With “Georgia Off My Mind,” Larkin Poe Put Their Twist on a Classic Title

Larkin Poe‘s “Georgia Off My Mind” is a head-nodding, smooth-rocking track that features their innate ability to craft a hooky melody and pair it with a saucy instrumental groove. The sisters that make up this badass blues rock duo — Rebecca and Megan Lovell — reflected on the play on words that acted as the song’s genesis: “Like 99 percent of my songs, that song came into being at my kitchen table late in the evening,” says Rebecca. “My husband and I stumbled into that line at the chorus – ‘Tennessee keep Georgia off my mind’ – and it turned into a love song for the stretch of I-24 that connects Atlanta and Nashville, which is a drive we’ve made thousands of times now.”

At the onset of 2023, Larkin Poe will perform across the US and eventually in Australia. Meanwhile, they’re releasing a new album titled Blood Harmony on November 11 on their own Tricky Woo label. As anyone who’s seen them perform can attest, Larkin Poe rock the hardest and their new album is sure to deliver. Check out “Georgia Off My Mind” below.


Photo Credit: Jason Stoltzfus

BGS 5+5: Caleb Caudle

Artist: Caleb Caudle
Hometown: Germanton, North Carolina
Album: Forsythia

Which artist has influenced you the most … and how?

I would say as far as songwriting goes, It would be Guy Clark. I like how plain he can be. It’s very matter of fact. I try to write in my speaking voice and I know Guy did, too. It’s easy to connect to. He always went heavy on the details and I try my best to always do the same. In a time where everything feels as if it’s been written about before, details are sort of the last frontier.

What’s the toughest time you ever had writing a song?

I struggled for about a year and a half with “I Don’t Fit In,” which is the lead track on my new record. I thought it was finished but when I listened back to the demo it felt like I was complaining about not having a place in this world. I didn’t like that. I rewrote the verses from a place of power. I wanted to feel proud about the trail I was blazing. I’m not sure where I land musically and it’s constantly evolving. I think there’s something really special about that.

What has been the best advice you’ve received in your career so far?

I was doing a tour with Ray Wylie Hubbard in California four or five years ago and we were talking about gigs where folks don’t show up and how discouraging that can be and he said “Now Caleb, just remember…never play to the empty seats,” and it changed the way I felt about the audience who was there. I have such a deeper appreciation for those moments now.

Which elements of nature do you spend the most time with and how do those impact your work?

While I love all nature and what it brings to the table, at heart I’m a mountains guy. I love how small they make me feel. I also love the difference between the older mountain ranges like The Smokies, Catskills and Ozarks when compared to the Rockies or Tetons. They are all beautiful in their own way.

Since food and music go so well together, what is your dream pairing of a meal and a musician?

I’d say a plate of Hoppin’ John which is usually meant for New Year’s Day but we make it anytime we want. It’s black-eyed peas, collard greens, cornbread and country ham. I’d pair it with Doc Watson because I’m from Doc Country and I’d be shocked if it wasn’t a meal he loved, too.


Photo Credit: Caleb Caudle

WATCH: Stephen McCarthy & Carla Olson, “We Gotta Split This Town”

Artist: Stephen McCarthy & Carla Olson
Hometown: Richmond, VA (Stephen McCarthy) and Austin, TX (Carla Olson)
Song: “We Gotta Split This Town”
Album: Night Comes Falling
Release Date: November 11, 2022
Label: Have Harmony, Will Travel

In Their Words: “I had an idea about a ne’er-do-well swindler whose luck was running out. A confidence man on the run with his gal who was trying to set him straight. She was in too deep to make a clean break. The story is a conversation between the two co-conspirators. The song was definitely written as a duet. A couple trying to make sense of their downfall. I think it works well with the melodic dialogue riffing over a driving beat and distorted B3 organ. I remember showing it to Carla and suggesting that she sing it in a way that showed she had some disgust with my character.”

(Read more below the player.)

“Carla and I were touching on many different genres with this album. Mostly finding the intersection where rock ‘n’ roll and country collide. We had a talented group of musicians that were able to help get these songs off of the page with passion and a great groove. Writing and recording was very challenging during Covid. We were sending ideas back and forth long-distance, then refining them the few times we were able to get together before cutting the album. For the video, we both shot scenes remotely and they were edited by a great director named Tim Roth. He added all of the extra scenes which visually illustrate the story of this wayward couple.” — Stephen McCarthy

