LISTEN: Joe Henry, “Kitchen Door”

Artist: Joe Henry
Hometown: Charlotte, North Carolina; Rochester, Michigan
Song: “Kitchen Door”
Album: All the Eye Can See
Release Date: January 27, 2023
Label: earMUSIC

In Their Words: “I very rarely know where a song comes from, or what it’s ‘about’ in the real time of writing it; and I am sincere when I tell you that I have no desire to know — as I never want to find myself anticipating direction, or trying to steer the discovery that is a song’s hallmark and most potent offering. Additionally, I will confess here that even when I do know, I’m not likely to be forthcoming about it when asked; because I don’t want a listener either to be making assumptions about the experience that a song so uniquely shepherds. Best always for practitioners and receivers alike to plunge headfirst into a song’s water and let it swallow you whole, with all mystery intact.

“Having said that, I’d feel disingenuous right now — having been asked directly about this particular song — to feign ignorance; for in this unique case, I can readily trace its point of origin, and identify its beating heart …

“My beloved mother passed away, suddenly and with no warning, on the last day of May, 2020, at the home she shared with our father in Shelby, NC. Owing to those early and confusing days of the Covid lockdown — and my own status of being somewhat immune compromised — I was initially unable to travel from my home in Los Angeles to join my grieving dad and siblings. It took three weeks, in fact, for me to find my way safely there to stand with them.

(Read more from Joe Henry below the video player.)

“I’d assumed to feel my mother’s spirit still occupying the house, as my brothers and sister had reported they’d sensed; but as it turned out, once there — and though her handiwork is evident in every corner of that old farm house — I could not divine her presence; felt certain that wherever it is that people go upon departure … she’d flown there.

“As I lay alone and awake in one of my old bunk-beds in the converted attic that first night — weary, and very heavy of heart — I heard myself ask toward the ceiling,

“‘Where are you?’

“ — and knew even as those words escaped me that she was and remains all around and within me.

“The song that followed a day or two after returning home picked up on that very thread. And though the first two verses may strike a more abstracted tone, it is the final one that speaks for me personally as I have rarely allowed a song to. And my willingness to let it stand says less about my evolution as a songwriter, and more about my dedication to letting, as always, a song speak its piece and have its way.” — Joe Henry


Photo Credit: David McClister

Folk Alliance International 2023: Valerie June, Mary Gauthier, Janis Ian, and More

This week in Kansas City, Folk Alliance International beckons to those people who love intimate songwriting, intentional activism, and interesting interactions at every turn. The Bluegrass Situation will be on the ground with hundreds of other music fans and performers, seeking out new talent and engaging with the legends. Here are some of the moments we’re most looking forward to.

First-Timers Orientation
Wednesday, February 1 at 3 pm

Pretty much everything related to this conference–from the trade show to the showcases–takes place inside the Westin Hotel, so you’ll find yourself squishing into elevators with the same faces throughout the five-day event. The inevitable question is, “What are you going to see next?” That’s up to you, of course, but this mixer will help you make a game plan to maximize your time at Folk Alliance. Sure, it can be intimidating at first. But once you get used to it, it’s also one of the most welcoming events in the music industry.


International Folk Music Awards
Wednesday, February 1 at 8 pm

One of the most popular gatherings of the week, the International Folk Music Awards recognize the achievements of the past year as well as the accomplishments of the genre’s icons. Leyla McCalla and the Milk Carton Kids are among the confirmed performers. Take a look at the nominees and special award recipients and enjoy an evening of wonderful speeches and song.


Black American Music Summit
Wednesday, February 1 at 4 pm
Thursday, February 2 at 11:30 am
Friday, February 3 at 12 pm
Saturday, February 4 at 12 pm

Black artists and industry members will confer about ways to empower one another with daily conversations during this four-day summit. The first session on Wednesday is subtitled “Setting the Tone,” while Thursday tackles the theme of “It Takes a Village,” which helps leaders learn how to lean on others to grow their business. On Friday, the topic is “Money Matters,” with tips on identifying revenue streams and best practices for touring, applicable to artists and industry alike. The final installment on Saturday explores the vast and ever-changing modern landscape of Black Music with a two-hour program subtitled “Lifting the Gaze.”


