Sara Watkins talks new Nickel Creek album

With their amazingly adventurous new album, Celebrants, Nickel Creek makes a dynamic return, one that marks a full nine years after their last offering, A Dotted Line, an album which, in turn, arrived a full nine years after its predecessor, Why Should The Fire Die? Still, in their case, quality isn’t forestalled by consistency. Their spate of awards — as IBMA’s Emerging Artist of the Year in 2000, IBMA’s Instrumental Group of the Year the year after, and ongoing Grammy Awards and CMA nominations, along with the Grammy they won for Best Contemporary Folk Album courtesy of This Side — all attest to the innovation they can claim when it comes to bending their boundaries.

Nickel Creek is Chris Thile on mandolin, Sean Watkins on guitar, and Sara Watkins on fiddle. All three sing. Jeff Picker is bass player for the new album and tour. The band formed when the three primary contributors were in their teens, and their rapid rise to success was something to behold.

In every regard then, Celebrants comes across as a decidedly bold offering, one that’s unrestrained as far as melody, motif, and the trio’s obvious enthusiasm. It represents the latest phase of a creative career initiated early on, one that foretells the future more than it simply revisits the past.

https://youtu.be/OKilnoei7XM

Bluegrass Today recently had the opportunity to speak to Sara Watkins shortly before Nickel Creek embarked on a tour that takes them across the country, and to any number of major festivals. Both amiable and articulate, she was only too happy to share some insights into the thoughts that inspired the new album.  

Even before we delve in depth into the backstory, it ought to be mentioned that there’s quantity as well as quality here. The new album boasts 18 tracks, making it a very generous offering indeed.

Our goal at first was for this album to be contained as one traditional length album length, which is what, like 47 minutes or something? That was our goal. We didn’t want people to miss listening nearing the final parts of the record. Anytime we make an album, especially with our producer Eric Valentine, we do what we call a practice swing, which means we go in, and we sit in a semicircle with maybe three mics, and we play the entire record. Or at least all the songs on the record. So that’s what we did, and usually getting that down takes about a week. This time it took, well, I’m not sure exactly how long it took. It’s like a sketch of the album, basically. But with this album, we had a pretty a theoretical sequence going, because, as you may notice, a lot of the songs sort of relate to each other, and lead into each other. So we wanted to be confident in the sequence before committing to it on record. Ultimately, we changed a tiny bit of one instrumental and one instrumental went away, and another instrumental kind of came into it, and then we made a couple of tiny tweaks. But, really, for the most part, it was all there. It was all intact.

Nevertheless, that in itself is quite out of the ordinary. There’s a lot you express. It’s kind of reminiscent of the Beatles’ Abbey Road in a way, especially the way the songs flow into one another. So how will that that in live performance? Will you perform it so that the songs flow in sequence?

I think that’s going to be really fun process. We’ll definitely include some of the transitions, but some may be a bit challenging to perform live. However we plan to incorporate some older material and fold it into the newer songs, and hopefully build some some fun transitions out of that. The idea will be to show the relationships between the the music, because it all does come from a similar place. So, that’ll probably be really fun. I’m looking forward to that. And we’ll get to do that very soon. We hit the road in just a couple of weeks.

You’ve received so many accolades over the course of your individual and collective careers. Having achieved all those honors early on, does it ever enter your mind that given all you’ve achieved, you have this enormously high bar to measure up to? Is it almost intimidating in a sense?

I feel incredibly privileged that we don’t feel that way. We’re aware of who our audience is, and we want them to be happy, but we also know that they won’t be happy if we’re doing something that we don’t believe in. And, ultimately, that’s really what matters. If you’re just trying to please somebody else and you’re not happy, then there’s no point. Why go do something that you’re going to enjoy?

So I think for us, there is no other alternative. We would just not do this if the only alternative was to only make music that that we didn’t believe in 100%. In this case, there was no other record we could make at this point in time, even if we wanted to. It’s not like we had three records in front of us and we chose this record to make because this is the only record we could make at the time. This is where all of the choices led us. This is where all of the decisions led us, and with each each decision of each song, we then decided let’s do this.

Were you all in sync with the choices?

