There are more trees than people in San Isabel, Colorado, where the Wet Mountains poke the sky and Jamestown Revivalâs Zach Chance and Jonathan Clay set up a makeshift recording studio in a cabin. The Texas natives emerged with San Isabel, a gorgeous new album that marks both a return to Jamestown Revivalâs acoustic roots and a bold step forward into more topical lyricism.
While addressing the unease now shaping the countryâs collective mindset is a first for the pair, the record maintains Zach and Jonathanâs anchors of empathy and hope â along with their now-signature Southern folk harmonies that are woven together with that unexplainable richness usually reserved for families.
With a day off from touring, Jamestown Revival called in for a conversation with the Bluegrass Situation.
BGS: Location seems important to you guys. Take your album titles, for example. Utah was your first, and now, with San Isabel, youâve returned to an album title that documents where you recorded. Youâre not from or living in Utah or Colorado, but you sought them out. Why?
Jonathan Clay: Colorado is a place weâve always loved. Long story short, we had access to a summer cabin in Colorado, and we thought, Gosh, we should take advantage of this.
Zach Chance: Itâs kind of twofold. It was access to those places and trying to record in a guerrilla fashion. We enjoy the adventure of it — going and setting up in these settings, being removed — it just makes for a really fun process for us.
JC: For us, the city is not really conducive to creativity. Itâs just not where I feel compelled to create.
ZC: The city has its own flavor of inspiration. It does inspire us at times, but itâs not really where we like to record, soâŚ
JC: We have a habit of getting out into the woods when weâre ready to make an album.
Why did you guys decide to return to a more acoustic sound this time around, compared to The Education of a Wandering Man?
ZC: We werenât touring as much as we had been the past couple of years. Weâd been writing for some other things, and we just really wanted to go back to two voices â to write songs that could work with one guitar and two voices, back to the roots of what we were doing. I donât know if it was all the noise of the time we live in right now, but we wanted something more centered around traditional folk storytelling. We were listening to a lot of Bob Dylan, Crosby, Stills, Nash, & Young â stuff like that. We felt compelled to live in that world.
Do you have favorite songs on the new record?
ZC: I donât know. As soon as we start talking about them, Iâll tell you all the reasons I love them. Maybe Iâm too diplomatic. I love âHarder Wayâ and âWho Hung the Moon.â That was a song we wrote in Colorado and recorded in a day. Theyâre like children. We love them all equally but differently. This might sound really dumb [Laughs], but there have been times playing âCrazy Worldâ that I get kind of choked up. I start thinking about everything, and I get a little sad. The first few times we played it out, I got really emotional. We want to write stuff that ages like weâre aging — that matures a little bit.
JC: I think thatâs a good point. We want our art to grow with us and mature with and without our listeners. I really like âWho Hung the Moon.â âHarder Wayâ is a pretty special song. Iâm actually pulling my three-year-old boy on the scooter right now, humming melodies that I donât know. Itâs a special thing. When I sing the line about my boy, itâs coming from a real place. I have to hold back emotions sometimes because I think, Iâve got an audience to perform to. I canât get choked up because that makes it hard to sing.
It seems like more and more artists feel obligated to address the uneasiness in the country right now. San Isabel does it â not necessarily explicitly, but it is still more topical than your previous work. Did you feel obligated to do that?
JC: I donât think it was out of obligation more than it was just compulsion. We just felt compelled. Itâs on everybodyâs mind âeverybodyâs consciousness. As an artist, I think your consciousness manifests in your songs. Thatâs what happened with us.
First, you take a beat to acknowledge the despair a lot of folks are feeling in âCrazy World.â
JC: Zach and I have always been careful not to speak from some place of moral high ground. We donât want to be just one more person preaching to somebody, as if weâve got all the answers, because I think the problems plaguing our country are very complicated. If you oversimplify them and place blame, youâre falling victim to the very thing youâre proclaiming to rally against.
In a lot of our songs, we just point out what we see. Itâs almost a lament rather than a judgment. Weâre all in this together. All of our countrymen and women, we created this â we all played a hand in it. Weâre trying to point out our observations and underscore the fact that weâre all on the same team, when you really get down to it. We all do care about each other. I feel like weâve got more in common than we realize sometimes. It seems like sometimes the world is wrapped up in greed and malice and angst and vitriol rather than peace and — not to sound cheesy, but — harmonious things, the things that really give us happiness.
ZC: Yeah, itâs funny. âCrazy World (Judgment Day)â and âThis Too Shall Passâ are back to back on the album. And those are like two sides of the same coin, you know? âCrazy Worldâ is the day you wake up and think, I have zero hope for humanity. The idea was youâre sitting in a bar, and youâve had a few to drink. Stuff is coming across the news, and youâre just discussing the state of affairs, like, âYeah, man. Itâs still a crazy world. Not much has changed.â
I love that you just brought up that itâs like those two songs are two sides of the same coin because it does feel like âThis Too Shall Passâ offers some comfort.
ZC: Yeah, as dark as I can get, I recognize that Iâm probably a glass is half full person. John, I think you are too.
JC: Oh, Iâm a hopeless optimist.
ZC: [Laughs] So, that song speaks to that. No matter how dismal it is, we have to find a silver lining. Friendships and family are where the true joys in your life come from, more often than not.
Whatâs the best thing youâve encountered or experienced back on the road this time?
ZC: Oh gosh, I have so many good ones. Eating dumplings in New York in this little shop in Chinatown. We crammed in with all our people, sat with strangers, and the beers were flowing. Those nights are fun. The camaraderie of being on tour again: Youâre just living together, and you come home with a million new inside jokes and phrases.
JC: One thing that was really cool about this tour is we brought somebody out in our crew as a roadie who had never been out of Texas. We saw the world through his eyes. His parents brought him here from Mexico when he was six years old. He hasnât had the opportunity to do much traveling. I met him and thought he seemed like a cool dude, so we gave him a job as a roadie.
ZC: Weâre all a bit more advanced in age and have made a few more laps around the country, so in some ways, you can be jaded by that. But heâs 21, and experiencing all these things for the first time. It was really fun to relive some of this stuff through his eyes.
On this album, it feels like you have found your sound, at least for now. Comparisons to Simon & Garfunkel are inevitable, but ultimately, you donât sound like anyone else out there right now.
JC: Well thatâs a huge compliment. I appreciate that.
ZC: We definitely look up to Simon & Garfunkel and the Everly Brothers and would gladly take a comparison, but humbly say those guys are masters. Weâre trying to figure it out.
JC: Yeah, those guys are masters, but we want to be masters. Somebodyâs got to carry the torch. Iâm not saying that in a cocky way, but I would love to be somebody that attempts to carry the torch. Itâs what we love to do, and itâs what we love to sing. Singing without harmony — I donât enjoy it half as much. When I sing with Zach, my voice feels complete. So itâs almost like a musical necessity for us.
If it were just the harmonies, the comparisons to Simon & Garfunkel would still come, but itâs your writing too, which is so strong.
JC: A lot of people still ask, “Are yâall brothers? The way yâall harmonize, I feel like you have to have grown up with each other.” Well, weâre not brothers, but we have been singing together since we were 15 years old, so I guess thatâs about as close as you can get without being blood-related. Itâs like a vocal marriage.
As far as the writing goes, we try to be thoughtful and not say things in a way thatâs been said before. We knew early on that we wanted to be the kind of writers who are not overly esoteric or hard to understand. We wanted to speak in a way thatâs plain and understandable but at the same time, maybe put in a way that you havenât quite heard it put before.
Photo credit: Paul Pryor