Valerie June Keynote Address and Artist in Residence
Thursday, February 2 at 1:30 pm

Tennessee native Valerie June is one of the most versatile figures in roots music, with her creative output ranging from Grammy-nominated albums to a new children’s book. Her afternoon keynote address is likely to touch on some of her favorite themes, such as finding joy, mindfulness, and communing with Mother Nature. Prior to her appearance, the conference will host a presentation from its Artist in Residence. Cary Morin will speak about his experiences with Friends of the Kaw, a grassroots organization dedicated to protecting the Kaw River (also known as the Kansas River). He will also sing a song written about the experience.


The Queer Pulse of Society: A Conversation About Community and Social Sustainability
Friday, February 3 at 10 am

This conversation presented by Bluegrass Pride will offer insight from performers and industry professionals about their interactions in the music community. Topics include intersectionality, identity politics, and socially sustainable models of business. The discussion will be led by Lillian Werbin (president and co-owner of Elderly Instruments), Marcy Marxer (a prolific recording artist in children’s music), and Sara Gougeon (founder of Queerfest and part of the FAI social media and marketing team).


Mary Gauthier: Saved by a Song
Friday, February 3 at 2 pm

Mary Gauthier shared her highs and lows of her path in her thought-provoking memoir, Saved by a Song: The Art and Healing Power of Songwriting. In this special interview session at Folk Alliance, she will describe how songwriting can bring people together, even when it seems that they have nothing in common. If you’re looking for wisdom and insight from one of our most masterful artists, don’t miss this one. The interview will be conducted by folk radio personality Marilyn Rea Breyer.


CommUNITY Gathering: Meet the Team
Saturday, February 4 at 9:30 am

It should be clear by now that Folk Alliance has an approachable vibe. That extends all the way to the organization’s leadership. All delegates at the conference are invited to this gathering that features new executive director Neeta Ragoowansi and new board president Ashley Shabanakareh. After a few remarks, there’s a casual meet-and-greet. BGS executive director Amy Reitnouer Jacobs will also be on hand, alongside Folk Alliance deputy director Jennifer Roe. Yes, we know it’s early, but there’s coffee!


Janis Ian: In Her Own Words
Saturday, February 4 at 10:45 am

The enduring singer-songwriter known for “Society’s Child” and “At Seventeen” is now in the twilight of her career. An unusual case of laryngitis forced her to cancel her farewell tour but it hasn’t dimmed her status in the folk community. She’s revered for her way with words and her honesty, not to mention six decades on stages around the world. Her final album, The Light at the End of the Line, is a proper coda to her recording career but you can expect this informal chat to survey her full career. Stick around for a Q&A after the talk.


Songs of Hope, Songs of Change
Sunday, February 5 at 10 am

By now, you’ve made new friends, discovered amazing artists, and stayed up waaay later than usual. Congrats! Close out the event with this grassroots multi-artist concert featuring songs written about climate and social justice written by FAI artists. Hosted by the People’s Music Network, the event is intended to rally the activist in all of us. As the (highly recommended) Folk Alliance 2023 app says, “Come lend your ear and lift your voice at this Sunday morning event, as our community collectively and creatively engages with messaging and meaning that will inspire us all.”


LISTEN: Frances Luke Accord, “All the Things”

Artist: Frances Luke Accord
Hometown: South Bend, Indiana (Brian Powers), Boston & Chicago (Nicholas Gunty)
Song: “All the Things”
Album: Safe in Sound
Release Date: February 9, 2023
Label: Two-Dale Records/Tone Tree Music

In Their Words: “A song that speaks to the heart of our indie/folk/bluegrass/pop sensibilities, ‘All the Things’ is a playful but heartfelt ode to boundless love and companionship. Made with help from Don Mitchell (banjo, percussion, harmonium, production) of Darlingside, this happy-go-lucky tune is a warm ray of sunshine on our sophomore LP, Safe in Sound. Written during the dark days of COVID lockdown, we crafted the lyrics in a way that (we hope!) begs the listener to stay unabashedly hopeful and CONNECTED; for at the end of the day, our perspective on suffering — coupled with our ability to discuss it in an honest and open way with others — will determine its grip on us. We hope you like it as much as we enjoyed writing it!” — Brian Powers & Nicholas Gunty, Frances Luke Accord


Photo Credit: Luke Jackson

Mark O’Connor Recalls His First Fiddle Contests in New Book, ‘Crossing Bridges’

As one of the most accomplished fiddle players of his generation, Mark O’Connor could fill a book with all of his musical achievements. Instead, he goes all the way back to the beginning in Crossing Bridges: My Journey from Child Prodigy to Fiddler Who Dared the World. Retracing his seminal experiences on the stage and in the studio, the memoir concludes in the early 1980s, just as O’Connor is poised to make his mark in Nashville’s country music community.

