WATCH: 49 Winchester, “Russell County Line” (Acoustic)

Artist: 49 Winchester
Hometown: Castle, Virginia
Song: “Russell County Line” (Acoustic)
Album: Fortune Favors the Bold
Release Date: May 13, 2022
Label: New West Records

In Their Words: “This is one of those songs that lends itself to a stripped back, more subdued performance. Even though the studio version has that big, electrified outro, the heart of the song really is still that acoustic guitar. A simpler approach is sometimes hard to pull off, but with this song, it works. I hope to always be able to write songs with that kind of adaptability. Good songs can be rearranged and experimented with instrumentally and still be good songs, and I think ‘Russell County Line’ is like that. I’d love to do a bluegrass version of the tune with a banjo bouncing along and carrying that melody.” — Isaac Gibson, 49 Winchester


Photo Credit: Joshua Black Wilkins

Folk Alliance Returns, In-Person and Online

Beginning Wednesday, May 18, the Folk Alliance’s first in-person conference since January 2020 kicks off in Kansas City. Whether tuning in from the comfort of your home via the virtual option, or connecting in person in the hallways of the Kansas City Westin, one thing is certain: it sure feels good to be back with all our folk friends.

SPOTLIGHTS
Spotlight Week is a virtual presentation of talented acts from around the world in one-hour pre-recorded showcases as part of the virtual programming for the 2022 Folk Alliance International Conference.

From May 9-11, eight partners from the UK, Australia, New Zealand, Colombia, Canada, and the USA presented 52 acts total from a wide range of genres. Artist highlights include Aoife O’Donovan, Peggy Seeger, John McCutcheon, and Michaela Anne. All performances are available for repeat viewing within the conference platform for the rest of May. Discover the full Spotlight schedule here.

OFFICIAL SHOWCASES
One of the biggest highlights of every Folk Alliance conference is the promise of discovering something you’ve never heard before.

We’re particularly looking forward to The Bluegrass Situation’s official showcase night on Friday, May 20, from 4:15-9pm CT in the Century C Ballroom, featuring Laura Cortese & the Dance Cards, JigJam, Dan Navarro, and Ensemble Iberica.

Stop by and say hello to our editor Craig Shelburne as he emcees the stage for the evening!

PANELS & PROGRAMMING
FAI is always a meeting point for some of the most prominent names in the roots music industry to connect and share updates on the state of the folk and folk-adjacent music world.

This year brings us remarks from keynote speakers Shirley Collins and Madeleine Peyroux, plus the International Folk Music Awards, Peer Sessions for artists, agents, labels, and festivals, artist mentorship meetings, and even Affinity Group sessions for communities like BIPOC, LGBTQIA+, Women, Folks 55+, and Folks with Disabilities. Plus the world premiere of a new work from Saskia Tompkins, FAI’s 2022 Artist in Residence.

You can discover a guide to all the daytime programming and panels here.

Even if you can’t be at this year’s conference in person, it’s not too late to register for the virtual conference. Virtual access is available via a pay-what-you’re-able model allowing you to access official showcase performances within 24 hours of their live set, plus exclusive online-only content like the daily Black Opry Hour. You can discover more here, and the full program for the week’s events is available here.

What are you most looking forward to at this year’s Folk Alliance International conference? What are some of your favorite memories and discoveries from past conferences? Let us know in the comments!


Photo: Raye Zaragoza via Folk Alliance International

WATCH: Banditos, “Here Tonight”

Artist: Banditos
Hometown: Birmingham, Alabama; now in Nashville
Song: “Here Tonight”
Album: Right On
Release Date: May 20, 2022
Label: Egghunt Records

In Their Words: “We’ve been in Nashville about 10 years now, but all came up in Alabama — the outskirts of Birmingham mainly. When we moved we all made the jump together. We were staying in a band house to cut cost of rent & be able to tour more, so naturally we moved into a house all together in Nashville. Our dear friend, Joshua Shoemaker, who grew up with us in those Birmingham outskirts, also lived in those houses & made that jump with us as well. He pushed us to make the move as he was expanding his career as a filmmaker. We had our friends’ bands come stay with us at our house. Banditos would play shows with them. Joshua would film videos. It was simpatico.

Long story long we adore this man & he does incredible work. He’s done several live videos with us over the years, but never a narrative. It’s always been a dream to make it happen & I think the excitement shines through. We had an amazing team, hired some really star actors from Facebook & it turned out beautifully. The song itself kind of throws back to our Birmingham days where we’d be at a bar & you’d see the lonely & ornery drink themselves dry at the end of the table. This one is about finding hope in those dark places & letting yourself love yourself despite life’s circumstances.” — Mary Beth Richardson, Banditos


Photo Credit: Citizen Wayne Kane

Jim Ed Norman Resumes His Orchestral Role on Eagles’ Hotel California Tour

Jim Ed Norman has juggled all kinds of jobs over five decades in the music business, but he decided to get back to his roots after receiving a phone call from Don Henley. The two musicians met as college students in Texas, then briefly played together in a band called Shiloh. But it was their creative collaborations on a couple of Eagles records that stuck with Henley for all these years. When the offer was extended for Norman to lead the orchestra on tour as the Eagles played the entirety of their 1976 album, Hotel California, it proved irresistible.