If someone disagrees, then we talk it out. And we figure out what we what we want to do. And all of those choices led us here. And that this is the album that we made, the only one we could have made, because anything else would have been a sacrifice in a way that betrayed who we are as a band. So again, this is the only album that we could make, and the one that we wanted to make. And we’re really, really proud of it.

As well you should be. It’s such a dynamic and express album. And it’s a really a bold step forward. You took it well beyond any expectation in terms of the concept, and the execution, which we would imagine, and as you were saying, was the result of a lot of planning time and discussion and opportunity to really figure out where you wanted it to go, even before you actually went into the studio to do it.

I don’t think a lot of people realize that anytime people make something creatively, that they’re making choices. Some people say that a song just like came to them, and then it was finished, and it was done and dusted. But mostly, when people are making something like this it’s because they’re making a choice. “I like it when the melody goes up rather than down. I like it when the guitar does this little turn a couple times before we come back to the verse.” All of these things are choices anytime anyone hears it, and I say that because I don’t want someone to feel like the music is calculated in any way, where it doesn’t have heart. I feel like Nickel Creek has so much heart, and so much love and so much joy,

That’s pretty evident in hearing this new music.

I’m so glad to hear you say that. What we’re trying to say on this album is that the pursuit of joy is not always easy. The pursuit of joy is not always joyful, and it’s not always easy. A lot of times joy is what you feel when you’re really in the trenches, or even in the midst of a conflict or a struggle. If I’m struggling for something that I truly believe in, if I’m struggling for something that I really want, and desire, then that struggle can can be a joy. And I think that this album is largely about a pursuit of connection and engagement. In any connection, there’s going to be friction, or gravity. So what we’re trying to say is, a lot of what we’re singing about is the stuff that life is made of. It’s not always sexy, and it’s not necessarily tragic or dramatic. Most people have something like that in a relationship, or simply in life. It’s about finding the middle.

That business that so many of us are in right now — where you’re choosing to stay, or you’re choosing to remain, is not because everything’s terrible. You have to continue to engage, and that might be in a friendship, or that might be about a job, or maybe it’s just about figuring out who you are as a person. It might be about engaging with your partner, with your kids, or with the place that you live. It could be about anything, but it takes work and it takes deliberate and intense effort. It’s as much about the good stuff as well as it is about the heart and the turmoil and the struggles.

What you’re saying is totally profound and totally meaningful. So it begs the question — was there something you learned about each other and maybe about the chemistry that you have as this band Nickel Creek? Was it a connection to a learning process that you were picking up again after nine years?

I think it’s always a learning process. Being in relationship with people is always a learning process. One of the benefits of the time away we spent away from each other is finding the clarity of how people change and develop, and how that’s a beautiful thing. We’re all changing and developing. And sometimes when we’re in tight, tight proximity to people, that change is not perceivable or not allowable, because we accept it, and we expect things to not change so that they can be dependable. And one of the beautiful things about the space that we have frequently found in this band, is that it affords us the perspective of realizing how beautiful that change and growth and development can be in your collaborators, or in your friends and family. 

That certainly is a learning process, and in a very essential way, part of what means to come of age.

I also think it gave me a lot of delight in my own change, and my own development as an individual. There was a while there when we were all spending so much time together in our early 20s, where I felt like I didn’t know what I think about it. And I would look to the band for answers about how I felt about certain things. It was because I felt so engrossed with the group. As I’ve become an adult, I think that’s a normal thing. So as I was growing up and engaging in all the things that time affords, I really relish that process and that evolution. Finding those differences and commonalities and celebrating all of that is good and normal and part of life.

https://youtu.be/RPI9RTNtbCo

Celebrants is available from popular download and streaming services online, and directly from Nickel Creek as downloads, audio CDs, or vinyl LPs.

Sean and Sara Watkins talk influences, Nickel Creek, and virtual concerts

There are some artists who make it a point to expand into different realms and diversify their approach, all the while maintaining a certain solidarity with their roots by not necessarily tampering with their template.

The renowned brother sister duo Sara and Sean Watkins, who also go under the name The Watkins Family Hour, could be considered in that number. No matter where their musical ventures lead them — from their earliest endeavors as Nickel Creek, their super group of sorts, WPA, Sara’s high profile side sojourn under the aegis of I’m With Her (also featuring Sarah Jarosz and Aoife O’Donovan), Sean’s sometime project, The Fiction Family, or the various endeavors each carries out on their own — they’ve managed to retain a reverence for their bluegrass beginnings while adding new elements to the mix that allow for further daring and diversity. To a certain extent, that comes as a result of their ongoing residency at the Largo Nightclub in their native Los Angeles, where, for the past 18 years, the two have held court with a rotating cast of special musical guests.

