooth lead and harmony vocals, as well as her consistent rhythm guitar playing tie the album together.

This recording fits well beside those made years ago by artists such as The Carter Family and Uncle Dave Macon, with newer songs such as Dottie Rambo’s It’s Me Again Lord also performed in this older-sounding style. A Passing Glimpse is sure to help place this couple alongside these historic artists, proving both their first-rate whittling and musical abilities.

More information about these artists and the banjos they craft can be found on their web site.

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