WATCH: Kendell Marvel, “Don’t Tell Me How to Drink” (Feat. Chris Stapleton)

Artist: Kendell Marvel
Hometown: Nashville, Tennessee
Song: “Don’t Tell Me How to Drink” (featuring Chris Stapleton)
Album: Come on Sunshine
Release Date: September 23, 2022
Label: CmdSht

In Their Words: “I wrote ‘Don’t Tell Me How to Drink’ with my old songwriting buddy Chris Stapleton a couple years ago. Me and Beau Bedford tracked this song, and I sent it to Stapleton asking if he would be interested in playing guitar and singin’ on it. It’s a damn thrill for me to have him on this Honky Tonkin’, Rock n Rollin’, Hell Raiser. Younger folks might be better at some things, but don’t mess with the old dogs when it comes to stuff like drinkin’!” — Kendell Marvel


Photo Credit: Laura E. Partain

MIXTAPE: The Hooten Hallers’ Punky Rootster Playlist

If there’s one thing that connects us to a lot of our road dawg peers, it’s that we don’t fit neatly into a particular genre. In this playlist, we’ve compiled some of our favorite tunes from bands we’ve met and played shows with along the way, spotlighting roots musicians with a heavy punk influence. The combination of punk and other variations of rock ‘n’ roll mixed with blues, folk, string band, bluegrass, and country make for an exciting and energetic reimagining of traditional music. Their spirit, musicality, rhythms, and lyrical themes deliver in a way that can only be achieved by artists who have lived those stories, and whose passions lie at the intersection of outsider music cultures. — The Hooten Hallers

Possessed by Paul James – “Four Men From the Row”

Possessed By Paul James is the stage name of Texas folk musician Konrad Wert, who injects his performances with frenetic, intense energy and raw emotion. An educational professional by trade, he never misses an opportunity to teach the audience something new about their own humanity.

The Tillers – “All You Fascists Bound to Lose”

A core component of both punk rock and folk/roots music is using the platform to spread messages of political reform. This anti-fascist anthem from ‘original punk’ and revolutionary folk singer Woody Guthrie is done here with raw energy and emotion that is inextricably tied to a world where this struggle is more relevant than ever — almost 80 years later.

The .357 String Band – “Down on a Bender”

Northern notables The .357 String Band featured the instrumentation of a traditional bluegrass band and played a big part in inspiring a generation of young punks to pick up the banjo and start pluckin’. The Hooten Hallers first shared the stage with .357 way back in 2008 and continue to do so with projects formed afterward by some of the band’s original members.

Carrie Nation & The Speakeasy – “Rümpeltum”

A true musical collider, Carrie Nation & The Speakeasy combine elements of bluegrass, jazz, punk and metal. Their songs often feature heavy vocals, drums, and a horn section alongside traditional stringed instruments. “Rümpeltum” is the name of a punk squat and performance space in St Gallen, Switzerland, where this band, ourselves, and many others have played over the years.

Left Lane Cruiser – “Ol’ Fashioned”

Left Lane Cruiser has been a huge influence on The Hooten Hallers ever since Andy and John first saw them play nearly 15 years ago. The effortless combination of traditional blues guitar picking with sludgy, raw metal riffs and powerful drumming make this band an absolute force of nature. Seeing this band live continues to be just as jaw-droppingly inspiring today as it was the first time.

The Goddamn Gallows – “7 Devils”

Turning the “trash-grass” up another notch toward punk and metal, this band blends acoustic string instruments with electric guitar, drums, and an energetic and antic-laden show that has become legendary. This band truly embraces the wild and strange, and we’ve gotten to cross paths in some truly wild and strange places around the world over the years.

Soledad Brothers – “Going Back to Memphis”

Soledad Brothers have been a punk blues icon since before they were formed and they forever will be. The first time we heard the saxophone taking the place of bass guitar in this way changed everything, and eventually led to Kellie joining the band. Some chance encounters and a few dear mutual friends led to our eventual collaboration with Johnny Walker, who produced our self- titled record in 2017.

James Leg – “Dirty South”

James Leg, moniker of absolute dynamo John Wesley Myers, delivers powerful riff heavy blues rock on a distorted Rhodes piano. To say he has been hugely influential on The Hooten Hallers would be an understatement, and we’re proud he appears as a guest on our new record Back In Business Again. This is his cover of St. Louis proto-punk and alt country legend Bob Reuter’s “Dirty South.”