Crossing Bridges is being released on February 10, 2023, in conjunction with the CD titled Early Childhood Recordings and a collection of photos taken by his mother titled A Musical Childhood in Pictures. The Bluegrass Situation is pleased to share an excerpt from the first chapter of Crossing Bridges below.


I WAS A MERE BEGINNER BACK IN 1973, when the legendary Texas fiddler, Benny Thomasson, stopped to listen to me in the hallway of an Oregon schoolhouse as I warmed up on my tunes with an elderly blind guitarist from the area. At these local fiddle contests, Marshall Jackson enjoyed accompanying most anyone who asked. I glanced up to see Benny Thomasson coming down the long corridor, making his way toward us. I was practicing my contest round of three tunes: a hoedown, a waltz, and my tune of choice.

My first entrance in a fiddle contest was just a month earlier at the gold standard—the famed National Old-Time Fiddlers Contest in Weiser, Idaho. My instructor, Barbara Lamb, a talented 14-year-old fiddler who was also living in Seattle, was teaching me very well and charging just $4 a lesson. Barbara was preparing me for the little kids division at Weiser: the “Junior-Juniors.” This new division got going because a few youngsters in the Pacific Northwest wanted to fiddle. None of them, however, could be accomplished enough to compete against the older fiddlers. Barbara assured my mother that I could win one of the three prizes offered, but only if I practiced my rounds just as she was teaching me. Only three kids had entered the year before.

To aid in our collective effort, my mother, Marty, snuck my guitar away when I was at school. She learned to play rhythm guitar with a flat-pick all on her own, just so I could get better timing on the fiddle tunes I was learning. I was benefitting from the harmony and the counterpoint we created between the two instruments played together—a wise musical portrait to learn the violin. I could even find my pitches better when Mom added her chord changes. Mom had no experience playing instruments other than a couple years of piano lessons as a girl. She became quite good at guitar backup, even within a few weeks. Mom kept pace with me for a while, until she figured I was speeding on past her. Like lightning.

Barbara was right. At Weiser, I came out of there with a 2nd place trophy and $15. Most of all, we met a lot of wonderful people who would become our new friends in music. Folks there informed us about other Northwest fiddle contests we should go to that summer. We stumbled into a new world teeming with old-time fiddlers.

WHEN I WAS EIGHT, I saw Cajun fiddler Doug Kershaw on television: The Johnny Cash Show. That was in 1969. I was so excited by it that I begged for a fiddle for three whole years before I finally got one. My parents couldn’t afford another instrument, they always told me. Disheartened, I attempted to make a fiddle out of cardboard, using crayons to color it brown. I used more colors for the inlays. My effort folded up on me when I tried to use my guitar strings on it. By age 11, Mom finally gave in and got me a $50 fiddle from Al Sanderson, an old fiddler from Sweden we discovered lived nearby. For the next couple of weeks, I fiddled Kershaw’s “Louisiana Man” on just one string—pretty much non-stop. I played it with all four fingers, sliding up and down the neck in various positions to find the pitches. I could relate it to guitar fingering. As soon as we found a teacher, though, I started real lessons—with Barbara Lamb on October 28th, 1972. I was filled with so much joy and wonder over the fiddle.

Benny Thomasson’s favorite fiddle student in Washington state was Loretta Brank. Just one year older than me, she was winning the little kids divisions in the area handily. She repeated her 1st place standing in the Junior-Juniors at Weiser the very first year I entered. Loretta had been playing a few more years than my seven months, and it showed. Her father Kenneth, originally from North Carolina, was an old-time fiddler himself. He was responsible for making sure there was at least a little bit of prize money for his daughter and the other kiddies at Weiser. The money could provide some good incentive for those little ones to practice, he rightly expected.

Well, in a flash I was in love. Loretta was so very pretty. I did admire how good she could play at her age, too. I think I looked forward to seeing Loretta at those first summer fiddle contests more than entering them. But I thought I was too young for her, and probably not good enough on the fiddle yet. After all, she was 12, and I was still 11.