“Stephen was in Los Angeles for the McCabe’s record release gig for my Have Harmony Will Travel 2 duets album in February 2020. We were performing several songs at the show. When we got together to work on our songs for the gig, he showed me this idea for ‘We Gotta Split This Town’ (the working title was ‘Not Tough Enough’). We were alternating singing to each other and thought it had a pretty cool attitude, so Stephen turned it into the story about the couple on the run. I’m always impressed by the talented director Tim Roth who created the video for the song (he also made the clip for ‘Night Comes Falling’). He utilized his magical green screen technique to put Stephen and I in the same space at the same time. Not sure how he does it.” — Carla Olson


Photo Credit: Markus Cuff

LISTEN: Nick Dumas, “We’d Go to Town”

Artist: Nick Dumas
Hometown: Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin
Song: “We’d Go to Town”
Album: Details
Release Date: November 11, 2022 (Single)
Label: Skyline Records

In Their Words: “There is something about this song — maybe it’s the energy, the dynamics, the vocals, or the nostalgia — that will change your mood and get you smiling. Every time I hear this song, it just makes my day a little bit brighter. This song reflects the perspective of an adult reminiscing on his youth working hard on his family’s farm, and the rewards that person earned for their hard work. I think this song is relatable because many of us have memories of times where we worked hard and struggled, but the rewards made it worth the fight. I had so much fun recording this tune. Although this is a pretty straightforward bluegrass song, the band dynamics add such a creative flavor and a powerful dynamic to the song. The vocals and instrumentation are about as good as it gets in the industry, and there’s no doubt this song will get your body moving.” — Nick Dumas


Photo Credi: Hana Dumas

WATCH: Neil Young with Crazy Horse, “Love Earth”

Artist: Neil Young with Crazy Horse
Song: “Love Earth”
Album: World Record
Release Date: November 18, 2022
Label: Reprise Records

In Their Words: “The reason I wrote ‘Love Earth’ is because I see it as a simple message. If you do good things to Earth and try to keep the planet clean and taken care of, she will take care of you and your grandchildren in return. It’s a positive way to look at climate change. Do what you can. Try not to support factory farms. Try always getting clean food. Organic is clean. Local usually is clean. Remember the animals piled on top of one another in the factory sheds where they live their sad lives to make the hotdogs you get in the big stores. Don’t support that. Learn what you are eating. Remember climate change started years ago with factory farms’ destructive practices. Try to remember family farms with green fields and cows grazing peacefully. Strive for clean food. Learn the source. Think about the cost to Earth as well as the cost to your wallet. It’s not easy or convenient to do but it’s good for your grandchildren’s future.”

love Earth be well Neil


Photo Credit: Joey Martinez

LISTEN: The Roseline, “Hot Dice”

Artist: The Roseline
Hometown: Lawrence, Kansas
Song: “Hot Dice”
Release Date: November 4, 2022

In Their Words: “‘Hot Dice’ is a self-deprecating exploration of my tendency to ruin otherwise joyful moments with polarizing political conversation pieces or fatalistic and rambling soliloquies. By the end of the song, I learn to be slightly less of a vibe killer and just tell ‘a gross joke instead.’ Musically, it’s jangly heartland folk-rock that’s been elevated with super chorus-y guitar, great multiple harmony bgvs, and an altered arrangement toward the end of the song that really makes it shine. That drum fill is pretty sick, too. Obviously I’m biased.” — Colin Halliburton, The Roseline

The Roseline · Hot Dice by The Roseline

Photo Credit: Fally Afani

WATCH: Dailey & Vincent, “Those Memories of You” (Feat. Rhonda Vincent)

Artist: Dailey & Vincent
Hometown: Jamie Dailey, Gainesboro, Tenn.; Darrin Vincent, Greentop, Mo.
Song: “Those Memories of You”
Album: Let’s Sing Some Country!
Release Date: September 16, 2022
Label: BMG

In Their Words: “‘Those Memories’ has been one of my favorites songs since I was a kid. Recording this gem took me back to some wonderful times as a child. Having Rhonda Vincent harmonize with us on this song made it even more special to us! After all these years, we finally got to shoot our first video with our Opry sister, who’s also Darrin’s real sister! What a treat to also have guitarist Seth Taylor lend his talent to this fun project!” — Jamie Dailey

“‘Those Memories’ has always been an iconic song since Bill and his son James Monroe recorded it in 1978… Then in 1987, it reached the No. 5 spot on Billboard as a single for Dolly, Emmylou, and Linda. We’re so pleased Rhonda joined Jamie and myself with our updated take on the tune!” — Darrin Vincent


Photo Credit: Tyler Vandervort

Scottish Folk-Fusion Band Elephant Sessions Achieve Their Musical Destiny

An Elephant Sessions gig is always a lively night out, but Alasdair Taylor admits that their last one, at Glasgow’s famous Barrowlands Ballroom, was something else. The band were celebrating their 10th anniversary with their biggest production to date, including a light show and the backing of a live string quartet. “There was so much that could have gone wrong, it was kind of scary,” laughs Taylor. “Every time I turned to look at one of the boys I’d see a wall of screens and lasers and think, ‘This is mad!’”

