Hackensaw Boys Capture the Loneliness and Happiness of a Musician’s Life

Since 1999, Hackensaw Boys have been pioneering and pushing the boundaries of alt-country. Now with a dozen albums to their name, the group out of Charlottesville, Virginia, continues to do so with their new, self-titled and self-released effort.

Colored with hints of punk, country, bluegrass, folk and pop, the project contains some of the most raw and wide-ranging songs from guitarist David Sickmen’s extensive catalog, with arrangements from Caleb Powers (fiddle/banjo/mandolin), Chris Stevens (upright bass) and David’s son, Jonah (charismo). Throughout the 11 tracks, Sickmen ruminates on everything from how people hide their grief and project it onto others (“The Weights”) to long-ago breakups (“Old New Mexico”).

“Old New Mexico” is one of several tracks from the album that Sickmen penned over a decade ago but never had a home until now. With his older cuts sprinkled between songs written in the past year or two like “The Weights,” the album offers a comprehensive look at the evolution of Sickmen and his art before and after he was treated for vocal polyps in early 2016. The album has also provided him much needed clarity, particularly in reference to “Old New Mexico.”

“[This song] lightens my mind because it made me realize that breakups aren’t new to me. I’ve been writing about them for 20 years,” says Sickmen. “I’ve been falling in and out of things for a long time now, so going back and finally recording this was a bit of a pressure release because it helped me to understand that despite all of these changes I’m still alive, well and moving forward with purpose.”

The self-titled project is one that Sickmen is prouder of than any previous album from the group, which was at one time a launching point for songwriters Pokey LaFarge and John R. Miller. However, despite Sickmen’s confidence, he stresses now more than ever about how he’ll get his work noticed in an era of overwhelmingly accessible streaming options.

BGS: I can see how streaming can be a double-edged sword. It helps to get your music out there, but at the same time it does the same for everyone else, too. It can be easy for your work to get lost in the shuffle of endless options.

Sickmen: It’s funny because as an artist I hate Spotify, but as a music listener I love Spotify. I now have more music than I can even fathom at my fingertips, but like you said there’s so much to consume that it’s easy for your work to get buried and forgotten. It can be discouraging, especially with how much money it costs to record and promote an album nowadays and releasing it independently like we are with this one.

I feel like the same can be said for social media. It’s critical to promoting yourself as an artist (if you’re able to correctly work the algorithms), but it can also be a very toxic, depressing and distracting space.

I’ve never been able to figure out the algorithms. Man. To be honest, I’m terrible at using Instagram and Facebook. I can’t help but post political stuff in support of things like reproductive rights and Black Lives Matter that I’m sure turn some people off. I care about that stuff just as much as I care about the band. I feel like as an artist it’s our duty to speak up about the ills of the world to hopefully help push the needle toward positive change.

Early in the pandemic I took a break from social media for a couple months and it was so refreshing. I found myself happier, less stressed out and more invested in the moment. The last thing I want is to be on my deathbed thinking, “Jesus, I spent 55,000 hours of my life on social media?!”  It’s insane how much of a distraction it can all be while at the same time being essential to promoting a business or brand in our modern world. It’s a necessary evil in that regard.

What led to y’all opting to self-release this collection of songs?

Our last few albums have been on Free Dirt Records, but when I brought this project to them they told me their release slate was already full for the year. As a result I ended up hiring them a la carte out of my own pocket to help with distribution and publicity. I’m literally in debt to this record, which is fine, but it just goes to show how much independent artists put on the line for a return that’s far from guaranteed. All those worries aside, this album feels like a more full-scale Hackensaw Boys project than anything we’ve done prior.

Turning to the songs now, one of my favorites on the record is “Strangers.” I love the line “Go on and take a chance on a stranger / understand our lives are all in danger.” I feel like it succinctly captures the essence of how we’re all going through our own struggles and owe one another more empathy and less animosity. Is that what you were aiming to channel with the song?

You’re spot on. The band was rehearsing one day and that line you mentioned just popped into my head. For a long time after that, the lyric just sat in my list of ideas. I knew what I wanted the song to say but was having a tough time figuring out how to say it. Then it finally came to me the night before going to record it. What I ended up with is a story about not being afraid of those perceived as different from you, because in reality we’re all human and have much more in common than we don’t.