I was also going through one of the many awkward phases I faced as a child. I had a very gentle look about me, with full lips. I wore braces, too. That year, more than a few people mistook me for a girl, including some of the new kids at school. When the old-timers would approach my mother though, I cringed as they asked her, “How long has your little girl been playing the fiddle?” I had longish hair that Mom liked on me. For some quirky reason, she wanted my hair on the sides to be parted by my ears. That meant a whole chunk of hair in front of the ears. It was just so dumb looking, I thought. I argued with her about it, too, but she insisted; “Your ears should show.”

That was such a wacky thing with her, and I absolutely hated it. But I was plagued by my own wacko things, like this odd phobia, an undiagnosed paranoia called koumpounophobia—the fear of buttons. In practical terms, this meant that I would not go near anything with buttons, such as button-down shirts. The jeans had to have a snap button. So, what I wore during those years were mostly turtlenecks and pullover zipper tops. I loved those zipper tops because the turtlenecks always made my neck feel scratchy in the summer. At the time, my mother refused to allow me to wear T-shirts or sweatshirts on stage or at school. None of this helped people figure out if I was a little boy or a little girl.

I have that same button phobia even today, as I write this at 61, although it is easily manageable now. I still think about it every time I button up, though—never feeling very comfortable with the act of buttoning shirts. Despite it, I eventually learned to associate buttons with getting dressed up for musical performances—something I love to do and needed to do. I still mostly wear T-shirts when I want to feel pleasant, but as a kid anything with buttons was 100 percent a no-go.

Another remnant I carry to this day is that I never go anywhere without a handkerchief. That all started back then too. I had severe summertime hay fever in the Northwest. My Mom actually wondered if I was simply allergic to Seattle… and I may have been allergic to it, as it turns out. Just when I wanted to say something to Loretta at a fiddle contest, I usually had to sneeze and blow my nose first.

I had so many social oddities, I spent most of that whole year turning red in the face from embarrassment—triggered by most anything you could imagine. Even my ears would turn bright red, especially when they were “showing.” If someone looked my way, my entire face turned crimson, as if on cue.

I didn’t seem like the most promising child to take on a life in the entertainment field. I did wonder if I could ever get to a confidence level where I didn’t turn red.

Meanwhile, my Dad was a raging, abusive alcoholic at home—so in truth, my button aversion, my appearance, and my blushing were the least of my problems.

Times were very tough financially for my family, and we had to watch every penny. My Dad was back home working at the lumber yard while we were at those fiddle events. My mother, Marty (she much preferred this nickname over her given name, Martha), my younger sister Michelle (by three-and-a-half years) and I, slept in the back of our old, black 1959 Chevrolet station wagon. There were no motels for us. Not ever.

With the same three kids from Weiser entered in the Oregon fiddle contest, even the $10 prize for 3rd place would more than pay for the tank of gas we used coming from our Mountlake Terrace home in Seattle’s northern suburb.

There I was, warming up on my contest round of tunes Barbara had taught me. She had me playing real old-time tunes, too—hoedowns like “Boil ‘em Cabbage Down,” “Wake Up Susan,” “Cripple Creek,” “June Apple,” and “Whiskey Before Breakfast.” We coaxed her into teaching me “Jole Blon,” the first Cajun song I heard Doug Kershaw play on The Johnny Cash Show. Barbara was quite creative as a young fiddler and came up with her own version of it for me to learn. Moreover, I was particularly drawn to the blues on the fiddle. In my rounds, I played the blues tunes she taught me for my tunes of choice—“Florida Blues,” “Carroll County Blues,” “East Tennessee Blues.” Some of the older fiddlers remarked, “How did this young gal get the blues like that?” Yeah, right.

I KNEW WHAT BENNY THOMASSON looked like, though, and there was no mistaking him either. We had just seen him compete in the Open division at Weiser, and we saw him up close at a jam session one night at the Junior High “campground.” At Weiser’s main event, he was playing against several master fiddlers for the national championships, particularly a couple of previous winners, Herman Johnson and Dick Barrett. Their names were all brand new to us as we were immersing ourselves into this fiddling world. My heart skipped a beat when I saw Benny Thomasson now standing just a few feet away, listening to me. I kept my head down and played my little tunes as best I could.