Most recently, the pair released their sophomore album under the aegis of the Watkins Family Hour, which they appropriately titled Brother Sister. It’s another example of their ability to tap into tradition while furthering their contemporary credence, it reflects their love of the music that nurtured them early on and continues to inspire them even now. And while the pandemic has put an end to live performances — at least for the near future — the two continue to share their music in other ways, including their upcoming concert from Fanciful Fox Studios in Los Angeles, one which will be streamed for Boston’s Celebrity Series on Sunday, November 15, 2020 at 7:00 p.m. EST. The pair plan to showcase songs from the new album with support from bassist Sebastian Steinberg, and after the performance, fans will have an opportunity to chat with the artists.

This performance is Sara Watkins’ third for the Celebrity Series. She made her Celebrity Series debut in March 2016 with Patti Griffin and Anaïs Mitchell, and she later appeared with her trio, I’m With Her. 

“We’ve become COVID stars,” Sean jokes. “It’s nice to have something to talk about. It’s nice to be talking about music.”

“We’ve been doing our virtual performances every two weeks, and that’s been good for us,” Sara says. “It’s given us a chance to come up with different songs to play, and to work up some new covers. We’ve been doing those shows as the Watkins Family Hour. A few festivals have also been allowing is to do virtual performances in place of actual live performances, and that’s been really nice as well. In so doing, they’ve been supporting bands and offering things to their audiences. The Celebrity Series is an incredible series as well, and we’re so glad to be a part of it, even if it’s just virtually.”

Here again, the pair find a creative connection to their bluegrass roots, not only through their love of music that’s of a certain vintage variety, but also in the communal connection that’s essential as well.

“We grew up listening to and going to bluegrass festivals,” Sara recalls. “We’d travel across the country to go to IBMA, and even as kids, we’d go to Kansas and Minnesota and Philadelphia for the folk festivals there, driving in our family minivan. I can still recall the incredible welcoming feeling of the bluegrass community, as well as the challenges of learning how to solo and sing harmony. That whole rich repertoire will always be with us. We love bluegrass music so much, and with this upcoming performance for the Celebrity Series, we will really lean on the kind of bluegrass chops that require a lot of precision in our arrangements. A lot of the early duo and solo records that have been landmarks in bluegrass — the Louvin Brothers being one example — and they’ve had a lingering impact on us, specifically when it comes to the arrangements and how to accompany one another.”

“Bluegrass is kind of a frame of mind in a way,” Sean suggests. “It’s about how you think about two-part harmony singing. Throughout the years, we may have tried different approaches and been more experimental, but there’s never been a time when we were sitting around and jamming with friends that hasn’t been awesome to us. And whenever we’ve had a chance to do that, we’ve been overjoyed. I think that’s the beauty of bluegrass — you can take it with you wherever you go. I remember watching an interview with Tim O’Brien when he said, ‘I can’t get away from bluegrass. It’s me, and everything I do is going to be identified with it because its part of my musical identity. You can try, but it’s always going to be there in some way.’ I love that idea and I love all the things you can do with it.”

Indeed, the roots dig deeper, and the Watkins not only realize and reflect that, but they celebrate it as well.

“Bluegrass isn’t just a style of music,” Sean insists. “It’s a lifestyle and tradition, and the things we learned from our elders while growing up and playing with other musicians are all built into the framework of bluegrass, more so than a lot of other kinds of music. Maybe jazz has that, but bluegrass is more than just a sound. It’s a way of looking at the music and including other people in it.”

“Growing up in Southern California, the group Bluegrass Etc. had a big influence on us,” Sara recalls. “They were really our teachers. And the artists that came down from the Bay Area — Laurie Lewis, Kathy Kallick, John Reichmann, Scott Nygard — influenced us as well. There were some great bluegrass festivals when we were growing up, and we saw all those bands that would come down to play in Southern California and the Southwest. So they were a huge influence and ringleaders of the scene.”

