Live Review – Ry Cooder, Sharon White and Ricky Skaggs – The Granada Theatre – 9/25/2015

Ry Cooder, Sharon White, and Ricky Skaggs

All discussions about roots music lead to some kind of history lesson. But history in theory brings tedium and loss of context. The lucky crowd on hand last Saturday at the historic Granada Theatre were given a living history lesson none of us will soon forget. Ricky Skaggs, Sharon White, Ry Cooder and a grand supporting band performed country, bluegrass and gospel songs (none younger than 1965, Skaggs informed the audience) in grand aplomb

This is the source, the core. The musical crop seed of what now goes by the umbrella Americana. And the standing room crowd stood enthralled in this living and joyous journey into history.

Masterful musicianship and dazzling harmonies (helped by Sharon’s sister and fellow Whites band member Cheryl) wasted no time with a stirring version of Louvin Brothers’s gospel favorite “Family Who Prays.” The spirit of the ages filled the theatre for a nearly 2 hour performance that would alternately hush the room in a solemn silence and then rev them up into whooping, had-clapping, boot-stomping frenzy.

“(Take Me in You) Lifeboat” by Skagg’s own mentors Flatt & Scruggs followed , then a swinging rendition of Merle Travis’ “Sweet Temptation.” Next a solum moment with a devastating Hank Williams’ mournful “Mansion on the Hill.” On through the night on sounds from a reverent band of dizzying talent. But all was not somber reflection, Skaggs, White and Cooder traded affection and jokes all night. After breaking out a banjo for Stanley Brothers’ “Cold Jordan” Cooder quipped “I learned this song from YouTube, and so can you.”

Cooder then donned one of his several vintage electric guitars for the Delmore Brothers stone-rocking “Pan American Boogie.” Then a gloriously sweeping version of Hank Snow’s “A Fool Such As I” (video below) and then Kitty Wells’ song of heartbreak and woe “Making Believe” (written by Jimmy Work), and then a smartly-dressed White nephew joined the band to add to add twin fiddle to a rousing version of what Skaggs named “The state’s national anthem,” Bob Will’s ‘San Antonio Rose.’

Skaggs fluidly moved from mandolin to fiddle to acoustic guitar to a sweet cheery red Telecaster. Cooder was the master of the elusive tone. White was the soul of classic country on acoustic and other-worldly harmonies. A 84 year old Buck White showed why he’s a master of the ivories. Ry’s son Joachim Cooder on drums and Mark Fain laid a fluid yet solid foundation for the band to dance on.

Call it what you will, the music was alive and left the audience hungry for more.

Setlist:

The Family that Prays (Louvin Brothers),
Take Me to Your Lifeboat (Flatt and Scruggs)
Sweet Temptation (Merle Travis)
Mansion on the Hill (Hank Williams)
On My Mind (Flatt and Scruggs)
Cold Jordan (The Stanley Brothers)
Daniel Prayed (Ralph Stanley)
Hold What You Got (Jimmy Martin)
Pan American Boogie (The Delmore Brothers)
Fool Such as I (Hank Snow)
Above and Beyond (Harlan Howard)
San Antonio Rose (Bob Wills)
No One Will Ever Know (Hank Williams)
Gone Home (Ricky Skaggs)
Wait a Little Longer (Bill Monroe)
No Doubt About It (Flatt and Scruggs)
Uncle Pen (Bill Monroe)

Encore:
You Must Unload (John B. Vaughan)
Don’t Get Above Your Raisin’ (Flatt and Scruggs)
Reunion In Heaven (Flatt and Scruggs)

Watch Out! Rita Hosking – ‘Resurrection’ – PREMIER

Rita Hosking - Resurrection

Rita Hosking has been doing some soul-searching. From that inward journey an album has manifested taking a look at humanity and what challenges might be ahead of us. On the song ‘Resurrection’ a languid shjmmer of acoustic guitar accompanies Hosking’s strong and warm vocals as she explores the duality of nature, religion and humanity.

