Back in the summer of 2012, we reported on a then new documentary film on bluegrass called The Porchlight Sessions, produced and directed by Anna Schwaber. Like many such projects, it was created more for people new to the music than for seasoned fans, but given its high professional standards, lush photography, and music and interviews with bluegrass artists, its sure to have a strong appeal for long time grassers as well.
Schwaber visited a number of prominent festivals and talked with a long list of top acts, including the late Ralph Stanley before he passed, plus Sam Bush, Jerry Douglas, Béla Fleck, Steve Martin, Del McCoury, Bobby Osborne, Trampled By Turtles, Mumford & Sons, The Infamous Stringdusters, and several others. Her focus is on the distinction between traditional bluegrass and the music that has been developed since, where it has changed, and where it has stayed the same.
Though it was premiered at World Of Bluegrass 2012 in Nashville, Anna has spent the past five years screening the film at festivals, and had never offered it for sale. But it is now available to purchase as for download viewing.
For only $20 you receive access to watch the full film as edited, plus additional bonus footage from several of the artists featured. Those include full song performances from Crooked Still, The Infamous Stringdusters, Abigail Washburn, Bobby Osborne, and Steep Canyon Rangers.
The Porchlight Sessions has generated a good deal of excitement in the past five years, and this is the first opportunity that has existed to obtain it for home viewing.
Check out the trailer below.
The film is presented in English with optional Japanese subtitles.
The films to be screened during the debut IBMA Bluegrass Film Festival at the 2014 World of Bluegrass Convention have been announced. Eight different projects will be shown, including a pair of highlight films that were selected for special merit. All have been profiled here at Bluegrass Today and should be at least conceptually familiar to dedicated readers.
The two highlight films are Banjo Romantika by Lee Bidgood, and The Porchlight Sessions from Anna Schwaber, both documentaries. Bidgood’s project, made with Shara Lange, chronicles the development of the bluegrass music scene in Czech Republic, with assistance from East Tennessee State University. Porchlight is more a journey of discovery, where Schwaber travels to a number of bluegrass festivals and speaks with artists about the music’s history, and where it is going.
Both of these films will be screened during the business conference portion of the week, including a Q&A with the filmmakers. They will be shown again during that weekend’s Wide Open Bluegrass event, October 3-4, along with these six other selected productions:
The weekend screenings will be free of charge and open to the public.
Film Festival Committee Chair Michael Hall, who had initiated what is thought to be the very first bluegrass film festival for the Northern California Bluegrass Society in 2008, says that the organization is happy to now include the visual arts in its annual celebration.
“The first IBMA Film Festival will welcome bluegrass filmmakers to the mix of creative professionals at the World Of Bluegrass. Films about bluegrass music history, culture, performers, and lifestyles help tell the bluegrass story to existing fans and new fans alike. These films are now beginning to reach beyond ‘film’ audiences to ‘music’ audiences and are an important developing area of bluegrass event programming. Thanks to the IBMA’s staff and volunteers for supporting this new trend by introducing the films at the World Of Bluegrass.”
For more details on the IBMA Bluegrass Film Festival, and all eight of these films, visit IBMA online.
The Porchlight Sessions, produced by Nashville and Los Angeles documentary filmmaker Anna Schwaber, will be screened in Redwood City on Sunday, January 27, as part of a free afternoon bluegrass film program.
The Northern California Bluegrass Society will present the NCBS International Bluegrass Music Museum Film Festival from12:00noon to 5:00pm at the Redwood City Main Library, 1044 Middlefield Road, Redwood City, in the San Francisco Bay Area of California.
The Porchlight Sessions film examines the nature and implications of bluegrass music culture among new and old devotees throughout the USA. It seeks an answer to the much-debated question, “What is bluegrass?” through interviews with musicians and their fans. There is also plenty of bluegrass music to enjoy!
This will be the first California showing of this exciting full-length 2012 cinema project.
NCBS International Bluegrass Music Museum Film Festival is presented by the Northern California Bluegrass Society, and is an official museum event hosted by IBMM representative Carl Pagter.
The event supports the museum’s Oral History Project by screening one or more Oral History Project films (this year it will be Bill Bolick Of The Blue Sky Boys). Films from the Oral History Project collection can only be shown at official museum-related events.
In addition, the six-year-old festival presents new independently-produced bluegrass-related documentary films. Other films on the programme include:
James Reams’ Rollin’ On (produced by Redbird Mountain Music, Arizona). Reams will make a personal appearance to discuss his film with the audience.