Two weeks later, the band are “still just coming down” from the experience. “It’s our new benchmark,” says Taylor. Because after a decade together, the Scottish folk-fusion band have finally achieved the sound – and the experience – they were always destined for. You can hear it in their fourth studio album, For the Night, whose tracks bring together the tradition of Highland tunes that they grew up with, and the rich blend of electronic, dance and funk that they can’t get enough of.

Taylor lives in Inverness in the heart of Scotland; his window looks out on the rolling hills that surround the tiny city, and he can even make out Ben Wyvis, the largest “munro” (or mountain) in the region. Fiddle player Euan Smillie, who has been making music with Taylor since their teenage years, lives a short distance away in a rural hamlet. “This is country that feels remote, even when you’re only 20 minutes from town,” says Taylor. Loch Ness, Scotland’s second largest freshwater lake, is only five miles away.

It is a very different place from Glasgow, the gritty, grungy home to Scotland’s vibrant music scene, but it’s pretty great for inspiration. “We live in a really beautiful part of the world,” sighs Taylor. The new album’s fourth song, “Taransay,” is named after a boat they took out on the loch for Euan’s birthday and its trance-like mood suggests that a mellow time was had by all.

Fusing Scottish fiddle tunes with electronica is not new, but its growing popularity is. One of the band’s inspirations is Martyn Bennett, revered for his impact on modern Scottish music and “the first innovator to mix proper dance music with piping and Gaelic culture” according to Taylor. Then there were Shooglenifty, whose ‘90s fusions inspired him to take up mandolin, and Croft No. 5, blending Highland music with African beats. The latter’s track, “Elephant,” is the source of Taylor and Smillie’s own band name.

These days, Elephant Sessions find themselves riding a wave of late-night enthusiasm as their own brand of folk-fusion plays to big, boisterous crowds both in their own country and as far afield as Eastern Europe and Australia. “And there’s a bunch of younger bands following us who are realising you can branch out and do something totally different to what anyone’s done before,” says Taylor. “The scene has really grown, and it’s only going to increase the longevity of folk music.”

When Taylor was learning fiddle at school, folk music was considered deeply uncool. “Kids can be cruel to each other. You’d get laughed at, and it caused so many people to give up. Now I’m telling all those people, ‘You’d be making so much money from piping for weddings and funerals if you’d stuck at it!’”

Aged 12, Taylor’s father gave him an MP3 player loaded with some his own favourite artists – Jimi Hendrix, Led Zeppelin, Toto, AC/DC – and the young lad swapped fiddle for guitar. Soon he and Smillie were earning good money playing trad fiddle-and-guitar gigs at local bars and hotels – but they knew it wasn’t the musical life they desired. “We wanted bass and synth and drum kits and samples and big stages and things like that,” says Taylor. “We just had to work out how to get there.”

They met Greg Barry, who was drumming in function bands, at a fèis, a youth programme teaching the Gaelic arts. They would get together and jam in the shed at the bottom of his garden (Taylor estimates he spent “weeks, if not months” of his life down there) and it was the perfect place to begin to experiment with new sounds. Seth Tinsley, the band’s bass player, met Taylor on the folk degree course at Newcastle University, and Elephant Sessions was born – merging Barry and Tinsley’s love of funk with Smillie’s passion for electronica along with a shared background in folk.

Their first album in 2014 – The Elusive Highland Beauty – remained traditional and largely acoustic. “There were two tracks with electric guitar distortion and one had a bit of synth,” recalls Taylor, “and we were scared to do that much. There were shows where we’d look at the crowd and say, ‘We can’t play that one tonight, look where we are!’ It took growing in confidence and a lot of learning about different genres to be comfortable enough to do this current mix.”

Before working on an album, they create a joint playlist where each member adds his current favourite inspirations. “We’re constantly sending each other listening assignments, we listen to so much music before we even start writing,” says Taylor. This year’s playlist included Dua Lipa’s “Don’t Start Now,” for its phenomenal bass line. “We kept playing it on a loop, trying to capture that disco funk vibe, and that’s how we ended up with our track ‘After Hours.’”

