From the Bluegrass Situation and WMOT Roots Radio, it’s Hangin’ & Sangin’ with your host, BGS editor Kelly McCartney. Every week Hangin’ & Sangin’ offers up casual conversation and acoustic performances by some of your favorite roots artists. From bluegrass to folk, country, blues, and Americana, we stand at the intersection of modern roots music and old time traditions bringing you roots culture — redefined.
With me today at Hillbilly Central, Travis Meadows. Welcome.
Glad to be here.
So happy youāre here. You have a new record, First Cigarette.
Yes, maāam.
Itās a beauty, man. It really is.
Iām pretty excited about it!
ā¦
I feel like … āif onlysā are a big part of this record, or the disposing thereof — the discarding of excuses of not being right here, right now. Thatās in the title track and in a bunch of the other songs. So, the balancing act between accepting where you are and who you are, and still striving to be better — how do you see that and how do you achieve that?
Oh, man! I didnāt realize it was gonna get so deep in this interview.
Oh, yeah, man. [Laughs]
You know, I donāt know. My whole life these days is kind of in 24-hour increments. I canāt get too locked into the past because I canāt do anything about that, and I canāt do anything about tomorrow, so my whole life is just kind of centering around āright now.ā And that kind of reflects itself in my writing, you know what I mean?
Trying to give your best to this moment.
To this moment, yeah! And I will say that, on this record, I did something that I had not done on the previous records, and that was taking into consideration the audience listening. Itās such an unusual thing that is happening in my life, but I didnāt know that people were gonna gravitate to these songs and that I was actually gonna get invited to play places … But then I started [thinking], you know, “If I were in the audience and I was listening to one wrist-slitter after another, I wouldnāt like this! Itās a little depressing.”
And so, on this record, I was very adamant about putting some breathers in there, some levity, just a chance to enjoy music and not have to think as much as you were on the previous songs. You know what I mean? Which, in some ways, is, I feel like, a little bit of a sign of personal growth, because the first two records were just completely self-absorbent, self-indulgent records. I was just writing songs for me. And I still write songs for me, but I was thinking, “If I were in the audience, I would want something fast every now and then. Iād want a little breathing time.”
But I think, even if you are writing for you, if youāre writing with truth, itās gonna resonate with people.
I think so.
And I think about, on this record, a song like āBetter Boat.ā Thatās a song that I resonate with and I think probably a lot of people would — anyone whoās trying to better themselves by going deeper into their relationships. Thatās what that is to me, you know?
Yeah, absolutely.
But that wasnāt always how you looked at life was it? Through that lens?
No, and regrettably I can still be quite pessimistic. You know, Iām just a dark son of a gun! But Iām getting better about it, and Iām embracing the moment more and more. Iāve actually — I cannot believe Iām about to say this — but Iāve actually, even in the past week with the reaction to the record where I ought to be jumping up and down and just beside myself, Iām kind of freaking out. People cannot like this this much! Thatās my brain. And I have to [think], “They keep showing up to the shows.” So itās humbling and itās challenging and, heck, if theyāre gonna keep showing up, Iām gonna keep showing up. And thatās kind of where Iām at.
Sometimes, I think, for those of us who have had troubled or dark or broken lives — which, technically, is everybody …
Pretty much.
Some more than others. But I think joy is one of the hardest things to embrace, right?
I went through a preacher phase for a while. It’s so funny because I’ve gone through these little chapters of my life. I almost completely change. I look at those chapters like it was somebody else. … One or two [of my long-time friends] said, “I don’t know what you were doing in the preaching days, but you’re preaching now.” And that was way too much responsibility for me. … I’m just singing my songs. That’s enough for me.
But it did make me look at, “What is it that I am doing?” And I think what it is, with me being this vulnerable and telling this much truth about myself, I think Iām giving people permission to be okay with themselves — who they are, where they are, scars and all. I think we have this kind of messed up idea, “Well, if I could marry this person, or if I had this much money, or if I was doing this job instead of this one, things would be better.” And I think the secret is, if Iāve stumbled onto anything in these few years that Iāve been kickinā around, is that the idea of contentment comes from being okay where youāre at right now, which is hard. Itās like a bird that lands on your shoulder and as soon as you look, itās gone! But those moments where you have that serenity, that calm, that peace.
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But I think the other thing that you do through your songs is, by digging into your truth and laying it out there for the whole world to see, in all its ragged vulnerability and rawness, youāre giving people the permission to look at their stuff, too. And theyāll be like, āOh, well, heās doing that, so maybe itās okay if I kind of turn the lens inward a little bit.ā
Absolutely.
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Photo credit: Joshua Black Wilkins