At age 64, Benny was slight in stature, and at 5’ 2”, no taller than my mother. Even so, his authority was one of a granite monument. We had been listening to him a lot, both on the Weiser jam tape I recorded on our new cassette machine, and from a couple of LPs of his we picked up at the contest. I just kept playing my tunes and tried not to look up for fear of making eye contact with him. Yes, I was painfully shy.

Benny began speaking to my mother about me as I continued playing. Mom knew what a legend he was, too, and she was aware that he had recently relocated to Washington state from his native Texas. After the conclusion of the fiddle contest in Cottage Grove, Oregon that evening, my mother recounted the conversation she had with the fiddling luminary:

“How long has he been playing?” Thomasson asked my Mom.

“For eight months,” she replied.

Mr. Thomasson had only listened to me for a few minutes.

“I would like to teach him,” Thomasson said.

“We are certain we couldn’t afford your teaching fees,” my mother responded. She added, “We just started lessons with John Burke in Seattle.”

“That won’t be a problem, I’ll teach him for free,” Benny declared.

Mom saw I was growing nervous about the exchange, but she promised me that she was very gracious to him. I was thankful at least that he didn’t mistake me for a girl, like some of the old-time fiddlers did. “No, don’t worry about that,” Mom said. “We had a good conversation,” she assured me.

With the fiddler, John Burke, taking over as my principal teacher, Mom didn’t want to get too far ahead of ourselves as John was a local music celebrity in his own right. He specifically was working with me on creativity and improvisation already—how to improvise on tunes for both old-time and bluegrass music. It was, quite honestly, way over my head, but John saw a lot of potential in me for this direction. He was not at all into fiddle contests, though.

Mom was a realist, and she warned me, as her practical side materialized. “Mark, Mr. Thomasson lives way down near the Oregon border!”, she pointed out. Mom continued retelling her earlier conversation with Benny Thomasson.

“That is so very kind of you Mr. Thomasson, but we can’t really afford the gas for the three-hour drive to your home each week. Unfortunately, it is just too far away for us,” Mom determined.

She continued; “The only way we could attend this weekend’s contest is that Mark here had a good chance at the 2nd place in the Junior-Junior division, since there were only three kids entered…” Mom finished justifying her assertion.

The Texas fiddle master paused for a moment, realizing the predicament he faced against someone who, unbowed by his stature, stood her ground. So Benny Thomasson put it on the line for her:

“If you can bring him to me in Kalama, there, where I live, you see, I’ll teach the boy all day long.”

Looking back to that day, it is simply unimaginable that Benny Thomasson saw so much in me already. Although I had five years of guitar—classical, flamenco, and folk—behind me, I was only eight months into learning fiddle. I was nowhere close to the skill level of his number one pupil, the young fiddler Loretta.

Maybe Thomasson detected a potentially creative attribute in a very young student as well? To offer us this chance of a lifetime, based on his singular foresight, was extraordinary to us.

In retrospect, Benny Thomasson did have a sixth sense about me, and this proclivity would continue to play out over time.

To study regularly for long hours with one of the greatest and most iconic fiddlers in the country was beyond our wildest dreams. Even at my young age, I was able to appreciate the magnitude of it. Mom continued to talk it over with me that evening on the drive back home.

“It would require a major commitment, Mark,” she cautioned me.

“I know, I want to do this,” I assured her.


Excerpt used by permission. Lead photo by Mitch Weiss. Secondary photo by John David Pittman

WATCH: Kaitlin Butts, “Blood”

Artist: Kaitlin Butts
Hometown: Tulsa, Oklahoma
Song: “Blood”
Album: What Else Can She Do

In Their Words: “I came to Nashville for the first time five years ago. I was miraculously set up to write with someone who I have looked up to for quite a while, Angaleena Presley of the Pistol Annies. I was so nervous walking up to her house, hoping to not make a fool out of myself during our session. She made me feel right at home and we started talking about family and how we accept certain behaviors from our family that we would not tolerate from our friends. We sweep things under the rug or hold our tongue, as to not stir the pot so that no one goes and flips the table over at Thanksgiving dinner. And I don’t think that’s how it has to be. I don’t think you should just have to tolerate abusive behavior solely because someone is blood. I think that if someone makes you feel small or bad about yourself when you’re around them, they cross lines that you’ve asked them not to cross time and time again, if they don’t love you unconditionally for exactly who you are, you do not have to be around those people, family or not.