7 Shot Screamers – “In Saint Lou”

This St. Louis group had a cult following in the psychobilly and rockabilly scenes of the ’90’s and ’00’s, and served as Exene Cervenka’s backing band for several years. Rockabilly was of course an early roots genre mixer of rock ‘n’ roll, country, and hillbilly music, and its mix with punk’s ideals and energy by the 7 Shot Screamers led to the blowing of many young minds in the sweaty brick rooms of St. Louis and beyond.

Larry and His Flask – “Young Is the Night”

Lightning fast dual leads between guitar and banjo, incredibly tight and engaging vocal harmonies, and a horn section put Larry and His Flask in a league of their own. Larry and His Flask, like many others on this playlist, connected with fans on a global scale through years of intense DIY touring. They are beloved for their musicianship, complex arrangements and chord progressions, and intensely energetic live show. It’s extremely difficult to hold back a smile when this band is on stage.

Legendary Shack Shakers – “Mud”

While the band’s lineup has changed over the years, the constant star of the show has always been the banjo and harmonica leads and circus-like stage antics from frontman JD Wilkes. The chaos that he brings to the stage is much like what you’d expect at a sweaty basement punk show, but after the show he can and will give you a musical history lesson that would rival professors at most institutes of higher learning.

Split Lip Rayfield – “Kiss of Death”

These fellow Midwesterners are definite early pioneers in the melding of traditional bluegrass instrumentation and punk ethos. Split Lip Rayfield’s signature sound paved the way for scores of counter-cultural roots pickers and grinners alike to form their own sounds and take to the highways.

Scott H. Biram – “I Want My Mojo Back”

Scott H. Biram, the dirty old one man band, can go from crooning a heartfelt country ballad to exploding into heavy guitar-driven aggression in the brief moments between songs at a show and he’ll have your undivided attention every step of the way. Nodding heavily to the history and style of the great roots and blues musicians that came before him while fusing that with a vibe all his own make him an essential part of this playlist.


Photo Credit: Charles Bruce III

The Story Within Violet Bell’s New Folk Album Is More Than Just a Celtic Myth

Americana duo Violet Bell‘s new album, Shapeshifter – out October 7 – tells a story of the mythological selkie, a mermaid-like creature from Celtic folklore that embodies a form that’s half woman, half seal. In their retelling and reshaping of this ancient folk narrative, they tease out its connections to the transatlantic journey of American roots music, to the cultural and social melting pot of the “New World,” and to agency, intention, and self-possession. 

A concept album of sorts, the music is remarkably approachable and down-to-earth, while the stories and threads of the record tell equally ordinary and cosmic tales. At such a time in American history, with fascism once again on the rise and attacks on bodily autonomy and personal agency occurring with greater frequency at every level of governance, Shapeshifter offers a seemingly timeless lens through which to engage with, understand, and challenge the overarching social and political turmoil we all face on the daily. Moreover, it’s an excellent folk record, demonstrating Violet Bell’s connections to North Carolina, Appalachia, and the greater communities that birthed so many of the genre aesthetics evident in the album’s songs.

Shapeshifter is a gorgeous exercise in community building, an artful subversion of societal norms, and a stunning folktale packaged in accessible, resonant music with a local heartbeat and a global appeal. Read our interview with duo members Lizzy Ross and Omar Ruiz-Lopez and listen to a brand new single from the project, “Mortal Like Me,” below.

BGS: I wanted to start by asking you about community, because I know it’s always very present in your music making. I feel it, definitely, in Shapeshifter. Not only because you’ve got Joe Terrell and Libby Rodenbough (Mipso), Joe Troop, and Tatiana Hargreaves on the project, but because I can feel that community is a tent pole of this record. What does community, musical and otherwise, mean to you in the context of this project? 

Lizzy Ross: It was such a wild time to be making the record because it was March of 2021, so vaccines hadn’t quite happened yet and we had all been on lockdown for about a year. We were obviously really missing our community and the live music community. There was also this strange thing, where our friends who would normally always be on the road all the time were at home. So we had an incredible opportunity to call up people, like calling up Tati and Joseph and Libby and Joe Troop – who lived in Argentina but came home because of COVID! The way that it worked out, people were around and we were able to convene and make this album in circumstances that probably wouldn’t have been possible, because everybody would have been on the road. 