Of the album and song Hosking says:

“The album roughly follows 12 steps of the hero’s journey — as described by Joseph Campbell in The Hero with a Thousand Faces. The “villain” of sorts is Wetiko — Cree word for a cannibalistic soul sickness, as discussed by Jack Forbes in Columbus and other Cannibals. I have an intro trailer to the cd here.

While in the traditional model of the hero’s journey there would be some kind of rebirth at this point, even having the hero die and come to life again, I instead rebel and state that there will be no resurrection. It’s a call to recognize our humanity (and thus our mortality), and that we’ve got one shot and better stop acting like we’ve always got second, third or fourth chances. Do it right. Many of us have a tendency to act delusional about this sort of thing.

My producer, Rich Brotherton, was egging me on while singing this one. He stopped me once and scolded something like, “you’ve just come through this ordeal, this long journey, and now you are facing the council of elders. You better make your statement clear—give it some strength!” So that’s how I imagined it while singing–I was telling them what I gather, from what I’ve seen. And I had as much right to an opinion as anyone.

Official Site

Jason Isbell Announces 2016 Winter Tour Dates

Jason Isbell

Jason Isbell’s will take the extraordinary songs from his best-selling latest (94,000 copies to date) ‘Something More Than Free’ (Southeastern Records/Thirty Tigers) on the road in the New Year. Kicking off on February 11 with two performances at ACL Live at Austin’s Moody Theater with stops in Chicago, Boston and New York City (See All Tour Dates Below).

Isbell will be backed by his crackerjack longtime band The 400 Unit, featuring Derry DeBorja (keys) Chad Gamble (drums), Jimbo Hart (bass), and Sadler Vaden (guitar). Isbell and company will be bringing the great co-headliners and openers The Avett Brothers, John Prine, Lydia Loveless, Shovels & Rope and more in support of the new dates.

Isbell has released his second ‘Building The Song’ video (above,) which featuring in studio footage as he , producer David Cobb and his bandmates created and recorded each song on Something More Than Free.