“Byron Berline was another one who made an impact,” Sean adds. “He was a major session player in Los Angles at the time, and he had this incredible history with the Flying Burrito Brothers and all those records he played on in the ‘70s and ‘80s. Alison Krauss was also an influential artist. When she was young, she was doing all these interesting things with bluegrass, and incorporating the pop music she grew up on, and that sort of became a template for us — maybe more than we realized. We listened to her a lot, and every now and then, when we’d see her perform, she’d bring us on stage. She ended up producing our first two records.”

He goes on to mention others iconic individuals whose impact they mined along the way as well. “Tony Rice in particular had a great impact on me, especially with the huge variety of songs he played. He was my first introduction to Randy Newman, Gordon Lightfoot, Bob Dylan…he explored a wide range of chords and melodies and harmonies in this way that seemed to fit seamlessly into what we loved about bluegrass. We also listened to the two Will the Circle Be Unbroken albums. Those were big for our family, and I remember listening to those tapes in our motorhome when we were driving to different festivals. I’d hear the conversations they recorded between takes, and think, ‘Oh my gosh, this is what it’s like in the studio!’ We were getting a feel for what it was like to be in the room. That was the thing that gave me my first visual of what it’s like to be in a studio as a professional musician.”

Indeed, their ideas — and ideals — developed from there, as Sean is quick to confirm.

“We would also really absorb all that stuff that we heard in Southern California and later, at the IBMA,” he remembers. “All of us kids loved Lonesome River Band, and we would play their versions of all these standard songs using the same arrangements. They were a big influence in some specific ways. They were very traditional, but they were also doing stuff that was nontraditional. They had this really aggressive side, but lyrically, they were a little more modern, and that’s what attracted us to them.”

Sara says that growing up in the fertile Southern California music scene had a profound impact on them as well. “There was a lot of overlap, especially with the people that played places like the Troubadour in LA,” she explains. “It was a really fascinating time. Chris Hillman had a lot to do with that, especially when he was with the Byrds. They were like the American Beatles and they were huge at the time. And then you see what Chris Hillman has done since then, and what a versatile musician he is. The stuff that he’s done has played a huge role in shaping American music.”

“Oftentimes, when people are asked about their influences, they tend to name their favorite musicians, but those may or may not be the people who had the most influence on you,” Sean reflects. “We would see a band, but we may not have heard their records. They might not have even made records, but they had a huge impact on us all the same. It’s fun to realize the stuff that actually gets in there and sticks with you. But beyond that, the people that we started getting into was Strength in Numbers, and the group that recorded the album Uncommon Ritual, which was Béla Fleck, Mike Marshall and Edgar Meyer. There were these groups that consisted of these Nashville session musicians who were doing incredible things with bluegrass instruments. That stuff was really the second wave of stuff that shaped us. And then, we went back and started digging into the early stuff, and the traditional stuff, and really appreciating artists like Del McCoury and Ralph Stanley.”

In that regard, both Watkins acknowledge that there’s a certain amount of fluidity that allows them to make music together, while also venturing out on their own when their muse encourages them to do so. It allows for a certain verve and versatility that expands the individual parameters, without feeling threatened that any essential relationship may be damaged in the process.  

“That’s the thing that we first noticed about bluegrass music early on,” Sara notes. “It’s something that everyone does. Even when you have a steady gig, you’re always playing with other people, and that may develop into an album or a tour. Tim O’Brien is a perfect example. He’ll sit with in everyone, but the question never comes up, like ‘why doesn’t he just pick a band?’ That’s the norm in bluegrass, so it makes perfect sense that we would do that as well.”

“There’s another world where someone like Beyonce might do a solo record away from Destiny’s Child and it becomes like, ‘Oh well, that’s the end of that thing,'” Sean suggests. “With bluegrass, of course you do a solo record. Everybody has multiple solo records and side projects, and a lot of that has to do with the nature of the business side. Of course you have to have a lot of irons in the fire to make some money. That was always our framework, and whenever one of us wanted to do a solo record, it was never like, ‘uh oh, they’ve gone solo!’ It just always made a lot of sense for us, and in the process, it helps relieve a lot of tension. If you have some songs that don’t fit within the framework of the band, you can still do them on your own or in the context of another band.”