The groove was laid down long before the tune. “In folk music generally people come along with a tune and the rest of you accompany it, and that’s what we always did,” says Taylor. Then Covid hit, and the way they interacted had to change. “On the first album I wrote half the tunes, and Euan wrote the other half. Now we write the whole album together. We might start with a bass riff, a drum beat, a vibe to a hip hop track… it’s a much longer process but it’s more rewarding. And you can hear us enjoying it more!”

The mood of their new record is captured in its title: For the Night is an ecstatic homage to all they had lost during the pandemic, “everything we used to do and missed.” That included live music, partying at festivals, and messy evenings that ended up at their local dive bar, Johnny Foxes, where they would drink mixed shots of tequila and absinthe which the bartender christened a “Misty Badger” (they once dedicated a tune to the drink).

After the “desperation of being stuck inside,” the music they have made post-Covid has been their most defiantly upbeat. “At the start of lockdown we were all devoid of creativity but somehow this desire to reclaim that freedom and joy is in this album more than any other we’ve made. Lockdown ended up being a big inspiration, which I wouldn’t have imagined a year ago.”

The album also benefited from the input of Duncan Lyall, one of the Scottish folk scene’s foremost bass players and producers. It was the first time the band had ever brought in a producer from outside their own creative bubble, and the results were instantaneous. Under Lyall’s guiding hand, writing sessions took on new direction and creative blocks melted away. Originally “Taransay” had a breakbeat backing that stymied its momentum; Lyall introduced the call and response section in the middle which helps the music to flow and to build.

The band also credit him with rescuing their final track, “FM,” which was even longer than its eventual seven-minute running time before he helped make it more succinct. It is now such a powerful track – with a mesmeric guitar solo – that they close their sets with it. Strangely enough its title doesn’t actually refer to the radio sample that introduces the track but to the fact it’s written in F-sharp minor, making it especially tricky for both mandolin and fiddle player to play. “But the B-part is this classical-style melody and it just sings in that key,” says Taylor.

You can hear how much the band has grown in confidence in its pumping basslines and unapologetic beats. For Taylor, the turning point came in 2018, when they were surprised to find they had sold out their gig at Celtic Connections (“we were super, super nervous,” says Taylor, “the Old Fruit Market was a venue that seemed way too big for us”). Major festival breakthroughs followed in the Czech Republic and in Australia. “I think the fact we were from Scotland intrigued people, and those three shows made us realise we can tour a production, and this kind of music can work to a big audience, not even one that knows us. We can win them over.”

With For the Night, they are pushing the boundaries they always wanted to. “We certainly couldn’t have made this album 10 years ago,” says Taylor. “Everyone’s got better as writers, as arrangers, performers.” The results have surprised even them. “We always knew Elephant Sessions would fuse these genres – but I don’t think we knew how far we would go.”


Photo Credit: Euan Robertson

WATCH: Charlie Treat, “Swimming in November”

Artist: Charlie Treat
Hometown: Nashville, Tennessee
Song: “Swimming in November”
Album: Into the Wild Mystic Mountain
Release Date: November 18, 2022

In Their Words: “An autobiographical tale of unlikely lovers from opposite backgrounds brought together by a motorcycle and a shared glimmer in their eyes to do something wild and strange. Based on actual events November 7, 2020, Wartrace Creek Park on Cordell Hull Lake, Gainesboro, TN. This is the most honest and real song on the most honest and real record to date. Danger, discomfort, taking chances, the enormity of love — it’s all in there, fused together by the ancient alchemy of hot and cold, dark and light, north and south. Video by Jesse Weeden, done in one take, Bells Bend Park, Nashville.” — Charlie Treat


Photo Credit: Taylor Ann Bogner

The Show On The Road – Jim Lauderdale

This week, we call on an Americana pioneer and a beloved fixture of the Nashville roots-country scene, the always affable Grammy-winner Jim Lauderdale. This year he celebrated the release of his thirty-fifth record, Game Changer.

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Growing up in both North and South Carolina, as a young man Lauderdale fell in love with country music but took an unconventional path to becoming a sought-after songwriter, harmonist and writer in Music City. He toured in New York theatre productions when he was starting out, and ended up in LA. Even today you can hear the drama in his aching harmony-soaked songs like “Lightning Love” off Game Changer.

While sales and national recognition haven’t always aligned, the “stylistically restless” Lauderdale has played the Opry over 200 times, collaborated on albums with his heroes like the late bluegrass legend Ralph Stanley, written tracks for artists as diverse as George Strait and Elvis Costello, and has accidentally become one of the leading elder-statesman of the Americana movement.

What is Americana exactly? Even Jim impishly won’t say. But it’s that earthy genre-bending sound that has kept his longtime fans coming back for more nearly four decades into his storied run.


Photo Credit: Scott Simontacchi