Jason Isbell & The 400 Unit – Upcoming Tour Dates

10/1 – Lexington, KY – Rupp Arena %%
10/2 – Huntsville, AL – Von Braun Center Concert Hall >> *SOLD OUT
10/3 – Memphis, TN – Orpheum Theatre >> *SOLD OUT
10/4 – Washington, DC – UNITE To Face Addiction Rally
10/8 – Springfield, MO – Gillioz Theatre $$
10/9 – Carbondale, IL – Carbondale Live on Main $$
10/10 – Bloomington, IL – The Castle Theatre $$ *SOLD OUT
10/15 – Tuscaloosa, AL – Tuscaloosa Amphitheater !!
10/16 & 17 – Charleston, SC – Charleston Music Hall \ *SOLD OUT
10/18 – Atlanta, GA – Piedmont Park Promenade ##
10/23 – Nashville, TN – Ryman Auditorium *SOLD OUT
10/24 – Nashville, TN – Ryman Auditorium *SOLD OUT
10/25 – Nashville, TN – Ryman Auditorium *SOLD OUT
10/26- Nashville, TN – Ryman Auditorium *SOLD OUT
10/29 – Amarillo, TX – Potter County Memorial Stadium **
10/30 – New Orleans, LA – Voodoo Music Experience
11/6 – Knoxville, TN – Tennessee Theatre //
11/7 – Boone, NC – Schaefer Center for the Arts
11/8 – Chattanooga, TN – Tivoli Theatre //
11/12 – Madison, WI – Capitol Theater @@
11/13 – Eau Claire, WI – State Theatre @@
11/14 – Green Bay, WI – Meyer Theatre @@
11/19 – Durham, NC – Durham Performing Arts Center << 11/20 - Roanoke, VA - Berglund Center << 11/21 - Savannah, GA - Lucas Theatre for the Arts << 12/9 - Kansas City, MO - Uptown Theater && 12/10 & 11 - Denver, CO - Ogden Theatre && *SOLD OUT 12/12 - Omaha, NE - Sokol Auditorium && 1/6 - Oslo, Norway - Rockefeller 1/7 - Stockholm, Sweden - Bern 1/8 - Gotenburg, Sweden - Pustervik 1/9 - Copenhagen, Denmark - Vega 1/11 - Berlin, Germany - Privatclub 1/12 - Hamburg, Germany - Knust 1/13 - Cologne, Germany - Blue Shell 1/15 - Amsterdam, Netherlands - Paradiso 1/16 - Brussels, Belgium - Orangerie 1/18 - Paris, France - La Maroquinerie 1/19 - Brighton, UK - Concorde 2 1/20 - Bristol, UK - Trinity 1/22 - London, UK - O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire 1/23 - Manchester, UK - Ritz 1/24 – Glasgow, UK – O2 ABC Celtic Connections 1/31-2/6 - Miami, FL - Cayamo Cruise 2/11 & 12 - Austin, TX - ACL Live at the Moody Theater ++ 2/16 - Dallas, TX - South Side Ballroom ++ 2/17 - St. Louis, MO - Peabody Opera House ++ 2/19 - Indianapolis, IN - The Murat Theatre ++ 2/20 - Chicago, IL - Chicago Theatre ++ 2/25 - New York, NY - Beacon Theatre ++ 2/27 - Boston, MA - House of Blues ++ 2/29 - Toronto, ON - The Danforth Music Hall ++ 3/1 - Royal Oak, MI - Royal Oak Music Theatre ++ 3/2 - Pittsburgh, PA - Benedum Center for the Performing Arts ++ 3/5 - St. Augustine, FL - St. Augustine Amphitheatre ++ %% = Supporting The Avett Brothers >> = Co-Headline with John Prine
$$ = Lydia Loveless supporting
!! = Sturgill Simpson & Brandy Clarke supporting
\ = Hiss Golden Messenger supporting
## = Strand of Oaks & Natalie Prass supporting
** = Ray Wylie supporting
// = Cory Branan supporting
@@ = Elizabeth Cook supporting
<< = Anderson East supporting && = Rayland Baxter supporting ++ = Shovels & Rope supporting Ryman Auditorium Special Guests: October 23: Amanda Shires October 24: Parker Millsap October 25: Hurray for the Riff Raff October 26: Chris Stapleton

Jenny Lewis Celebrates 10-Yr Anniversary of ‘Rabbit Fur Coat’ with Deluxe Reissue and Tour

Jenny Lewis  Rabbit Fur Coat'

Indie darling Jenny Lewis will celebrate the ten-year anniversary of her solo debut and One of the best roots crossovers of contemporary times, “Rabbit Fur Coat.” with the release of a deluxe limited edition remastered vinyl album, available for pre-order today at jennylewis.com.

Lewis will also do a limited tour with The Watson Twins, along with very special guest, M. Ward, just as she did ten years ago, in support of the release. Tickets go on sale September 25th and 26th at Ticketmaster.com.

Jenny Lewis’ upcoming tour dates:

09/24/15 – Marfa, TX – El Cosmico Transpecos Festival of Music and Love
10/11/15 – Las Vegas, NV – The Chelsea at The Cosmopolitan w/ Neil Young
10/13/15 – La Jolla, CA – Rimac Area at UCSD w/ Neil Young
01/29/16 – Los Angeles, CA – The Cathedral Sanctuary at Immanuel Presbyterian Church*
02/03/16 – New York, NY – The Beacon Theatre*
02/06/16 – Nashville, TN – Ryman Auditorium*

* w/ The Watson Twins and very special guest M. Ward

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_cHF6JN1I-Q

Americana Music Festival 2015 Picks

americana-fest

Sleep deprivation, dehydration and perpetual joy at musical discovery are risks faced by attendees at the 16th annual Americana Music Festival and Conference this week in Nashville.