“In making this video, I really wanted to show what being in a relationship with an abusive narcissist looks like behind closed doors. At first, you see me attempting to cater to his ego by staying quiet and maybe just attempting, in a non-confrontational way, to say something that’s on my mind. ‘You don’t hold back, you don’t play nice….’ In the first chorus, he flips his lid, gets in my face, threatens me, puts me back in my place.

(Read more from Kaitlin Butts below the player.)

“The second verse, I change my tone a little bit and try to set a boundary thinking that maybe if I stand up for myself, he’ll respect me. ‘You go too far, and you get too close…’ And towards the end of the verse, I put myself in my place, feeling like I may have said too much, singing ‘but I hold my tongue, swallow my pride, and stay,’ because …What am I gonna do? Leave? But narcissists don’t like it when you set boundaries either, so I lose again.

“Over the instrumental, you see him say something under his breath that finally puts me over the edge. He finally pushed me to my breaking point, then I finally stand up and give back to him what he has always given to me and basically turn into the monster that he wanted me to become just so that he could mutter ‘you’re crazy.’ I finally realize that there’s nothing I can do to win this fight, I can’t cater to his personality, I can’t stand up for myself, and I certainly can’t fight him. The only answer is to leave.

“I think that’s what I want people to take away from this. If this is happening to you, leave. I don’t care what they are to you, I don’t care if you’ll ‘have nothing’ if you leave them. (I know that’s probably what they told you, but they’re lying.) If someone around you belittles you, disrespects you, abuses you physically or verbally, you are much better off with nothing than being with them.

“Oftentimes, in movies we see what a dysfunctional relationship looks like, what an abuser looks like; typically a gruff looking drunkard, a jobless ‘loser’ living in a trailer. Something very stereotypical. But in my experience, it looks a lot different. To me, it looks like the prettiest, wealthiest homes with the dinner table set to perfection, a homemade pie, crystal glasses and refined whiskey. The husband just got home from work, still wearing his suit. In public, he looks distinguished, a well-respected man. Behind closed doors, he is a monster feeding off of a power that he holds over her. That is what a ‘loser’ looks like to me.” — Kaitlin Butts


Photo Credit: Mackenzie Cornwall

BGS 5+5: Reckless Son

Artist: Reckless Son
Hometown: New York City
Latest Album: Reckless Son

Which artist has influenced you the most … and how?

If there has been one consistent touchstone for me, particularly as a songwriter, it’s been Bruce Springsteen. I can remember the exact moment I fell in love with his music. I was a bit of a punk rock kid growing up and for the most part Bruce had always struck me as too theatrical, too earnest for my taste. But I was also a real bookworm, and I remember one night at a party listening to the song “Backstreets” from Born to Run and I was blown away by the lyrical scope of the song. It felt ambitious to me on the level of really great literature. I think as far as influences go, and this extends beyond my life as an artist or musician, I’ve always been looking for people that I could model myself after. In that moment, even though I was a kid growing up in Manhattan who had never been behind the wheel of a car or set foot in Asbury Park, I felt like Bruce was someone I could model myself after, someone I wanted to be like. I’ve also always been drawn to artists that I felt really had something to say, artists who’re seeking something rather than just looking to be entertaining, and to me Bruce was that.

Lastly, I’ll say that Springsteen on Broadway was a big inspiration for me specifically when it came to writing Reckless Son. I’d been traveling the country performing in prisons for a long time and I desperately wanted to communicate what I was seeing and experiencing to people who would normally never have any exposure to those places, and when I saw the Springsteen show I said to myself, “This is how you’re gonna do it.” His character sketches in songs like “The River,” “Born In the USA” and “Highway Patrolman” just blow me away. Those songs are entire novels in three minutes and thirty seconds. Not only do you feel like you know those characters inside and out by the time the song is over, you feel like you could be them, or that you at least totally relate to them. That’s maybe the most remarkable part about it. You can listen to one of those songs, and although you seemingly have nothing in common with the narrator, you can relate to the point where their struggles could be your own. I wanted to make the experience of incarceration and all the circumstances that lead to it something relatable to people who live a life completely removed from that world. I wanted to make that experience tangible and human, to inspire some compassion. I feel like more than anyone, Bruce showed me not only how to do that, but why it’s so important to do that.