Inevitably, that leads to the subject of Nickel Creek. The band recently released a live album through Bandcamp that was recorded at the Fox Theater in Oakland California during the group’s last reunion tour in 2014. In addition, re-releases on the band’s first three studio albums —Nickel Creek, This Side, and Why Should the Fire Die — are also due for imminent rerelease, given the fact that they’ve been out of print on vinyl for quite some tine. 

“The record company put them out,” Sean says. “They printed them up and they ended up selling really well, which was a pleasant surprise. We were going to do some Nickel Creek shows this year, but in light of the fact that live shows aren’t happening anywhere, and realizing that we had all our shows recorded from that last tour, we realized that it would probably be a good time to release that live album.”

“I think Nickel Creek will do some stuff in the future,” Sara muses. “There’s no reason not to do something. There’s no master scheme with a timeline that suggests we’ll do it in five years, but I don’t think it will even take that long.”

Tickets for the digital concert presented by the Celebrity Series are $20, and available online. A recording of the premiere stream in its entirety will be available for on demand viewing approximately one hour after the initial premiere stream ends, and will be available to view for 72 hours.

Those interested will be able to log in and watch any missed portions of the performance, and the stream is available worldwide to all.

Watkins, Jarosz and O’Donovan announce new single and video

Sugar Hill Records has announced the May 8 release of a 7” vinyl single from the roots power trio of Sara Watkins, Sarah Jarosz, and Aoife O’Donovan. The three young women, known for their previous work in groups like Nickel Creek and Crooked Still, and as headlining solo artists, have come together this year to record and tour as a unit.

A debut video, which shows the three in the studio cutting John Hiatt’s Crossing Muddy Waters, is available now, with the single offered as a download in iTunes. They give the song an old timey treatment, with Aoife taking the lead.

The single will be backed with an a cappella version of Be My Husband by Andy Stroud.

Jarosz, whose banjo is heard on the single, says that after a chance trio performance at the 2014 Telluride Bluegrass Festival, she is expecting great things from their work together.

“I’m really excited about this trio because we each do our own thing and we each do it differently, so I’m looking forward to discovering all of the unique possibilities that come with combining our individual voices.”

Starting in the Spring, these three ladies will be on the road, beginning with a European tour in April and May, followed by a round of US dates later this Summer. It is billed as the I’m With Her tour.

Stops scheduled as of this date include:

  • 4/18 – Uppsala, Sweden – Folkmusikgalan
  • 4/18 – Barcelona, Spain – Theatre Principal
  • 4/21 – Bristol, UK – Clifton Cathedral
  • 4/23 – Biddulph, UK – Town Hall
  • 4/24 – Gateshead, UK – Sage Gateshead
  • 4/25 – Bury, UK – The Met (Sold Out)
  • 4/26 – Sheffield, UK – Memorial Hall
  • 4/28 – London, UK – Union Chapel
  • 4/29 – Oxford, UK – St. Johns the Evangelist 
  • 5/1 – Belfast, UK – Cathedral Quarter Arts Festival
  • 5/2 – Londonderry, UK – Culturlann Ui Chanin
  • 5/3 – Kilkenny, Ireland – Kilkenny Roots Festival
  • 5/4 – Sligo, Ireland – The Hawks Well Theatre
  • 5/5 – Dublin, Ireland – Whelan’s
  • 5/22 – Vienna, VA – A Prairie Home Companion
  • 5/23 – Vienna, VA – A Prairie Home Companion
  • 7/10 – Katonah, NY – Caramoor
  • 7/11 – Mt. Solon, VA – Red Wing Roots
  • 7/25 – Lyons, CO – Rockygrass
  • 8/29 – Fayetteville, AR – Fayetteville Town Center
  • 9/5 – Pagosa Springs, CO – Four Corners Folk Festival
  • 9/19 – North Adams, MA – FreshGrass

Pre-orders for the vinyl single and I’m With Her tour merch (show posters and shirts) are available now online.

Rodgers Remembrance Vol II: Any Old Time

This week we are going to remember the life and times of America’s Blue Yodeler, the Singing Brakeman, and the Father of Country Music: the late, great Jimmie Rodgers. On Saturday, May 26, Jimmie Rodgers will have been gone 79 years.