But those voluntary perils are undertook gladly for an opportunity to see some of the best roots music from around the world playing live showcases at multiple venues around the city and to partake in panels and seminars giving career tips and insights to musicians and other industry types. Then there’s the indescribably good Hattie B’s hot chicken) located near the hosting Hutton Hotel.

I’ll be skipping this year but if I were on the ground (and had a way to be many places at the same time) these are the shows I’d be sure to see.

Tuesday, September 15th

Donnie Fritts & John Paul White – 11:00 PM – City Winery

Wednesday, September 16th

The Suffers – 10:00 PM – Cannery Ballroom

James McMurtry – 11:00 PM – City Winery

Patty Griffin – 12:00 AM – City Winery

Thursday, September 17th

Ry Cooder / Sharon White / Ricky Skaggs – 10:00 PM – 3rd & Lindsley

Buddy Miller & Marc Ribot – 3rd & Lindsley

Ryan Culwell – 8:00 PM – The Basement

Daniel Romano – 12:00 AM – The Basement

Ray Wylie Hubbard – 9:00 PM – Cannery Ballroom

Pokey LaFarge – 10:00 PM – Cannery Ballroom

Randy Rogers & Wade Bowen – 11:00 PM – Cannery Ballroom

Eilen Jewell – 9:00 PM – City Winery

Dustbowl Revival – 10:00 PM – City Winery

Jeffrey Foucault – 12:00 AM – City Winery

Legendary Shack Shakers – 8:00 PM – The High Watt

Birds of Chicago – 9:00 PM – The High Watt

Lindi Ortega – 10:00 PM – The High Watt
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7AnMZG9sgkY

Possessed by Paul James – 12:00 AM – The High Watt

Mary Gauthier – 10:00 PM – The Listening Room

The Stray Birds – 8:00 PM – Mercy Lounge

Lera Lynn – 10:00 PM – Mercy Lounge

honeyhoney – 11:00 PM – Mercy Lounge

Humming House – 12:00 AM – Mercy Lounge

Darrell Scott – 6:00 PM – Downtown Presbyterian Church

Béla Fleck & Abigail Washburn – 7:00 PM – Downtown Presbyterian Church

Friday, September 18th

Lewis & Leigh – 8:00 PM – Mercy Lounge
September 16, 12pm AMA-UK Mid-Day Party, Blue Bar
September 17, 5:30pm, Acoustic Set at British Underground High Tea, Tin Roof

Sam Outlaw – 8:00 PM – 3rd & Lindsley

Caitlin Canty – 9:00 PM – City Winery

Lee Ann Womack – 9:00 PM – 3rd & Lindsley

John Moreland – 10:00 PM – Mercy Lounge

Whitey Morgan – 10:00 PM – 3rd & Lindsley

Cale Tyson – 10:00 PM – The High Watt

Jim Lauderdale – 11:00 PM – 3rd & Lindsley

Uncle Lucius – 12:00 AM – – 3rd & Lindsley

Henry Wagons – 11:00 PM – Basement East

American Aquarium — 12:00 AM – Mercy Lounge

Saturday, September 19th

Andrew Combs – 10:00 PM – Mercy Lounge

Doug Seegers – 10:00 PM – City Winery

Gretchen Peters – 11:00 PM – City Winery

The Hello Strangers – 12:00 AM – City Winery

Fats Kaplin and friends – 11 PM – The Station Inn

Sunday, September 20th

Thirty Tigers Gospel Brunch – 1:30 PM – City Winery

Hardly Strictly Bluegrass 2015 Lineup

Hardly Strictly Bluegrass 2015

As they have done the last few years organizers of San Francisco’s Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival have trotted out over a few say streaming teaser mixes from their upcoming bill.

It’s a playful challenge for the thousands of fans that attend the free three day roots music festival at Hellman Hollow and Marx and Lindley meadows in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park to lend their ears and make their best guess as to who those 100 musical acts that will play seven stages.