What’s your favorite memory from being on stage?

I’ve amassed a pretty incredible repertoire of stories and scrapbook of memories, but if I had to narrow it down to one I think I’d have to pick the very first time I ever played a show in a jail. It was in November of 2016 when I was given the opportunity to do a show in the Heroin Recovery Program of the Albany County Jail. I took the train up to Albany. I remember most of the leaves had already started falling by that point but the ones that remained on the trees were just incredible. It was a gorgeous train ride but I was so nervous. The entire time I kept kicking myself, thinking, “How did I get myself into this?” Once I got to the jail, I remember the sheriff walking with me down these long corridors and crossing checkpoints with huge metal doors banging and slamming into place behind us each time, each one its own “point of no return.”

When I finally walked into the unit, the men all seemed to turn and look at me at once, completely perplexed by why I was there. But I literally just put one foot in front of the other, unpacked my guitar and got ready to play. After I played my first song, the craziest thing happened. They all started clapping! I’m telling you, I couldn’t believe it! And when I played my second song, an even crazier thing happened. They clapped again! Before long, we started talking to each other in between songs — the space was small enough to have a conversation with the maybe 20 or 30 guys in the group. They started telling me how they felt about each song, about if and how they related, and they started telling me stories from their own lives. My life changed inalterably that day. An entirely new world of possibilities opened itself up to me, not only as an artist, but as a person.

What other art forms — literature, film, dance, painting, etc. — inform your music?

Like I mentioned, I’ve been a bookworm most of my life and I’d have to say that books and literature have impacted my music more than any other artform. I work as a bookseller at an independent bookstore in my neighborhood in Manhattan called 192 Books and besides playing music it’s the best job I’ve ever had. You go on these epic scavenger hunts though the inventory when you’re restocking and you come across so many special books accidentally you would have never discovered, and each one sort of feels like it was waiting for you to find it. Books let you travel in time and travel all over the world and for me they feed a kind of spiritual wanderlust.

It’s the same sense of adventure that motivates me to keep making art and music. The discovery of some new landscape, a new color or texture, a way to feel a little bit closer to articulating my interior world and making it something I can share with others. Great books can also give you incredible insights into the mind and the soul. In my songs, I feel like I’m constantly grappling with the question of “Why do we do things we don’t want to do?” Great literature and poetry don’t necessarily give answers to that question, but they help me accept, embrace, and maybe even celebrate all the inevitable limitations that come with being human.

If you had to write a mission statement for your career, what would it be?

The final song of Reckless Son is called “Just One” and I think that song is about as close to writing a mission statement for myself as I’ll ever come. When I introduce the song, I talk about how I’m pretty terrified every time I walk into a jail or a prison to perform. The problems people are facing seem overwhelming and impossible to solve, and it can feel silly at times thinking I can do anything to help, but the way I get past that doubt is to tell myself if I can help just one person in the room, then it’s worth it. If I can make just one person feel a little more seen and a little less alone, then I’ve done my job and I’ve done it well. I think it’s easy to underestimate the profound difference we can make with just simple acts of kindness and respect. Sometimes I think the only real way to make a difference in the world is on a one-on-one, individual basis, and this song reminds me that no matter how powerless I feel I know I’ve got it in me to be helpful to someone, somewhere and somehow.

How often do you hide behind a character in a song or use “you” when it’s actually “me”?

This is an interesting question, because every song on Reckless Son is written in the first person, so I might definitely be hiding in “I.” Part of it is a craft thing. Sometimes I don’t think I’m a good enough writer to make something feel interesting or intimate enough from the narrative distance of third person, but with Reckless Son I also knew I was trying to write a body of work that felt like it was all coming from one person’s point of view. The Reckless Son is a character I sketched together. He’s an amalgamation of different men I met inside correctional facilities, but he’s also got some of me and my life experience in him too. While I’ve never been incarcerated, there are elements of that experience I believe I can identify with. I also make a point in the show to say that even when I take on a character in a song, if the lyric isn’t still somehow drawn from the truth of my own experience, it will fall flat.