During IBMA week, I had the pleasure of attending the Nashville premiere of The Porchlight Sessions, a new film which digs deep into the roots of our music while also looking forward to its future. The film blew me away. (See our review.)
I had the opportunity to talk with the film’s creator, Anna Schwaber, and learn more about this exceptional film, which took nearly four years to complete.
DM: First of all, I thoroughly enjoyed the film. It was outstanding! AS: Thanks!
DM: What was your inspiration for creating The Porchlight Sessions? AS: I worked on many various aspects of Bonnaroo under Danny Clinch, who was an inspiration for me making this a feature-length project. I was living in Australia studying Photomedia at the ANU when I met a banjo player who loved the music I grew up around but overlooked. It was through his interest that mine was rekindled. We came up with the idea together to create an AV (audio visual) project that updated the look and understanding of what bluegrass and old-time is. In early concept development, I was drawn to 1970’s music documentaries like Wattstax and Woodstock, as well as newer music documentaries like Heima. I loved how the culture was captured in these films as well as how they were stylized and wanted to make my film contemporary yet nostalgic.
DM: You have such a myriad of special guests in the film. Everyone from Ralph Stanley to Mumford & Sons! How did you determine who you were going to interview? AS: Hustling bluegrass music every day, you pick up on what people are interested in and are listening to. The funny thing is a lot of people don’t make the connection that a lot of the young acts are pulling from these older generations of musicians. I consciously looked to different influential musicians to speak to certain points of history but wanted a good balance of influential people in the film and people talking about influential people. I purposefully tried to curate as much as possible as we developed the story and as the trends shifted on the music scene. Also, I have to mention that not everyone was available for filming. Tracking musicians down with all the variables of tour, recording, and shooting schedules was not always easy.
DM: Along those same lines, what were your criteria in deciding which songs to include whether through archival footage or performances shot for the film? There is such a nice variety, I’m curious as to how you chose them. AS: The archival performances were very limited as we always tried to showcase performances from the acts during the time periods people were talking about them. For the performances shot for the film, I gave a lot of freedom to the musicians to play something they were really close to. Then there were choices we made that were very specific like the songs performed by the Gibson Brothers, Yonder Mountain String Band, and Steep Canyon Rangers as we aimed to film examples of songs popularized by the act mentioned in that scene. By having them do these “covers,” we were hoping to bring the old and the new together and to make the scenes more dynamic instead of mostly fact based.
DM: A film highlight was the interview and performance by Doc Watson. What was it like to spend time with a musical icon like Doc, and, in hindsight, conducting one of his final interviews? AS: Doc was very charming when we met with him before a sound check in Ohio. He was excited to talk with us about why he loves mountain and home life. He was very humble and he laughed a lot. For me, it was just so strange to sit down with him after spending so much time with footage and photographs of him over the years. I don’t really think about that being one of his final interviews as he still feels very much alive and well to me as I live with the footage everyday. That’s one of the hardest realities of capturing something on film.
DM: Other than Doc, what were some of your favorite interview sessions and why? AS: There are so many great memories with each session we did. Its hard to pin down too many favorites. We did have a great time interviewing Erik Berry of Trampled by Turtles and Jeff Austin of Yonder Mountain String Band. They both spoke so passionately about the evolution, growth, and future of Bluegrass music. Chris Thile’s interview was very rushed but the result was something very meditative as we took his performance one time and from one angle. All the interviews I did were really great experiences but these three were unexpected gems.
DM: What did you find most surprising while conducting the interviews? AS: Since I decided early on that I wanted to tell the story through the voices of the community without any narrator or voice-over to fall back on, sometimes I would go out and film for hours with someone who I was certain would be able to nail our target questions. Oftentimes, however, musicians wouldn’t be able to remember 40 years ago to the detail that we’d read about it in books or online. That was frustrating and also meant more work for us in the editing room.
DM: You worked on The Porchlight Sessions for nearly four years. What was the defining moment in the creation of the film? AS: The night we successfully completed our Kickstarter campaign was by far the defining moment. That was a serious game changer for me. I went from working on the film whenever the time and resources aligned to working on the project with a whole team of people around the world. It just still amazes me how much momentum that effort brought and I am still filled with immense gratitude for the community who believes in my work.