Omar Ruiz-Lopez: Or, [we would have had them] recording remotely. Which is not the same. One of the reasons why I play music is because of the community. That ability to bring people together and share music and hold space together, the energy that comes from that is so vital to the human experience. Getting to create that space, to bring an album to life, there’s not much else in this world that I live for, besides that. Getting the opportunity to bring everybody together, especially after such a big isolation, was so life-affirming and helped bring me back to why I make music in the first place. 

That’s definitely palpable in the music itself, but also in the overarching viewpoint that y’all have within this record. I also find that it’s very grounded. You might have heard BGS just released our first season of a podcast called Carolina Calling, about North Carolina’s history through music. One of the through-lines that keeps coming up in all of our interviews is that North Carolina specifically has such a strong sense of musical community. Even though this is kind of a story record and kind of a concept record, it feels very grounded in North Carolina and in the South. 

LR: Omar and I are kind of mongrels from the non-South. But we’ve come and steeped ourselves in this land and these traditions and this community, so I think that what our music reflects is the internal sort of “musical diet.” Our musical diet is probably atypical when you consider what most people think of as North Carolinian or Southern music. The music we were listening to going into this even, we were listening to a lot of Groupa

ORL: Groupa is a Scandinavian folk band that makes these albums based on music from different countries, like Iceland, Finland, and Sweden. I feel like anything that’s not from here is called “world music,” but their brand of folk music is very beautiful and out there and organic and grounded in the different traditions they represent on their albums. It’s mostly instrumental music, it’s pretty powerful. We were listening to that a lot, as well as Julia Fowlis, a singer who sings in Gaelic primarily. Those cultures – Scottish, Irish, Scandinavian folk – they’re related to the music here like old-time, bluegrass, and Appalachian folk traditions of fiddle and banjo. 

To bring it back to the question, I’ve been here for twelve years. I was born in Panama and raised in Puerto Rico listening to Spanish and Latin folk. When I say Spanish, I mean Spanish-speaking, the language of our colonizers. But there’s something still not-from-Spain in the native, Indigenous musical and cultural influences in that music. Like in Bachata and Cumbia. Then I moved to the States and fell in love with rock ‘n’ roll and more of the singer-songwriter tradition here. 

LR: Originally I came here for school. I grew up in Annapolis, Maryland, where I didn’t really find a musical community. There was one, I just didn’t find it. When I came to North Carolina it was the first time I saw people gathering together over a potluck and music, with like shape note singing and like the Rise Up Singing book. Having this experience of big, group harmonies I had this realization more and more that music could be a part of my daily life in a way it hadn’t been as a child. Or, rather, as a way of public, shared daily life. Because it was always part of my life, but it was part of community life here in North Carolina. That was a big element of how music and North Carolinian music in particular drew me in and captured my heart. 

Can you talk a bit about the central storyline of this album and how you picked up the mythos of the selkie and turned it into this project? 

LR: The story of the selkie came to us and it’s something that is in the culture, it’s floating around. Many folks have seen the movies Song of the Sea or The Secret of Roan Inish. The first song that came to me, Omar and I were at the beach one day and I was playing on the banjo and this song came out. It was “Back to the Sea.” We were in the Outer Banks of North Carolina at that time, at the ocean, and I was kind of just listening for who this character is and what they are saying. It was a selkie. It was a selkie singing of getting to return home. 

I would say that coming home to ourselves is one of the central themes of this album and one of the themes the selkie story really brings into focus. The whole myth is centered around a being, a mystical ocean being, who gets yanked out of her native waters and forced to live in a world that doesn’t understand her and wasn’t built around her existence. To me, there’s a really clear connection. That story is a medicine for the cultural wound of when we don’t fit into the prescribed paradigm of power. If we don’t fit into white supremacy or if we don’t fit into normativity or if we don’t fit into patriarchy. It’s the sense of feeling like we have to cut off parts of ourselves that aren’t compatible with those power structures so that we can be acceptable to the power structure at-large.

This story says, “No, don’t do that.” You can reclaim the parts of yourself that you’ve had to orphan in order to survive. You can reconnect to those pieces of you and you can come home to yourself. It speaks to integrating who we are, the characters of the land and the sea in this story are really powerful to me. The sea, to me, is this cosmic force. It’s a pervasive, creative, destructive, loving, mysterious force that the selkie comes out of. It doesn’t follow the rules of the land-bound world. To me, it’s like the structures and hierarchies of our culture – whether it’s capitalism or something else.