I think another reason why I created the Reckless Son was because I didn’t think that I was an interesting enough person on my own, that my life story isn’t particularly compelling, and I needed to invent something to get people interested. It seems common for artists to create avatars and personas for themselves, but this is something I think about a lot for two reasons in particular. First, I plan to keep writing songs and I don’t know if they should still be coming from this character, and second, because I think it probably says something about my own insecurities and sense of identity that’s worth being mindful of. And that, to me, is the real wonder of the creative process. This journey took me all over, I learned so much and saw the whole country by visiting these shadowy places most people never see, all the while learning more and more about myself. It’s an inner and outer unfolding that happen simultaneously, and I’m eager to see where it brings me next.

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5vHzF69vqb5dx30uzMWN5x?si=2b2be49fa72a49b3


Photo Credit: Shervin Lainez

LISTEN: Rachel Baiman, “Self Made Man”

Artist: Rachel Baiman
Hometown: Oak Park, Illinois; now in Nashville
Song: “Self Made Man”
Album: Common Nation of Sorrow
Release Date: March 31, 2023
Label: Signature Sounds

In Their Words: “In 2019 John Hartford’s family released a posthumous collection of songs that he had never released. I was immediately enamored by a song fragment called ‘Self Made Man.’ The message of the song in conjunction with the whimsy of musical presentation spoke to me and I couldn’t get it out of my head. I decided to try and flesh out the song with additional verse lyrics, and a chorus and bridge melody.” — Rachel Baimain


Photo Credit: Natia Cinco

LISTEN: Pony Bradshaw, “Go Down, Appalachia”

Artist: Pony Bradshaw
Hometown: Chatsworth, Georgia
Song: “Go Down, Appalachia”
Album: North Georgia Rounder
Release Date: January 27, 2023
Label: Soundly Music

In Their Words: “This is one of the oldest songs on the record. The title came first, a play on ‘Go Down, Moses.’ I remember I wrote the line, ‘Hail to the creep / that swept you off your feet,’ when Trump became president. It was more of a knee-jerk reaction to the downright absurdity of someone like Trump leading a nation than it was a political or partisan dig. The song as a whole is fragmented and almost quilted together, creating one useful and practical thing out of many small but no less important things. Like a recipe for a stew or homemade biscuits. Every ingredient counts and brings forth the whole.” — Pony Bradshaw


Photo Credit: Bekah Jordan

LISTEN: Darren Nicholson, “Arkansas Without You”

Artist: Darren Nicholson
Hometown: Canton, North Carolina
Song: “Arkansas Without You”
Release Date: January 27, 2023
Label: Mountain Home Music Company

In Their Words: “’Arkansas Without You’ is our bluegrass story of romance, deception and when emotions overtake you. It’s our modern-day bluegrass murder ballad. I watch a lot of forensic files and true crime, and there are many tales like this that show the darker side of the human condition. Colby Laney on guitar and Zach Smith on bass provide a rhythmic groove that was so easy for Wes Corbett (banjo) and Billy Contreras (fiddle) to float over. The vocal tells the story, but the instruments are the props on the stage which are helping set the mood. I’m very excited this recording will be available in Dolby Atmos spatial audio. It’s a unique listening experience for sure. The tones and the clarity are just at a different level. This is my first time using Ferdinand, my 1923 Loar, as well as my first time having a song in Dolby Atmos. The new frontier of mixing!” — Darren Nicholson

Crossroads Label Group · Darren Nicholson – Arkansas Without You

Photo Credit: Reed Jones

LISTEN: Ken Yates, “Fairweather”

Artist: Ken Yates
Hometown: Creemore, Ontario
Song: “Fairweather”
Album: Cerulean (Bonus Tracks)
Release Date: January 27, 2023
Label: Soundly Music

In Their Words: “It was the first song I wrote for Cerulean, but at the very last minute I decided not to record it. I think I felt like thematically it didn’t fit with the other songs, and the slow pace of it might have gotten lost on a 12-track album. But I kept coming back to it, which is usually a sign that a song is worth revisiting as a release, so I sent a demo to producer Dan Ledwell. Hearing it with drums, piano, horns, and Jenn Grant’s lovely harmonies really breathed new life into the song for me, and now I’m really excited to share it with people. The song is about what happens to relationships when someone puts their dreams ahead of the people who love them. Ambition is what drives us to get up every day, but if we don’t nurture our relationships with friends, family, partners, etc., they may not be there for you in your darkest moments.” — Ken Yates


Photo Credit: Jen Squires