DM: The film is shot at such a wide variety of locations: artist’s homes, festival grounds, tour buses, Bill Monroe’s front porch, cow pastures, etc. Was this planned, or did it just happen this way? AS: This was entirely planned. My background is in photography and cinematography so I knew each frame was an opportunity to tell a story. I put interview subjects in front of compelling scenery to help capture a filmic world. I would take musicians into the campgrounds where they would otherwise not go just so we could have kids running around or people cooking in the background. Exposition like this helps stylize the interviews so each person is more of a character in the film world than some seated expert “talking head.”
DM: What was the most difficult place you had to shoot? AS: The Telluride Bluegrass Festival shoot was probably the most challenging shoot we did. We were there a full week, camping out with a tent big enough to let us sleep next to our camera gear. The 9000 ft. elevation coupled with the intense pollen in the air, all kinds of weather conditions (summer weather to snow), and no access to a vehicle around the town meant that I carried a ton of gear all day in harsh conditions. The footage was really worth it in the end.
DM: I’m sure wagging cameras around places such as Telluride and Festy resulted in some unique experiences. What’s the most interesting behind the scenes story from filming The Porchlight Sessions? AS: Yonder Mountain String Band was a good one. We drove 10 hours up to Northern California to a festival (not a bluegrass festival) called Gaia Festival. It had a great lineup but was completely different than all the other festivals we’d shot and the people did not look like the familiar “bluegrassers.” The festival grounds were pretty small and we had to find a good place to film that wouldn’t have any sound bleed from the main stage. Like the performance we shot with Crooked Still at the Festy, we went deep into the campgrounds to film. At this particular festival, there were people on the nude beach by the river, people blasting hip-hop around the site, and a lot more general craziness. We had a great time running interference, making sure a lot of those elements didn’t get in the way of the filming once we finally got the band to the location we chose to shoot.
DM: All in all, what do you hope The Porchlight Sessions will be able to accomplish? AS: I hope to bring bluegrass into the world of mainstream cinema, appealing to a whole new audience of music-lovers while introducing people to where bluegrass came from and where perhaps it can go. I think the message of the film will help broaden opinions on the scope of what bluegrass is today and will also be a catalyst for people everywhere to get together to celebrate the music. I believe this film will be a great resource for generations to come.
DM: Thank you so much for your time, Anna. I hope to be able to see you and The Porchlight Sessions again very soon! AS: Thank you.
As you can tell, Anna did not cut any corners in the making of her film, and it definitely shows on screen. Her attention to detail pays off dividends. The artistic quality of The Porchlight Sessions elevates it from merely a documentary to a cinematic masterpiece. Anna does nothing but portray our music with professionalism and class. Hopefully, this filmwill spread a greater appreciation of our music to a mainstream audience. If you have the opportunity to see the movie, you will not be disappointed.
For more information on The Porchlight Sessions, be sure to visit porchlightsessions.com.
In the new film, The Porchlight Sessions, Bobby Osborne uses this quote to describe the attitude it took to make his and Sonny’s dream of playing on the Grand Ole Opry a reality. This “can-do” spirit, which helped Bobby realize his dream, is what allowed Anna Schwaber to achieve hers. The young director/producer of The Porchlight Sessions pointed to Bobby’s story as an inspiration while completing the film.
Osborne was in attendance on September 26 for the film’s premiere at the Franklin Theatre during IBMA week in Nashville. In addition to Bobby, other featured artists were also on hand, including Sam Bush, Mike Bub, Ronnie Reno, Lance LeRoy, Missy Raines, Chris Pandolfi, Alison Brown, Peter Rowan, Laurie Lewis, and Steve Martin & the Steep Canyon Rangers (who provided pre-show entertainment for the crowd).
Through extensive interviews and rare archival footage, The Porchlight Sessions traces the roots of bluegrass music, as well as its many shoots and branches, in a manner both informative and engaging. Newcomers to the music will enjoy it as much as lifelong fans.
Anna’s cast consists of a “who’s who” of artists in and around bluegrass music. Everyone from Ralph Stanley to Mumford & Sons, and Doyle Lawson to Trampled By Turtles share their insights on the music we know and love. Seeing Jerry Douglas speak of hearing Josh Graves for the first time, or Steve Martin recalling his experiences with John Hartford, is plainly captivating. But it’s not all interviews with artists. The Porchlight Sessions goes a step further and interviews business people, luthiers, and fans to provide a penetrating look into the bluegrass culture.