Another song on the record that ties into those themes is your cover of Bob Dylan’s “All I Really Want to Do.” I understand that it made its way onto the album after you started jamming on the song one day with your son Jonah. What’s it been like having him become a part of your musical family?

It’s an incredible feeling. He was always around my music growing up, but he didn’t start playing himself until he got to college at Belmont University in Nashville. Despite getting a late start he’s caught on to things very fast and will soon be a better guitarist than me. He brings an immense amount of talent to the group on charismo and anything else he touches and has a great feel for the songs. At the same time he’s also my firstborn son, so getting to share time and make memories with him on the road when most touring musicians are spending extended time away from their loved ones is something I’ve been cherishing and don’t take for granted.

Is that what you’re singing about in “Only on The Brightside”?

It is. That song is my favorite on the album. It really captures the relationship between loneliness and happiness while out on the road. You can be happy with what you’re doing making music while also longing for the loved ones you’re away from. It’s a very melancholy tale, which is a writing style that I’ve always been drawn to, only now I’m a little less lonely on the road with Jonah around.


Photo Credit: Cloud Bobby

LISTEN: Jenner Fox, “Baby Names”

Artist: Jenner Fox
Hometown: Sisters, Oregon
Song: “Baby Names”
Album: Good Luck Road
Release Date: July 1, 2022
Label: The Thumb Records

In Their Words: “‘Baby Names’ is a portrait of a lost 25-year-old in search of motherhood, a cat, or at least a motorcycle — ‘something to love.’ I got the idea for the song when I learned that some of my friends have had running lists of baby names from when they were in elementary school. Shortly after learning this fact, a roommate and dear friend of mine called a house meeting about the prospect of adopting a kitten. Unfortunately, due to allergies, the verdict was no. She was crestfallen, and ended the house meeting saying, ‘I just want something to love.'” — Jenner Fox


Photo Credit: Josh Chang

LISTEN: Nora Brown, “Little Satchel”

Artist: Nora Brown
Hometown: Brooklyn, New York
Song: “Little Satchel”
Album: Long Time to Be Gone
Release Date: August 26, 2022
Label: Jalopy Records

In Their Words: “This is a tune I learned from both Fred Cockerham off the album High Atmosphere and also from the playing of Riley Baugus. I first listened to High Atmosphere on a visit to the album’s creator, John Cohen, up in Putnam Valley, New York, but only got around to learning it more recently. I often break my first string when I tune to this one, so I’ve been a bit scared away from playing it live. Fred’s playing and singing on this song is just incredible, especially the little rhythmic pattern he plays continuously throughout the song.

“I recorded my last project in an underground tunnel, but this time we were working in a cavernous church, which allowed us to really experiment with all the sounds that different locations in the sanctuary and different mic configurations could produce. When you listen, you can hear the expanse of the space pretty clearly, which was really important to our approach on these recordings.” — Nora Brown


Photo Credit: Benton Brown

BGS 5+5: Teddy and the Rough Riders

Artist: Teddy and the Rough Riders
Hometown: Nashville, Tennessee
Latest Album: Teddy and the Rough Riders
Personal nicknames: TRR, Teddy

Which artist has influenced you the most … and how?

Well, since there are way too many artists who have had singular, exceptional influences on us, I’ll have to just pick one amongst many! But someone special that comes to mind for me is Bill Monroe. For me he took the song formula to the moon, maybe from speeding up Jimmie Rodgers and other traditionals to breakneck speeds, and singing as high as humanly possible. To me he breaks through bluegrass. As a creator he made these simple, beautiful melodies that can be felt beyond genre, as he certainly was in his day.

What was the first moment that you knew you wanted to be a musician?

Growing up in Nashville there was a plethora of rock house shows and gatherings. One in particular I was around 15 years old when I saw this band Jeff the Brotherhood, and they just had this stripped-down, two-piece, driving minimalist rock sound. The scene around them was exploding and I truly felt like I got to be a part of it right then and there. That made me believe I could actually play music. It took our buddy Carter setting up a honky-tonk night every Sunday 7-9 at Santa’s Pub in 2011 to be fully convinced to play real country music, though!

What rituals do you have, either in the studio or before a show?