One of my questions was going to be about how queer the record is, and not just Queer with a capital Q, but also a lowercase Q, the idea of queerness as just existing counter to normativity. But it’s not just a story of otherness, it’s a story of otherness in relationship to embodiment. In the South right now especially, but in this country in general, embodiment is under attack. Whether we’re talking about COVID-19 or abortion access or trans rights. There’s something in this record that speaks to all of that. 

LR: I think one of my experiences [that informed this music] is that I’m in a female body. There’s a line in one of the songs, “I Am a Wolf” – that song is two parts. First is the fisherman speaking, he’s kidnapped the selkie, taken her out of her native waters, he’s made her come be his bride, and he’s like, “Why isn’t this working?” It sucks, he’s lonely, he thought things would be better. The second half is the selkie responding and she says, “I am a wolf, not a woman.” That’s the first thing she says. That was something I said at one point, when I was connecting with a sense of deep grief and rage within myself around what I felt were the prescribed cultural parameters of my existence. 

ORL: The people who made this album were mostly by BIPOC people and [people who fall outside those norms]. Joseph Sinclair and I are not white and Joe, Tati, [Lizzy], and I are not straight. I feel like a lot of different perspectives went into making this album. We didn’t just get white, straight dudes to make this album and it felt good that way, getting different musical perspectives on this. We could have just made it ourselves, that’s the other thing. I’m a multi-instrumentalist and Lizzy is a harmony singer, we could have overdubbed to kingdom come. Part of the reason why we got all these people together into the same room is because of their unique perspectives on the traditions they brought to the table. 

LR: This thread about embodiment is really important and by asking this question you’re helping me articulate something that I’ve been sitting with for months, a year, as I’ve been thinking about the writing and the words and characters in this story. And also, what is it for me in this story that I’m trying to unravel with this album. Also on a cultural level, what are we talking about here? 

The selkie, her skin is taken away from her in a moment of innocent revelry. The story starts with her dancing in the moonlight on a rock and that’s when the fisherman steals her skin. When I think about the people that I know and love, I think a lot of these systems are violent towards people whether or not they fit within the system’s perception of dominant power. When I think about the six-year-old version of a person or whatever version of a person was able to un-self-consciously dance or feel good or go into their mom’s closet and put on her clothes and makeup and not feel ashamed – there’s a different version of this for literally every person and what that means. That innocent revelry, it’s experiencing oneself not through the eye of an external observer but through the juicy presence of embodiment and joy and a sense of wholeness and rightness in your being.

Everybody’s had the experience of having their “skin” stolen from them. When you get yanked out of your sovereignty, your joy, your bliss. You get catcalled, you get shamed, you get this or that. There’s violence done to you, whether it’s physical or not, there’s that sense of losing your skin, when we start to separate from ourselves and regard parts of ourselves as less than. I think that dysphoria is a really important part of this story and this album. When we don’t experience ourselves or feel ourselves as the cultural perceptions tell us we’re supposed to be, whether it’s a question of gender or color, this feeling of not being at home in our bodies, I think that was a lot of what really resonated with me, even unconsciously, about the selkie. One of the ways that it took root and grew in my consciousness and eventually in our shared consciousness, between me and Omar and the folks who are on this music.

As a picker I have to talk about “Flying Free” and “Morning Girl,” because I think having instrumentals on this record makes so much sense. I have some ideas about how they fit into the story, not just based on the titles, but also based on how the tunes are so evocative like the rest of the project. Why, on a record that feels like a concept record, why instrumental tunes? 

LR: Words are our inheritance from so many of the same structures that can oppress us. And they’re also our freedom. Words allow us to develop and communicate concepts and they also contain hierarchies and power structures that we may or may not really need. The name of the song, “Flying Free,” and the fact that it’s instrumental, to me it’s like this somatic sensation of the selkie plunging back into the sea and the joy of being reunited with her home waters. Which to me is her sense of self, her sense of worth and safety and agency. 

ORL: Sound, organized sound inside of space, one of the powerful things about it is that we are able to attach emotion to it. It’s kind of beautiful how two people could feel similar things listening to one piece of music. When it came time to put together the songs for this album, there were a handful of tunes that came up that weren’t asking for words. But that totally helped paint the picture of the world of the selkie and what she was going through. 