Over the years I’ve attended the event it’s always unlike any live event I’ve attended. The Bay chill is tempers by warming temperatures and fleet week has the United States Navy’s flight demonstration squadron The Blue Angels zipping high overhead the largely mellow crowd enjoying great music rolling through the rolling fields under the Eucalyptus, Monterey pine, and Monterey cypress trees.

Stumped or just want to cut to the chase? Hood thing the full bill has just been confirmed.

Dave Alvin & Phil Alvin with The Guilty Ones
Scott Miller & The Commonwealth’s Ladies Auxiliary
Spirit Family Reunion
Nick Lowe
Jim White vs. The Packway Handle Band
ALO
Joe Pug
Tim Barry
Tony Joe White
Buddy Miller
Anderson East
The Oh Hellos
Robyn Hitchcock
Nels Cline & Julian Lage
The New Mastersounds
Asleep At The Wheel
Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain Boys
Flogging Molly
Delbert McClinton
Fantastic Negrito
Gregory Alan Isakov
Steve Earle & The Dukes
Jamey Johnson
Michael Franti & Spearhead
The Milk Carton Kids
Hot Tuna Electric
The Mavericks
Doobie Decibel System
Joe Jackson
Fairfield Four
Indigo Girls
Gillian Welch
Lera Lynn
Neko Case
Lee Ann Womack
Sister Sparrow & The Dirty Birds
Angel Olsen
Beth Hart
Heidi Clare & The Goose Tatums
Emmylou Harris & Rodney Crowell
Paul Weller
Boz Scaggs
The Stone Foxes
Ben Miller Band
Charles Bradley & His Extraordinaires
Monophonics
Leftover Salmon
The Blind Boys of Alabama
Chicano Batman
Pokey LaFarge

Hardly Strictly Bluegrass 2015
Three days, seven stages, over 100 artists
Friday-Sunday, October 2-4, 2015
Hellman Hollow, Lindley & Marx meadows in Golden Gate Park
FREE

Listen Up! 10 String Symphony – “Anna Jane” [PREMIERE]

10 String Symphony - "Anna Jane"

“Anna Jane,” the new cut from 10 String Symphony, starts out on a somber note, like a violin-led dirge. But the pace becomes lively in the jazz/bluegrass (jazzgrass?) style reminiscent of Nickel Creek or Sarah Jarosz, and a lovely ode to love (and jealousy) slowly blossoms. In the end, the praise of a woman tinges at the edges with a darker tone.

10 String Symphony is comprised of the exceptional talent of former Illinois fiddle champion Rachel Baiman & Christian Sedelmyer, who also occupies the fiddle position in The Jerry Douglas Band.

Of the song Rachel remembers, “Anna Jane was the first original song that Christian and I collaborated on. I had the verses all written and a version of the chorus but no real melody for the song. Christian came over and we worked the song up in my attic, where it turned into a subtly complicated affair, with the chord progression changing just slightly on each verse. My friend Caroline Spence was the first to tell me that the ‘Oh Anna Jane’ part was a chorus.

She said, ‘You totally wrote a chorus, that should be between every verse.’ I think at that point I was just over thinking everything a bit and wasn’t comfortable with such a simple refrain, when in reality, that was exactly what the song needed.

When people heard the first version of the song, (the chorus was just ‘Oh Anna Jane/Oh Anna Jane/Oh Anna Jane/Here we go again’) they often thought it was a love song. In fact, it’s a song about jealousy. But it’s that super painful form of jealousy where you want something (in this case someone) that your friend has, but at the same time, you know she is wonderful, and completely deserving of that person. It makes it all that much worse, because you really can’t bring yourself to be angry at anyone, which would be the easy way to deal with it. That is why, even though it’s not a love song, the first verse goes on and on about the virtues of ‘Anna Jane.’ I wrote all the verses in about 30 minutes in one of those really intense moments where your feelings are so big you feel like they are going to explode out of your body.