Jack and I love to rehearse singing together before a big show. I play mandolin and sing the high harmony, and Jack plays guitar and sings lower. But we do a huge Louvin Brothers routine, kind of doing the high lonesome, blood harmony thing. It’s just great practice and lets us all warm up solidly and relieve stress before a show.

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

Nashville is surrounded by great hikes. We go to Sewanee, Tennessee, where a good many friends have family cabins out there. That will put a song in your mind, it’s a pretty special place. We all go out to Percy Priest Lake together and listen to music and sit in the sun and swim. We have access to canoes and a lot of our friends are good at efficiently camping. I definitely write songs about those experiences all the time.

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

In Nashville there’s an exceptional Southern-style meat-and-three called Arnold’s Country Kitchen. Well, naturally we go there a good bit, but before his death, and for longer than I know probably, John Prine would go there every Thursday before a writing session and get the meatloaf. We’d go and see him ride in his huge black Escalade and go to town. So to me, John Prine and a big ole meatloaf and three sides from Arnold’s is the stuff of legend!


Photo Credit: Monica Murray

LISTEN: Tim Stafford & Thomm Jutz, “Take That Shot”

Artist: Tim Stafford & Thomm Jutz
Hometown: Kingsport, Tennessee; and Buehl, Germany (actual) / Nashville, Tennessee (felt)
Song: “Take That Shot”
Album: Lost Voices
Release Date: June 28, 2022
Label: Mountain Fever

In Their Words: “‘Take That Shot’ is a song about how images influence our perceptions of people and events. We cover a pretty wide range of photos in this song. From Billy the Kid, to Marilyn Monroe, to Bill Monroe and Robert Johnson. Tim and I are both very interested in history, so writing these types of songs comes natural to us.” — Thomm Jutz

“If you’re like me, you can’t pass up the chance to snap a photo in certain situations — a beautiful scene, something unusual that catches your eye. ‘Take That Shot’ is kind of unique in the bluegrass field, since there aren’t many ‘grass songs about photography, and especially historically important ‘shots.’ But they capture so much, about us individually and our culture — without words.” — Tim Stafford


Photo Credit: Jefferson Ross

WATCH: The Foreign Landers, “Traveler”

Artist: The Foreign Landers
Hometown: Travelers Rest, South Carolina
Song: “Traveler”
Album: Travelers Rest
Release Date: Late 2022

In Their Words: “Having grown up on opposite sides of the Atlantic and having toured full-time in traveling bands for many years, the two of us have had to spend a lot of time in foreign lands and unfamiliar places far from home. Even since we got married three years ago, we’ve only recently been able to find a place of our own for the first time here in Travelers Rest, South Carolina. Now that idea of ‘Travelers Rest’ has become very dear to us — having a place to call home and a respite from the road, even though we inevitably feel pulled back to our far-off roots and former transient lives. We wrote this song to try and capture some of those bittersweet ideas. Narrated from the point of view of Tabitha’s parents back in Northern Ireland, ‘Traveler’ deals with the wistful feelings of growing older and being away from loved ones. And for this video we filmed some beautiful shots both in our new hometown in South Carolina as well as the North Shore of Northern Ireland near where Tabitha grew up. This song will be featured on our debut full-length album, Travelers Rest, to be released later this year.” — David Benedict, The Foreign Landers


Photo and Video Credits: The Foreign Landers

WATCH: Old Crow Medicine Show, “Used to Be a Mountain”

Artist: Old Crow Medicine Show
Hometown: Nashville, Tennessee
Song: “Used to Be a Mountain”
Album: Paint This Town
Release Date: April 22, 2022
Label: ATO Records

In Their Words: “I’ve been playing Appalachian music in Appalachia since I was a kid. West Virginia, Kentucky, Southwest Virginia, and East Tennessee are the places I love to play most. When you saw a fiddle in these settings it always feels like a homecoming. But time has dealt a hard hand to the region that gave birth to country music, and ‘Used to Be a Mountain’ is a song that wrestles with the issues facing Appalachia today. I think that the intrepid spirit of the mountaineers of the coal fields of the Southern Highlands and Appalachia are some of the hardest and most important fore-bearers of the American dream. I think that when you take away the natural beauty and destroy the ecology of places, you don’t have a whole lot left to rebuild with. I know there’s a lot of folks that are hurting right now in the communities of the coal fields. This song is there to both reflect that hurt and to ask the question, can we do something better for these folks? Can we do something better for these mountains, these hills, the flora and fauna, for anybody who wants to breathe clean air and drink clean water in Appalachia?” — Ketch Secor, Old Crow Medicine Show

Editor’s Note: Along with the video, the band has partnered with Cumberland River Compact, a non-profit organization dedicated to enhancing water resources through education and cooperation. The partnership serves to bring awareness to the effects of climate change, connecting fans with ways to get involved in the local climate movement through local action.