Photo credit: Chris Frisina

Watkins Family Hour Felt “Hypnotized” By a Tune-Yards Song They Heard on Tour

Twenty years ago, two young musicians in the West Coast music scene started a residency that would outlive more bands than they could’ve imagined at the time. The brother-sister duo is none other than Sean and Sara Watkins, whose earliest national success came from their collaboration with mandolinist Chris Thile in Nickel Creek. Performing and recording with that band fostered the Watkins kids’ interest in acoustic music from a young age, and by the time they were both in their early twenties, Sara and Sean began a residency at the Los Angeles club Largo.

“It’s been really exciting to be part of this thing that is happening and growing and enables us to dig deep into this musical community. The consistency has been invaluable to both of us, as musicians,” Sean says. Sara adds, “But also, in life, the Family Hour has been and continues to be a huge part of making us feel anchored in the crazy city of Los Angeles.”

Now after numerous albums recorded with friends and on their own, Watkins Family Hour have reunited for a new project. It’s the third album from the duo, despite its curious name, Vol. II. As with previous installments from Watkins Family Hour, this new record features artists that have made guest appearances at Largo during the Watkins’ residency, including Madison Cunningham, Jackson Browne, and Gaby Moreno, to name a few.

Upon announcing the new album, Watkins Family Hour released their own spin on “Hypnotized,” one of their personal favorites discovered on their travels. “While on tour for our previous record, we heard this Tune-Yards song on the radio and then proceeded to listen to it just about every day after that while driving to the next town,” they stated. “Their version is so beautifully intricate and wild. We knew it would be a challenge, but it became apparent we needed to learn the dang thing ourselves and record it.”


Photo Credit: Jacob Boll

LISTEN: Todd Snider, “Big Finish” (Live)

Artist: Todd Snider
Hometown: East Nashville, Tennessee
Song: “Big Finish (Live)”
Album: Live: Return of the Storyteller
Release Date: September 23, 2022
Label: Aimless Records/Thirty Tigers

In Their Words: “I wanted to put out a live album of a one-man-band show to remind the people who listen to me that I know I am a troubadour and folk singer. I am a glorified busker first and foremost and always. The reason I get to explore music in the studio is because I can play it alone on the road. It’s like an unspoken agreement between myself and ‘The Shithouse Choir.’ I feel like we have a thirty-year inside joke going.

“It seems like the only thing they are counting on me to do is whatever I want and I wanted to make this album for them. It starts with this song that on one level is directly to them. You can listen to this as the first song of a new show from an old singer to an audience he’s lucked into for years through good gigs and bad, and he’s back again explaining his side of it. He says ‘it always seemed like the right thing at the time’ just like being here now does…welcome to the show.” — Todd Snider


Photo Credit: Stacie Huckeba

Basic Folk – Molly Tuttle

Growing up in Palo Alto, California, Molly Tuttle was surrounded by music. Her dad was a teacher at Gryphon Stringed Instruments, which is not-so-coincidentally where I got the pickups installed on my mini harp. Molly took to the guitar early and intensely, eventually earning a scholarship to the prestigious Berklee College of Music. But I think it was those early days growing up in California, attending bluegrass festivals with her family, basking in the glow of the jam, that set the tone for her warm and collaborative approach to playing music.

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At Berklee, Molly formed a band called “The Goodbye Girls,” and cut her teeth touring in Scandinavia. Digging into The Goodbye Girls was a good launchpad for talking about what it means to be a female musician in Americana, as well as what happens when you explicitly call yourself an all-female group. As the first woman to win the IBMA Guitarist of the Year award, Molly has a unique perspective on this particular conundrum. It’s juicy.

I talked with Molly about her debut album, When You’re Ready, and her dazzling covers album …But I’d Rather Be With You before sifting through the many layers of her latest album, Crooked Tree. Crooked Tree features Molly’s brand-new band, Golden Highway. This new record is a study of bluegrass sensitively executed by one of the genre’s stars. Molly’s interpretations of bluegrass traditions like the murder ballad, shiny stacked vocal harmonies, and lightning fast guitar playing, are something to behold.