Another treat is the music recorded specifically for this project. It adds a distinct character to the experience, and took the premiere audience from their spot in the theatre to a front row seat for some truly memorable performances. These included the Steep Canyon Rangers (Matterhorn), Ralph Stanley (O Death), Yonder Mountain Stringband (Steam-Powered Aeroplane), Chris Thile (Ookpik Waltz), Bobby Osborne (Once More), The Infamous Stringdusters (17 Cents), Abigail Washburn (What Are They Doing In Heaven Today), and more.
By far the most moving moment came just after the credits had rolled. The late Doc Watson provides the most beautifully honest rendition of Amazing Grace you’ll ever hear. As soon as his powerful voice began to echo through the Franklin Theatre, the crowd went completely silent. When we all heard “I once was blind, but now I see,” there was no dry eye to be found in the house. It would be tough to imagine a better way to end the film; just thinking of it still gives me chills, with a lump in my throat.
What I particularly enjoyed about The Porchlight Sessions was the wide lens with which Anna approached her study of bluegrass. In addition to focusing on our music’s roots and its “Golden Age,” the film spends just as much time on its future which I, for one, appreciate. Not since Bluegrass Country Soul has a film captured the past, present, and future of the music in such an honest and eye-opening manner.
The Porchlight Sessions manages to show the pros and cons on both sides of the tradition/progressive fence, leaving members of either camp with a better understanding of the other side. By focusing on traditional bluegrass as well as grass-influenced folk, newgrass, and modern acoustic/Americana music, the film leaves no stone unturned in its examination of where the music is today.
Schwaber showcases many aspects of what makes this music so special: bluegrass origins, instrument building, festival culture, live radio, jam sessions, the lovely Appalachian mountains, and more.
This is, without a doubt, the most artistic bluegrass film to date. The colors are crisp and vibrant, making the natural beauty of the mountains really pop. Anna also made a great decision in hiring a first rate graphic designer to create the film’s logo, title sequence, captions, and credits. The creativity on display throughout was an added bonus to this reviewer, who was predisposed to enjoy the film in any event. Although shot over the course of several years, there is never a loss of cohesion. Scenes flow seamlessly along, like a continuos story, demonstrating Anna’s skill, artistry and professionalism.
Every twenty years or so, a bluegrass documentary comes along that captivates a generation of fans. Now in 2012, we can add Schwaber’s film to the ranks of Bluegrass Country Soul and High Lonesome. This is one you’ll be sure to watch again and again; I know I will.
Here is a complete list of the artists who appear on screen:
Dr Ralph Stanley
Jerry Douglas
The Gibson Brothers
Mumford & Sons
Noam Pikelny
Doyle Lawson
The Ragweed Boys
Steve Martin
Sam Bush
Del McCoury
Peter Rowan
Pete Wernick
Ronnie Reno
Stuart Duncan
David Holt
Mike Bub
Bela Fleck
Crooked Still
Bobby Osborne
Missy Raines
Bryan Sutton
Infamous Stringdusters
Doc Watson
Alice Gerrard
Tim O’Brien
Wayne Erbsen
Dale Ann Bradley
Abigail Washburn
Runners Of The Green Laurel
Steep Canyon Rangers
Lance Leroy
Robin Smith
Trampled By Turtles
Vince Gill
Laurie Lewis
Chris Thile
Jeff Hanna
Morgan O’Kane
Sim Daley
Mayne Smith
Yonder Mountain Stringband
Matt Wingate
Todd Phillips
Brittany Haas
Andy Hall
Alison Brown
Sierra Hull
To learn more about The Porchlight Sessions, visit theporchlightsessions.com. An interview with the film’s director/producer, Anna Schwaber, will be forthcoming.
We had written previously about the The Porchlight Sessions, a documentary film project produced and directed by Anna Schwaber, that seeks to explain the music and the culture surrounding the bluegrass scene. More than two years in the making, the movie will be premiered next week in Nashville.
Told though a mix of interviews and live footage from both stage and impromptu performances, Schwaber’s story is meant as an introduction to Appalachian-based folk music styles (old time and bluegrass), and also an antidote to the often noxious image of the people and their traditions that exist in the popular mind.
She captured thoughts from early bluegrass pioneers like Bobby Osborne, Ralph Stanley and Doc Watson, plus contemporary figures like Dale Ann Bradley, Tim O’Brien, Abigail Washburn, Steve Martin, and Peter Rowan. Input from artists on one fringe or the other (Mumford and Sons,Vince Gill, Punch Brothers) is also included.