Photo Credit: Kit Wood (L-R: Morgan Jahnig, Mason Via, Ketch Secor, Jerry Pentecost, Cory Younts, Mike Harris)

LISTEN: Julian Taylor, “Seeds”

Artist: Julian Taylor
Hometown: Toronto, Ontario
Song: “Seeds”
Release Date: June 24, 2022

Editor’s Note: “Seeds” was inspired by a text that Taylor received from his cousin the morning after it was announced that 215 uncovered remains of buried Indigenous children had been discovered at a former residential school in Kamloops, British Columbia. The message simply read: “They tried to bury us, but they didn’t know we were seeds.”

In Their Words: “Seeing and reading messages from members of my family felt crushing because genocide has and continues to be attempted where me and my loved ones live and it’s happening all over the world. When I look at my family I see a group of undeniably strong people with stories to share and that also gives me hope and that’s when I started to write ‘Seeds.’ I hope that this song touches people’s hearts in some way and makes them think. Think about their lives in a different way. One that brings them closer to the natural world and the universe. I hope it makes them feel the need to help others and see just how important and special the teachings of the ancient ones truly are.” — Julian Taylor


Photo Credit: Lisa MacIntosh

WATCH: Appalachian Road Show, “Blue Ridge Mountain Baby”

Artist: Appalachian Road Show
Hometown: Nashville, Tennessee
Song: “Blue Ridge Mountain Baby”
Album: Jubilation
Release Date: October 7, 2022
Label: Billy Blue Records

In Their Words: “When we settled on the theme and title of Jubilation for this new project (intended to be sort of an ‘answer’ to our last project, Tribulation), we knew exactly the direction some of the material needed to head. But, sometimes finding just the right pieces to put it all together can be a task! One day the hook, ‘Blue Ridge Mountain Baby,’ popped into my head out of the blue sky. In that instant, I could just feel what the finished song ought to sound and feel like… We just needed to actually write it… and then perform it! When it was time to record it, man, did the guys sure scald it! If ever a song felt like it belongs on an album called Jubilation, I think ‘Blue Ridge Mountain Baby’ does!” — Jim VanCleve, Appalachian Road Show


Photo Credit: Erick Anderson

From Their Secret Studio in Nashville, The Grahams Cultivate a Community

Doug and Alyssa Graham dreamed big in 2018 when they opened 3Sirens, a hidden recording studio in East Nashville that’s become a go-to destination for independent musicians of all kinds. Now recording their own projects together as The Grahams, the couple grew up together in New Jersey and have since traversed the globe with their roots-pop blend of original music. But for their latest, they invited friends to record a cover song at 3Sirens for an upcoming compilation titled 3Sirens Presents: With Love Part 1. The Grahams themselves are getting in on the action with a mesmerizing cover of Mazzy Star’s “Fade Into You.”

“I always always wanted to cover that song. It spoke to me in a way that allowed me to wander through the magical world the band set up. It also spoke to me on a romantic level as it was something I could relate to with Doug as my lifelong partner,” Alyssa says. “For our cover version we slowed it down, leaned into the slow drip and embraced the jazzy mood of the changes. It felt a little more personal this way to us but nobody can do it even close to the original.”

Doug and Alyssa Graham invited the Bluegrass Situation to 3Sirens this spring for an afternoon hang.

BGS: What were the first steps in bringing 3Sirens from a good idea into reality?

ALYSSA: It took a while and it’s still not there. How’s that? (laughs) So, the good idea started when Doug and I started rambling on about how we grew up, which was together around campfires with everyone taking an instrument. Being hippie kids and playing music in any way we could. So, the idea has been there since we were kids. We have always loved that whole idea. Then we got caught up in the world and the business of music and forgot about the idea for a while.