Photo Credit: Samantha Muljat

LISTEN: Chris Canterbury, “Sweet Maria”

Artist: Chris Canterbury
Hometown: Haynesville, Louisiana
Song: “Sweet Maria”
Album: Quaalude Lullabies
Release Date: September 23, 2022
Label: Rancho Deluxe Records, distributed by BFD/The Orchard

In Their Words: “‘Sweet Maria’ came out of the first writing session I had with my good friend and one of my favorite co-writers, Vinnie Paolizzi, and was the last song I wrote before the pandemic. We were tossing around ideas about murder ballads and junkie tunes, and, of all things, we settled on a pop-inspired mid tempo uplifting number. It’s a driving song, it’s a love song, it’s all the things I thought we wouldn’t write that day. But, in the end it was the song we needed. ‘Sweet Maria’ is the embodiment of all the seemingly trivial things that make spending time with your partner such a blessing. When you don’t want the day to end, you just take the long way home….” — Chris Canterbury


Photo Credit: Brooke Stevens

WATCH: Margo Price, “Been to the Mountain”

Artist: Margo Price
Hometown: Aledo, Illinois/Nashville, Tennessee
Song: “Been to the Mountain”
Release Date: August 25, 2022
Label: Loma Vista Recordings

In Their Words: “‘Been to the Mountain’ is part one of an introspective trip into our subconscious. It is the perfect continuation of my search for freedom in my art and freedom in the modern age. I have a lot of high hopes for this next chapter and truly believe this is the most exciting music I’ve ever made in the studio with my band. We have all grown so much, we operate like one single organism — it’s telepathic. Courtney Hoffman brought my wild visions to life with the help of an incredible cast and crew in the music video. I wanted the story’s hypothetical 8- to 12-hour window to feel like a mini-lifetime. We also wanted to portray how an intense psychedelic experience has the potential to become a spiritual experience, and how that can change your perception of the world around you.” — Margo Price


Photo Credit: Alysse Gafkjen

Hawktail’s Instrumentals Add a Storybook Spirit to ‘Place of Growth’

The music on Place of Growth, the new third album by the Nashville acoustic string band Hawktail, calls a lot of things to mind. One thing it decidedly does not call to mind is the late country singer and songwriter Roger Miller.

And yet, here on a Zoom chat, the quartet’s bassist Paul Kowert is singing the opening line from Miller’s kids song, “Robin Hood.”

“Robin Hood and Little John and welcome to the forest,” he intones in a goofy, sing-songy, Miller-esque voice, from a hotel room in Seattle where he’s on tour as a member of the Punch Brothers. That, understandably, cracks up Brittany Haas, Hawktail’s fiddler, also on the Zoom from her Nashville home, just back from a duo tour of Europe with her cellist sister Natalie.

What the album does evoke is a lovely nature walk in a spirited suite of pieces including “Antelopen” (German for “Antelopes”), “Updraft” and “Pomegranate In the Oak Tree,” and three short linking “Wandering” interludes. Kowert, who is releasing the album on his Padiddle Records label, is cautious about overplaying that angle, though.

“It’s not programmatic and the titles aren’t even prescriptive,” he insists. “It’s just you need a title and what’s more universal than nature? It kind of pulls it all together, and there’s sort of a storybook quality to the music.”

Hence the Miller ditty.

Kowert, keeping a remarkably straight face, adds, “So that’s not inherent to the piece.”

But it works.

“It works, yeah,” he says. “It’s just that the album would take your imagination on a journey of its own creation and that each thing that comes leads you a little further on your trip. It was the desired effect.”

So yeah, Roger Miller is an unlikely reference. But how about Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition, with its Promenade interludes, and — dare we say — Beethoven’s 6th Symphony, a.k.a. the Pastoral? Given Kowert’s strong classical background before he wandered into bluegrass, that’s not a stretch.

Place of Growth saunters through landscapes where bluegrass, newgrass, fiddle tunes and, yes, composed classical music blend vividly, reflecting the sensibilities of the musicians, with guitarist Jordan Tice and mandolinist Dominick Leslie filling out the foursome. More immediate antecedents would include the artistic expanses covered by Chris Thile (Kowert’s Punch Brothers boss), Béla Fleck, Bruce Molsky and Sam Bush.

Most directly, they cite two mentors: Kowert, who grew up in Wisconsin, studied at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia with pioneering multi-genre composer and double bassist Edgar Meyer. San Francisco Bay Area native Haas, as a teen, connected with fiddler Darol Anger, a founding member of both the bluegrass-gypsy jazz hybrid David Grisman Quintet and the classical-jazz straddling Turtle Island String Quartet. Not only did he take her on as a student, but put her in his Republic of Strings ensemble.

Underscoring the classical connections, Hawktail has put out a companion to the album: sheet music of the gorgeous Place of Growth piece “Shallows,” arranged for violin and guitar by Kowert. Vinyl? Cassettes? Whatever. This is the real throwback format.