Arguably the most significant man in American music, he has heavily influenced country, blues, folk, jazz, Hawaiian, rock, pop, Americana, western swing, jazz, and bluegrass music. To celebrate the life and times of Jimmie Rodgers, I will be highlighting a Jimmie Rodgers’ song each day and showcasing popular bluegrass versions of each song.

Any Old Time — Jimmie Rodgers

[Yodel]

I just received your letter
You’re down and out, you say
At first I thought I would tell you
To travel on the other way

But in my memory lingers
All you once were to me
I’m going to give you another chance
To prove what you can be

Any old time you want to come back home
Drop me a line and say, no more you’ll roam
You had your chance to play the game fair
And when you left me, sweetheart, you only left a load of care

Now that you’re down, I’m going to stick by you
If you will only say your roaming days are through
You’ll find me here like the day you left me alone
Any old time you wanna come back home

You’ll find me right here like the day you left me alone
Any old time you wanna come back home, home, home

One aspect of Jimmie Rodgers that makes him so unique in American music is the sheer variety of musical styles he recorded during his short musical career. His original recording of Any Old Time may surprise many who have not heard it.

Any Old Time was recorded as a vaudeville/Dixieland jazz number. This may come as a shock to many who may not see the Father of Country Music in this light. Jimmie’s recording begins with him and his acoustic guitar, but finishes out with a complete jazz ensemble complete with piano, trumpet, and trombone. The Del McCoury Band and The Preservation Hall Jazz Band could have some fun with this one!

Jimmie’s influence in jazz music is oft-forgotten. Many of his tunes included horns and a very jazz-influenced fiddle. The greatest jazz musician of all time, Louis Armstrong, even had ties to Jimmie Rodgers. Back in 1930, a 29 year old Armstrong took part in a recording session in Hollywood, CA where he was asked to play behind America’s Blue Yodeler. With Louis on trumpet, and Lil Armstrong (Louis’s second wife) on piano, Jimmie sang Blue Yodel #9 (Standing On The Corner), which is one of The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame’s 500 Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll.

Even without the Dixieland instrumentation, Any Old Time is still a very jazzy song. The melody has a very vaudeville feel to it, even without the horns. The jazzy feel to the tune makes it very easy for artists to let loose and have a good time recording this classic Jimmie Rodgers song.

Beautifully written, the song tells of a man who is giving a past lover a second chance. Although he has been hurt by this woman, he feels sympathy since she has not been doing well since leaving him. He decides to give her the chance to come back as long as she promises to be true.

You’ll find me here like the day you left me alone
Any old time you wanna come back home.

This song runs deep with emotion. Sadness, anger, pain, love, forgiveness, betrayal- it’s all here. This may be why it still resonates with audiences eighty years later.

Any Old Time has been recorded by many  acoustic and bluegrass artists perhaps most memorably for bluegrass fans by Tony Rice on his Church Street Blues album.

One of my favorites on the album, Tony’s voice soar on Any Old Time. Vocally, it is easily one of his best songs ever; he makes it seems so natural. The jazz feel to the song’s melody does nothing but help him. Rice’s guitar work on the song may seem simple compared to his mind-boggling work on others, but it is a perfect match to Rodgers’ style, and leaves more room for Rice’s vocals to shine. This is a more stripped-down rendition of the song compared to Jimmie’s original version, which many will find refreshing.

Another stellar version of Any Old Time which many bluegrass fans may not know is available comes from Alison Krauss & Union Station. In 1997, Bob Dylan led the charge to record a Jimmie Rodgers tribute album. The Songs of Jimmie Rodgers – A Tribute included such artists as Dwight Yoakam, John Mellencamp, Iris Dement, David Grisman, Willie Nelson, Jerry Garcia, Steve Earle, Bono, and AKUS performing some of Rodgers’ most well-known songs.

Alison’s version of Any Old Time is hands-down the best recording on the album. The track begins slowed down with simply Alison and a piano, then picks up the tempo and adds in mandolin, guitar, bass, and light drums. The arrangement for this song is great. It pays homage to the Father of Country Music, while still keeping it Alison Krauss. She sings her heart out and delivers the song’s lyric in a very honest way, brilliantly unveiling all of the song’s emotional subtleties in a way only Alison can. This is a recording every bluegrass fan needs to have.