But the idea really started becoming a possibility when we were holed up with our friend Davíd Garza in our New York apartment during a blizzard right before South by Southwest around 2014. And we were just talking about the idea of creating a space that was reminiscent of what they were doing in the ‘60s. Or the ‘20s in Paris where artists would come together. If you knew Garza, you’d know he was like, “No cell phones. No computers, no technology.” We got past that, but that was the idea. Like-minded people, artists of all kinds, together. Garza was like, “Let’s see if my friend John Doe would be a guinea pig.” Who doesn’t love John Doe? We were about to go down to South by Southwest, and we didn’t have this house yet, so we rented a studio and said, “John, do you want to try to somehow make this a reality, conceptually, for one session, and see what we get?” So, that’s how it started.

DOUG: Then we got Ben Kweller to do a session with us, and we’re still working on getting that release plan together. And then we had an idea where we wanted to make a movie. Wouldn’t it be really cool if we got a bunch of musicians together and made a soundtrack? Dex, our buddy here, called a bunch of people in Nashville to come up with a compilation. So, here’s three pieces of content we had sitting around – John Doe, Ben Kweller, and the compilation. Then we started hanging out with Dex a lot and said, “We want to buy a space.” And here we are, basically. With our friends, we were drilling holes in the floor and running wires underneath the house and into each room, getting the studio plugged in.

What are some of your favorite memories or moments here?

ALYSSA: I would say one of my favorite memories is closing on this house. We had been looking and looking, and we were recording our own record at that time in Blackbird, and next door at Creative Workshop. They are amazing studios with everything at your fingertips. But we were also actively looking for an old house to turn into this. We saw lots of properties with Dex and then we went on tour. We were in France when we bought the place. We were on tour with our whole band and had a few days off in Paris. We bought the place sight unseen. Dex saw it – he Facetimed me and I saw every inch of it. We bought the place and I think my favorite memory is when we came back from that tour, we came in here. It was an empty house. We had bought a few of these rugs and the three of us stayed up for five days rolling out the rugs and putting up chandeliers. Pumped great music through here for five days. It was a clean palette. It was the beginning of something. We still don’t know what that is, honestly.

Where do you go from here?

ALYSSA: Lots of places! (laughs) One of the main reasons we wanted to do this is that we eventually want to start a foundation element to 3Sirens. We’re working on developing that concept, whether it’s working on grants for struggling artists or specifically musicians, or whether it’s partnering with some of the music schools. At the core of this whole thing is a collaborative sensibility where we want to bring people together and try to support artists in some way. There’s gotta be a philanthropic element.

DOUG: We have this larger dream than just this place. This is one element of a creative support network that we want to figure out. This is the most relatable part for us. We’re musicians, we’re here, so let’s make this a spot. We’ll start to make it available to people. How do we do that? How do we make it available to as many people as we can without trashing the place? (laughs)

ALYSSA: You can’t call up and book space. It’s not like that. It’s either we know you, or Dex knows you, or a friend told you about it, or you’re somebody we’re interested in musically or artistically and we invite you to come. It’s sort of a network that way. But in the immediate future, there’s a compilation coming out with all Nashville artists, which is cool. We also want to start releasing albums. We have a working relationship with (music distributor) The Orchard, and basically we’re going to start putting out records of artists that we not only love and support, but also people that might not have the right story, or the right look, or the right sound for a niche label.

We’ve talked about how 3Sirens can benefit the artists who come here, but what is the reward for you personally in having this space?

ALYSSA: I think we’re at a place in our life where, yes, we’re always going to pursue our own music and we’re writing a new record right now. We love being The Grahams. We’ve been doing this together since we were 10 years old. That will never change, but we have a 3-year-old and we’re at the point right now where we want to see beautiful things going into the world. We have the means and the dream to make this a place that brings joy to people, including us. We love to be around great music. We love to support great music. We love to hear great music.

DOUG: We did grasp at this music business for a long time, and now we’re kind of over that. We figured out that we just want to make music. We don’t want to be famous. This is a bigger dream, to provide joy and to provide a space.


Photo Credit: Alex Berger of Weird Candy