By accepting the gig, Norman switched gears yet again — which is something he’s done throughout his career. Over the last 50 years or so, Norman has developed an impressive profile in the music industry, but not always as a musician. Along with his conducting and arranging work, he produced multiple albums for Anne Murray, served as president at the country division of Warner Bros. Records, and even started a “Progressive” division at the label, taking a chance on artists like Béla Fleck and Mark O’Connor. As a producer, he shared a Grammy win in 2021 with the Fisk Jubilee Singers.

Now he’s in the spotlight himself, particularly when the orchestra is revealed to the audience after just a few songs. To make the return even more poignant, the tour heads to Texas in May, where the long-standing relationship began. While off the road and working on his home in Franklin, Tennessee, Norman told BGS about how it all started.

BGS: This feels like a full-circle moment now that you’re on the road with the Eagles. What is your role out there?

Norman: Well, first I want to say it’s great to hear you use that phrase “full circle” because that’s exactly the way I’ve looked at it and thought of it myself. I did all of the original orchestral arranging and conducting for the records for the Eagles, beginning with Desperado through Hotel California. Then I also played piano on some of the records through the years. I got a communication from Don Henley, whom I’ve known a long time, saying the band wanted to mount a Hotel California tour. They do the album top to bottom — and they don’t say a word in between.

When the album came out, it was on vinyl, and the A-Side ended with a song I was moved by emotionally, and what was going on with it artistically, and the quality of the songwriting. Don and Glenn were just amazing writers. So, I wrote an orchestral-only piece. Not per their direction; I was just simply moved by it. It happened that the day we were in the studio, we got finished and had some time left over. I said, “Hey, guys, I wrote this orchestral piece. Would you be interested in me sharing it?” And they said, “Yes, that sounds great.” So, we ran it down and recorded it.

Then they called me sometime later – or I don’t know if they even called me. I might have found out when the album came out, but Side A ended with a song called “Wasted Time” and Side B opened with “Wasted Time (Reprise),” the orchestral-only piece. So, when Don called and said they were going to mount this tour, he said, “Jim Ed, you can do whatever you want [on the tour] because we’re going to be doing your charts.” The more I thought about it, I decided to quit the day-to-day to reconnect with the creative process, if you will.

This was an opportunity, as you have outlined, for the full-circle aspect. It was how I started — as an orchestral arranger and conductor. The work with the Eagles led to doing it with Ronstadt, Seger, Kim Carnes, and America, and other people. On Hotel California, the orchestra comes and goes, and I do get an opportunity now to hear things I wrote so many years ago, lived out in that kind of environment. … The encore section includes “Desperado,” and “Desperado” was the first orchestral thing I ever wrote. I was fortunate that it ended up on such a great song and connecting with such a great group of guys. Every night on tour, I get to hear the arrangement that started it all for me.

Do you remember your response to first hearing the lyrics to “Desperado” and what it meant to you at the time?

It was around 1972 or 1973, when the music was being formed and “Desperado” was being written. So, the guys put together a demo for me. It had a lyric that went something like, “Desperado, da-da-da, da-da your fences, da-da-da-da… for so long….” The lyrics weren’t quite formed but it had a wonderful melody and structure. So, I first heard it in that form. The guys then went to London, where they were working with Glyn Johns producing. They sent me the track that they had recorded on reel-to-reel tape. I then got to hear the finished song, and I remember thinking this is wonderful because it’s also somewhat the linchpin conceptually of the record. The conversations that I heard at the time from Don, Glenn, and maybe Jackson [Browne], I knew there was a connection between life on the road and the life of an outlaw.

It’s easy to look back on it and conjecture, but I know Don well enough to know that little was left to chance. Don and Glenn were very thoughtful and insightful artists and songwriters. The other thing that was great about the experience is that was the first song Don and Glenn wrote together. And to think of that kind of eloquence, and what it says… It became a touchstone for me in my life as an arranger, because in all of my work subsequently, it was about putting emphasis on the lyric. It’s not a matter of showing how many notes you can write. (laugh) But rather frame what was going on, so that you listen to the vocalist intently. Then you have a melodic fill to keep your ear in tune with what the singer is singing.

All of the lyric content of the song was a very strong motivating factor in the notes that got written. There’s one lyric – “There’s a rainbow above you” – where I had specifically done this soaring thing. Whether anybody else ever thought of that as a rainbow, I’ll never know. I bet I listened to that version they sent me probably two to three weeks, or a month. I did nothing but listen to that song over and over, for weeks! At a certain point, I would even dream it, and imagine the orchestral things that would be going on around this song. One day I got the paper out and I ended up trying different things with a complement of instruments. In an orchestra, you have first and second violins, violas, cellos, and double basses. And I actually had no violas in this section that was used on “Desperado.” It was nothing but violins, cellos, and double basses. And it was with the idea of having a depth and “guts” with what was going on with the orchestra.