Those in Nashville for IBMA week will have the opportunity to attend a premiere next Wednesday (9/26) at the Franklin Theatre, now under the direction of Dan Hays. Dan is well-remembered for his 21 years of service to IBMA as Executive Director, spanning the organization’s tenure in Owensboro, KY and Nashville, TN.
This gala event with begin with a performance by Steep Canyon Rangers at 7:30, following a reception and bourbon tasting. The Porchlight Sessions will be screened after the Rangers’ set, and Anna will take questions from the audience at its conclusion.
Then on Friday (9/28) at 11:00 a.m., the film will be screened at the Country Music Hall of Fame, located a short distance from the Fan Fest site in Nashville. Schwaber will again accept questions after the showing.
We hope to have a reviewer at one of these screenings.
A 4 minute trailer has been released from The Porchlight Sessions, a new documentary film from Anna Schwaber that seeks to provide a more accurate glimpse into the culture of bluegrass music and bluegrass people than is common provided in the pop culture.
The story is told primarily in an interview format, and Schwaber collected hours of footage with icons like Bobby Osborne, Ralph Stanley and Doc Watson, as well as current touring artists like Dale Ann Bradley, Tim O’Brien, Abigail Washburn, Peter Rowan, and The Infamous Stringdusters, and instrument makers like Sim Daley and Robin Smith. She also visited festivals and captured plenty of music as well.
Using stunning visuals, compelling content and the sort of quick cuts and multiple images on screen that will be familiar to younger viewers and followers of independent film, this project is poised to penetrate the consciousness of potential bluegrass lovers who might not have discovered it otherwise.
Have a look at the trailer, followed by an interview with Anna Schwaber.
Can you explain a bit about your interest in bluegrass and old time music?
“Growing up in Nashville, the music was always in the backdrop for me and was not something I really paid too much attention to until just after college when I did a program in Australia. I befriended a banjo player in Canberra who had spent time in Nashville and loved a lot of the aspects of my up bringing that I had overlooked. Going on tour with his band and being a part of the fringe old-time/bluegrass scene there, I fell in love with the late night jam sessions and fireside hangs and was the way I connected to something that felt like home while I was abroad.
I’ve always been interested in music and have an extensive knowledge in many genres of music through working in music television, live event production, and as an on-air DJ. I think at some point you start to dive deeper into certain genres of music and Bluegrass has been exactly that for me. It has captured me and fascinated me over and over again…and why I spend so much time geeking out to obscure recordings that I discover that Neil Rosenberg or Mayne Smith might recommend.”
What was the impetus behind this project?
“I realized fairly early on that there was little compelling educational content about the region of the US that I grew up in. When I younger, I was an avid white-water kayaker and spent my summers on rivers in the Smokys while based in Brevard, NC. I remember the music as a soundtrack to these adventures, which was cool and all but we’d watch films like Deliverance before kayaking the river it was filmed on, the Chatooga River.
I really didn’t like how the people of the region were depicted in mainstream cinema and felt that a lot of my distaste for the music was steeped in the fact that is was poorly documented. As an artist and filmmaker, I saw this subject as my responsibility. I wanted everyone in the masses who equated bluegrass to the misleading concepts in Deliverance to see the beauty in the culture surrounding the music as I saw it.”
Anna says that she plans for the finished film to run just shy of 90 minutes, and that it has been a struggle to cull from the nearly 3 hour rough cut that she and editor Chris Cloyd made at the start of post-production. Once the work is completed, they have ambitious plans for exhibition and distribution.
“We hope to take the film through the film festival circuit as well as screening at bluegrass festivals. There is a lot of potential for The Porchlight Sessions as a branded business as well as a feature film, and aside from our goal of broadcast distribution, I would like to ultimately have a space for bluegrass in cinema and multimedia.”
How did you select the artists and other “talking heads” that appear in the film?
“In doing research, I reached out to a couple of session musicians in Nashville about who they felt I should include in the documentary as a starting point. Based on their recommendations, I began filming in 2009. Over the years, following current bands, trends, media outlets, and doing thorough research also kept me informed on who we should speak with.
There are a lot of musicians who I tried repeatedly to film, but coordinating shooting schedules with musicians’ tour schedules can be challenging. A lot of folks involved are from Nashville mostly because there is a concentration of bluegrass and old-time musicians living in or driving distance from there, but also because I used my parent’s house as a base for filming.
I’d say we met with just as many people from our other bases in Colorado and California.”