Bluegrass and bluegrass-related artists such as Sara Watkins, Jimmy Gaudreau & Moondi Klein, and Doc Watson have also recorded Any Old Time, as have country stars such as Webb Pierce, Ernest Tubb, and Hank Snow. Hopefully, you’ll listen to any or all of the aforementioned renditions of this Rodgers classic and understand what makes this song appealing people of all generations.

Come back tomorrow for Rodgers Rememberance Vol III: Frankie and Johnny.

 

If you enjoy the Rodgers Remembrances this week, feel free to tune in to my radio program, Bending The Strings, this Saturday afternoon on My Classic Country from 3:00-5:00 p.m. (EDT). In honor of the life of Jimmie Rodgers, I will be producing a very special tribute show including many of the songs discussed in the Rodgers Remembrances this week. You won’t want to miss it!

BP spills bluegrass along the Gulf Coast

We all recall the localized devastation of communities along the US coast of the Gulf of Mexico following the explosion of the Deep Water Horizon oil rig in April 2010, and the resulting discharge of nearly 5 million barrels of oil into the gulf waters. Images and stories of damage and loss filled the airwaves all Spring, with many in the tourist and fishing industries still reeling from the shock – not to mention the 11 rig workers killed in the blast

The BP oil company, who had responsibility for the drilling platform, has been active in both clean up efforts and in the battle for the “hearts and minds” of the citizens of the affected areas, by hiring displaced maritime workers, and through gifts and grants to community organizations.

Our friends in Delta Reign have just alerted us to one such grant, awarded to the South Mobile County Tourism Authority, which is being used to host a bluegrass festival in March on Dauphin Island, a barrier island in the gulf just south of Mobile, AL.

The SeaGrass Music Festival will be held March 23-24 on the grounds of historic Ft. Gaines, an outpost that figured in prominent battles during the Civil War, and which had changed hands repeatedly over its 200 year history. Ricky Skaggs and Nashville Bluegrass Band will headline, along with former Nickel Creek violinist/vocalist Sara Watkins.

Delta Reign is also on the bill, as is Alabama-based David Davis and the Warrior River Boys.

Gulf coast residents will not soon forget the damage done to their beautiful coastline and waterways from this tragic accident, nor the feeling of abandonment many reported feeling as politicians and oil company men argued about responsibility and the proper course of remediation while oil continued to gush from the damaged well head.

A bluegrass festival at this popular gulf coast tourist destination won’t heal those wounds. Still it’s nice to see the BP funds used for something that really will benefit the local community.

Full details online.

Ed Helms and the L.A. Bluegrass Situation

We’ve  written before about Ed Helms (of The Office) and his love for bluegrass music. Not content merely to be a lone banjo player in L.A., Helms decided it was time to put together a bluegrass music event in Hollywood. Partnering with a venue in West Hollywood called Largo, Helms has put together the L.A. Bluegrass Situation.

The Situation is a 5 day bluegrass festival/event taking place that the Largo, and featuring an impressive lineup. The even starts tonight with The Watkins Family Hour featuring Sean and Sara Watkins (formerly of Nickel Creek) along with guests Jackson Browne and Gillian Welch. Throughout the five days, performances will given by the Steep Canyon Rangers with Steve Martin, Ed Helms, and The Infamous Stringdusters will be wrapping everything up on Monday, March 22, 2010.

Helms is anticipating more than just stage performances though.

“There’ll be a lot of late-night jamming, I’m thinking,” he says. “Largo has a little coffee shop room that’s part of the complex and we’ll be hanging out playing there after the headline shows each night. It’ll just be everyone kind of mixing and matching. It’ll be great.” (source)

Sounds like Ed’s right. I think they’ve got a Bluegrass Situation there in L.A.!

Transatlantic Sessions 2010

Our friends in the UK are in for a treat soon, as the Transatlantic Sessions present the sounds of great music created by acoustic musicians from both sides of the pond.

The Transatlantic Sessions are put together by the Celtic Connections festival, but this year many of the musicians will briefly tour the British Isles, performing four dates in England and one in Ireland, in addition to the two consecutive nights of performance in Scotland at the Celtic Connections festival.

This upcoming run of the Transatlantic Sessions will feature a stellar cast of Bluegrass and Americana stars from here in America, along with some fine Celtic singers and musicians from the UK.