Our producer, Mark Sloan, helped us re-write the chorus to incorporate a fiddle melody that Christian wrote, and also to solidify the message of the song. He added those ‘she’s the only one you see’ and ‘I’ll never be what you need’ parts. I was so attached to the song I didn’t think I’d be willing to change it, but when he sent me recordings of those ideas, he had just nailed it so perfectly melodically and lyrically, that Christian and I both immediately loved it, which is RARE! Haha.”

10 String Symphony will release ‘Weight of the World’ on October 23.

Rosanne Cash Artist in Residency – Night Two Country Music Hall of Fame w Emmylou Harris & Lucinda Williams

Rosanne Cash,  Emmylou Harris & Lucinda Williams

Photo by Rick Diamond, Getty Images

This is a guest post by Holly Gleason

​When Emmylou Harris sang, “One thing they don’t tell you about the blues when you got ‘em/ You keep on falling ‘cause they got no bottom” in the aching “Red Dirt Girl,” the first song in what was supposed to be Rosanne Cash’s second night as the Country Music Hall of Fame’s 2015 Artist in Residency, the night seemingly could’ve turned into a night of one upsmanship and “watch this.” Raw, almost bleeding and deeply vulnerable, Harris’ song set a high bar for artistry and emotional pulse that could’ve read as a challenge.

​But given that Harris and Cash have been dear friends for 35 years and Lucinda Williams friends for almost 25, what emerged was a testimony to love, grace, talent and songs well-realized. Drawing on old songs, cover songs and songs yet to be recorded, the American roots music queen wove a tapestry of human emotion that brought everyone in touch with their deepest – perhaps even unacknowledged – selves.

​Seeing three women who’ve lived lives, ignited intense love affairs, faced great disappointments, shored up, thrived not just survived – and then wrote or found songs that distilled those things is a thrill. But to watch them love and respect each other unabashedly, shower the others with compliments and tell cheeky stories is to understand the power of women unfurled.

​For Rosanne Cash, whose velvety claret voice soothed Williams’ rusty barb wire tones on the final verse and chorus of “Sweet Old World,” the most rock-leaning of the threesome inspired a moment of true rapture with her song of death and devastation. Williams’ version of the song from the 1992 album of the same name has taken the stunned despair and deepened it with both a world-weary recognition of how much it hurts losing people you love and an appreciation for how wonderful the world is.

​Emmylou Harris waxed wry, offering the insight about NPR’s liberal point of view: “the truth” before launching into stark “Emmett Till,” which she introduced by explaining his racially-driven murder 50 years ago may well have tipped the civil rights struggle in a way that allowed Barack Obama to America’s first black President. Not one to preach, the gently reflection suggests much about the power of songs and women to deliver volatile social messages in ways that make injustice emerge on their own.

​That is the power of the feminine mystique in experienced hands: they can tackle charged topics, embrace Bob Dylan (Cash’s “Girl from North Country”) with innocence informed by passion, get visibly emotional (Williams before singing her beauty in the ravages “When I Look At the World” from last year’s “Where The Spirit Meets The Bone” album) and near intimidation (Cash talking about how she spent her first five years trying to impress Harris “and this song did it”) met with off-handed humor (Harris’ reply “which one?”) as the walk-up to Cash’s second #1, the dusky torch “Blue Moon with Heartache.”

​For those gathered in the 800-seat Ford Theater, it was the rare peak into the realm of women unfettered. The pair let it all hang out: glorying in songs, basking or demurring from the praise, making off-handed jokes and being unabashedly honest about their love for each other. In the small details – designer Natalie Chanin’s teaching Cash to sew with the admonition “You have to learn to love the thread” turning into the metaphor that inspired the double-Grammy winner “A Feather’s Not A Bird” or Harris revealing the inspiration culled from a birthday gift from the late Susanna Clark, “a print of a Terry Allen piece, what looked like a Leonardo DaVinci drawing of an arm, which would’ve been enough, but then there was a boat emerging from the arm, and it was called, ‘When She Kisses The Ship Upon His Arm” – empowers and grounds part of where their strength lies.