The letterpress print is lavishly illustrated with a stately heron and flowering vines by friend Heather Moulder, including a limited-edition hand-tinted version. This follows two earlier, finely crafted poster prints done by Moulder incorporating musical notation.

“That was sort of an early pandemic response,” says Haas. “We lost a bunch of gigs and said, ‘Let’s do something.’ You put the music in the hands of people in their homes and they can read it and play it themselves.”

So are fans playing from the sheet music?

“Some people are,” Kowert says. “Even if you don’t, it’s an art piece. It’s quality. It’s letterpress. You can run your fingers over it. You might not be able to sight-read music. You might not even be a musician. But you can see that the line goes up. you can see it go down, see how long the tune is. It’s like sharing the spirit of it, even if you don’t read the music.”

Ah, but is Hawktail playing from written music? Well… yes and no.

“I prefer as much variety as possible,” Kowert says. “Our music will have a segment of five seconds where everybody is composed and 20 seconds where two people are composed, but two are improvising, 10 seconds where one person’s composed and one person’s improvising and the other two are resting.”

“It’s pretty fluid,” says Haas. “Like, ‘This person will take this melody or that stuff.’ But it’s still like you don’t have to do what it says.”

They both laugh.

“We still want everybody to be themselves within it,” she adds.

Tice and Leslie add bluegrass roots — both of their dads play banjo and Tice’s mom is a fiddler — but go far beyond. Tice cites Tony Rice and Norman Blake as influences and has played with the Dave Rawlings Machine (as has Haas), Carrie Newcomer, Steve Martin and Yola, among others. Leslie, who grew up in bluegrass-rich Colorado, has played with Noam Pikelny and is currently on the road with Molly Tuttle.

Haas, Kowert and Tice connected on the festivals-and-camps circuit more than 15 years ago while going to college — Haas (who had joined “chamber-grass” band Crooked Still alongside singer Aiofe O’Donovan) at Princeton in New Jersey, Kowert at Curtis and Tice at Towson University in Maryland.

“When we first met it was clear there was a synergy between us,” Kowert says. “Jordan had a car, so he would pick me up in Philly and we’d drive out to see Brit and we would play [Norwegian hardanger fiddle player] Annbjørg Lien and [Swedish trio] Väsen tunes, music that was really suited to our ensemble, stuff we could kind of get excited about and play for fun.”

Not exactly the Bill Monroe canon.

“It was also music that was slightly on the fringe of what was most common to be playing,” Kowert says.

That carried through with the 2014 Haas Kowert Tice trio album You Got This and the first two Hawktail quartet sets, 2018’s Unless and 2020’s Formations.

Place of Growth is a culmination of that, meant to be taken as a whole piece. And that’s how Hawktail has been playing it in concerts — when they’ve had chances. Given each of the members’ active careers in other pursuits, that’s tricky.

“Hawktail’s a project that we all hold dear to our hearts,” says Haas, who is artist-in-residence and teaching at East Tennessee State University’s bluegrass program these days. “So we make time for it when we’re able to, and we really value that time and just the kind of musical bond that we’ve forged between the four of us. It’s instrumental music, and in the world at large it’s not that there’s not space for it. There totally is. But it’s not mainstream. And so it kind of finds its way, it curves around through.”

Fittingly, she turns to nature for an analogy.

“It’s like a little stream that’s running alongside the larger flow of music or something. It’s something that will always be there for us.”

Adds Kowert, “Hawktail has been our avenue to put our own personal twist on it. It’s like, ‘Oh, it’s a string band. They’re playing this fiddle tune, but this stuff is happening I’ve never expected.’ And we love that.”


Photo Credit: Benko Photographics (lead image); William Seeders Mosheim (inset)

LISTEN: Mary Bragg, “Love Each Other”

Artist: Mary Bragg
Hometown: Swainsboro, Georgia
Song: “Love Each Other”
Album: Mary Bragg
Release Date: September 30, 2022
Label: Tone Tree Music

In Their Words: “There is always an opportunity to love; to choose to be kind toward another human being instead of the myriad of other responses that can send us down an inflexible, judgmental road that only deepens the divide between us and the ones we disagree with. Empathy is at once an impossibility, and the necessity that breathes grace back into difficult situations. In the last several years, I’ve seen grace soften the sharpest pains, moving through seemingly innavigable relationship stresses. It only happens when people choose to love each other.” — Mary Bragg


Photo Credit: Shervin Lainez