In an array of at least eight outstanding singers, at least half will also be joining in on the tunes – Nickel Creek vocalist/fiddler Sara Watkins; O Brother Where Art Thou? soundtrack star Dan Tyminski (aka the voice of George Clooney), on guitar and mandolin; Bruce Molsky (fiddle) and festival favourite Tim O’Brien returns – this time with one of Americana’s greatest interpreters – his sister Mollie, for her debut Transatlantic appearance. Further gracing the song department will be three of the most sublime female voices, between them spanning a rich and varied spectrum of traditional and contemporary styles: Scotland’s Eddi Reader and Karen Matheson (Capercaillie) alongside Ireland’s Cara Dillon.

On the instrumental side, expect bravura solos, jaw-dropping ensemble medleys and gorgeous song accompaniment from a mouthwatering house-band line up including such familiar – and formidable – figures as Danny Thompson, Darrell Scott, John Doyle, Russ Barenberg, Phil Cunningham, Donald Shaw, Michael McGoldrick and James Mackintosh, plus joint musical directors Aly Bain and Jerry Douglas.

Bruce Molsky has all the dates on his tour schedule with links to various venues for ticket purchases.

Songwriter Q&A with Sara Watkins

American Songwriter recently interviewed former Nickel Creek fiddler, Sara Watkins. Watkins just released her first, self-titled, solo project.

The interview takes the form of a question and answer session. Some attention is given to songwriting, but much of the discussion concerned Sara’s music background and influences, her experiences with Nickel Creek, and of course, her new CD. One interesting exchange concerned the transition from being a band member to a solo artist.

Having played with Nickel Creek for most of your life, what was it like transitioning to life as a solo artist?

It has been interesting and really exciting, empowering and also frustrating. And I want to learn how to do it better‚Äì “it” meaning I want to learn to manage myself better. I have a manager but I want to learn to be more self-sufficient and to be more capable and to just be able to handle more, like multi-tasking. I don’t want to be so overwhelmed with details about travel and logistics. I want to be able to handle all of that and still be able to put everything into a show.

Check out American Songwriter for the entire interview.

Sara Watkins and The Lovell Sisters on Woodsongs

The most recent video episode of The Woodsongs Old Time Radio Hour features two artists sure to be of interest to readers of Bluegrass Today.

The show, which aired originally on June 8, has performances by Sara Watkins and The Lovell Sisters, viewable online as a Windows Media file. Both artists show the vibrancy and diversity of young bluegrass-oriented acts, and the ways in which young women interpret the music, as they offer live music from their new CDs.

Tonight’s (6/15) Woodsongs broadcast will include a set from Rhonda Vincent & The Rage, showcasing songs from her next CD, Destination Life, due out tomorrow (6/16) on Rounder. It airs live at 7:00 p.m. (EDT) and you can catch the show in real time online, in both video and audio.

Woodsongs is carried by a very large number of radio stations all over the world, most of who run the show later in the week. Check their affiliates list for details on when the show may air in your area.

Sara Watkins to Nonesuch

Nonesuch Records has announced that the debut solo project for former Nickel Creek fiddler and vocalist Sara Watkins will be released in April 7, 2009. The CD was produced by John Paul Jones, and will include guest spots from former NC bandmates Chris Thile – who also records for Nonesuch – and her brother Sean.

From the label’s description, it appears that her new album will hew closer to the Nickel Creek mold than Thile’s more adventurous acoustic direction, mixing folk, pop and fiddle music.

Watkins segues gracefully from the lighthearted country and western swing of Jimmie Rodger’s Any Old Time, to the world-weariness and spiritual yearning of Norman Blake’s Lord Won’t You Help Me, to the romantic wistfulness of Jon Brion’s Same Mistake. Though she still considers herself a neophyte as a songwriter, her own work is as evocative as any of the material she’s chosen to cover. Her wordless fiddle tunes are exuberant, foot-stomping pieces, while the songs for which she wrote both music and lyrics have a heart-meltingly lovelorn quality.

Jones, who made his name as the bass player with Led Zeppelin in the 1970s, has been actively involved in folk and acoustic music of late. He produced the most recent project from Uncle Earl, Waterloo, Tennessee.

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