​But more than that, it is the communion of friends, artists, muses. For Cash’s second night of a three night residency – the final being September 24 – she pulled back the veil and revealed the essence of a woman’s heart. It is joy, hope, sorrow and beauty all tempered with love and knowing, and when it is joined to songs tendered with lyrics of nuance, it is a stunning thing, indeed.

​By the time of the encore, the cheers had taken on a force of their own. After pulling Cash’s breakthrough “Seven Year Ache,” the tale of a heartbreak moving through a wide swath of town, as the common ground, each woman had shown her strength and lifted the others up. Celebratory, that man become incidental – yet Johnny Cash’s “I Still Miss Someone,” the night’s final song, also suggested these three understand the potency of romance, desire and falling in love to the hilt.
​What isn’t necessary becomes wanted, and that is the magic of life, emotion and the uncertainty of how we move through the world. Standing shoulder to shoulder on the edge of the stage, Cash, Harris and Williams bowed – as much to the forces that brought them to this place as to the packed house on their feet.

Holly Gleason has written regularly for ROLLING STONE, THE LOS ANGELES TIMES, PASTE, NO DEPRESSION and HITS, as well as contributing to RELIX, THE OXFORD AMERICAN, PLAYBOY and THE NEW YORK TIMES. She lives in Nashville, Tennessee.

Watch Out! Morrissey Covers Waylon Jennings’ ‘Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way?’

Morrissey Covers Waylon Jennings

Growing up as country and metal as my primary cultural staple I never caed for The Smiths (too whiney, though “How Soon Is Now’ is badass) and was never a Moz solo fan (too mopey and pseudo clever) But I do have to give the man credit for pulling off a damn fine rendition of ‘Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way?’

Last Saturday from the stage of the The Visalia Fox Theatre Morrissey, dressed like a paunchy X Men, and his cracker-jack band gave his all to Waylon Jennings’ first single from the album Dreaming My Dreams’ album. A not too subtle middle finger to Music Row that was released 40 years to the month and Jennings’ fourth number one on the country chart as a solo artist.

I do like the idea of a crowd of Morrissey fans largely wondering what the hell they were listening to.

Listen Up! The Afternoon Edition – “Fallow” [Album Premier]

The Afternoon Edition

Brothers Connor and Shane Noetzel put their experience playing in bands together through high school and college to great use. While in college, Connor befriended Brian Gallio , bonding over kindred love of music. After graduation the three burgeoning troubadours moved in together – with Connor as lead vocalist and main songwriter, Shane on lead guitar, and Brian on banjo, acoustic guitar, and piano – to focus on cultivating their craft.

After releasing their debut EP “No One Will Know” in May of 2013 the trio went on to perform those new songs at iconic New York spots like The Bitter End, The Living Room, Pianos, and Rockwood Music Hall.

The result is The Afternoon Edition. The New York based roots trio echo their shared heroes throughout the 10 cuts on their full-length debut “Fallow.” Shades of The Band, Crosby Stills Nash and Young, The Byrds, even contemporaries like Beck, The Avett Brothers and My Morning Jacket are heard throughout. From the yearning, Sea Change-esque opener “Let You In” to the sunny ease of the album closer ‘The World Will Beat A Path,’ on display is a passion for great 60’s and 70’s folk and country songwriting backed by spirited musicianship.

On the new album the band says “As far back as we can remember, the sounds of the 60’s and 70’s were hitting our eardrums and churning up emotion and fascination before we were even aware. The most captivating part of this music for us is the influence and history it contributed to in our own backyard, The Hudson Valley. Stemming from Westchester, and gathering inspiration from the natural beauty the Hudson Valley provides, it’s hard not to feel the same influence this area had on our heroes in the Folk/Americana scene years ago. We’ve set out to continue that tradition, and to use the same tools these artist had to create music that comes from the same rivers, hills and valleys that used to inspire them, and in turn now inspires us. It was only natural for us to wrap them in the Americana and Country aesthetic, which have always provided us with the comfort of wearing our hearts on our sleeves.”

‘Fallow’ will be released on August 28th