You mentioned that when you were arranging “Desperado,” you were listening closely to the lyrics. Did that come in handy as you started as a producer in Nashville? So much of the work you had to do was centered around lyrics.

Yes, I think so. I grew up with instrumental music as a young child. The first thing that I played, in the fifth grade, was trumpet. Then I moved to piano lessons for six months, and moved on to another instrument, and another, and another. Most of my early life was as an instrumentalist. A lot of the music I heard in the landscape of the ‘60s, you had the orchestra happening. … Even on the Beatles records, right off the bat, you’ve got a producer like George Martin, and I was swept along and magically transported by what I was hearing musically and orchestrally. When I say “orchestral,” in many cases I’m talking about how the Memphis Horns were just as cool as the London Symphony Orchestra.

It was in the mid to late ‘60s when I began to realize, well, there are lyrics here too. And how, at times, those things meld so perfectly that your emotional response to what was being said was because of the support that was happening from the complement pieces other than just the band. To me, I thought the Beatles were a good four-piece band. Those guys sat down and rehearsed and practiced and they were really good, but occasionally the songs had this additional complement that made the song special. There was a recognition that was beginning to happen for me about the power of lyric, and that grew and grew and grew through that period. I would say, without a doubt, it began to crystallize in my exposure to the work of Don and Glenn and Jackson and J.D. (Souther). It changed my perspective on what lyric was, and the importance of the lyric and the music combined.


Photo Credit: Paris Cronin

LISTEN: Silver Lining, “The Dream”

Artist: Silver Lining
Hometown: Oslo, Norway
Song: “The Dream”
Album: Go Out Nowhere
Release Date: May 13, 2022
Label: Die With Your Boots On Records

In Their Words: “We kind of struggled with this one in the studio, couldn’t really find the right sound, vibe, rhythm… After our first week of recording I was ready to scrap it, as I figured I wouldn’t be able to nail the vocals; the song requires a happier and more on-point way of singing than I’m used to, and at the time I couldn’t find the way out of my comfort zone. But when we came back for another round a few months later the pieces suddenly fell into place, and when the drums and bass were laid down by the mind-blowing duo Kim Åge Furuhaug/Chris Holm, the song finally found its form. I love how our producer Yngve Sætre pushed both me and the rest of the band to keep working on this tune, as it turned out so fulfilling in the end!” – Live Miranda Solberg, Silver Lining


Photo Credit: Julie Marie Naglestad

Seeking Bluegrass in LA, Ed Helms & Amy Reitnouer Jacobs Made a Scene With BGS

To commemorate the 10th birthday of the Bluegrass Situation, co-founders Ed Helms and Amy Reitnouer Jacobs are taking it all the way back to the beginning. In the first installment of an ongoing interview series, the enthusiastic bluegrass fans reveal how they first met, their shared vision for a modern aesthetic, and the meaning behind the unexpected (yet appropriate) name.

Amy: As we’re looking back on 10 years of The Bluegrass Situation, it occurred to me that you and I have never really reflected on how all of this started and how this thing kind of built up. So I wanted to get our own take on it and… reminisce, stroll down memory lane a bit, and think about it.

Ed: We need a little oral history for the archives! [laughs] And for our own… ’cause it’s exciting to reminisce a little bit.

Amy: I’ll kick it off and ask, what was your intro to bluegrass? Why do you care about this music to begin with and what drew you into it?

Ed: The earliest I can trace back would be growing up in Atlanta, Georgia. My mom’s from Nashville, so we would take road trips from Atlanta to Nashville all the time. In addition to that, I spent many, many summers at a summer camp in the Smoky Mountains in North Carolina. That’s another road trip that’s about a three or four-hour drive from Atlanta.

So, on those drives, we’re always pulling off at truck stops and whatever, and we would pick up cassette tapes at the checkout counter. And my dad, who grew up in Alabama, was always a big fan of opera and classical music. He would grab these string band tapes for some reason. And I started listening to these very generic, early string band tapes when I was 8 years old in the car. They didn’t resonate with me as artists, but the music connected with me somehow. And I associated it with those places — Nashville and the North Carolina mountains.

Then as I got older, I was one of those kids that kind of thought everybody was fake, you know, like Holden Caulfield. Just distressed by all the artificiality of our world and of the people around me and like, “Oh, everyone at school, everything is so performative. Like, who’s real? Who’s the real deal?” And that kind of drew me, musically, into older and older music. I got obsessed with authenticity and where are the roots of things. … I think it scratched some itch that I had for authenticity-seeking, and probably allowed me to feel superior to all my classmates in junior high.

Then when I could actually get to a record store, I remember the very first bluegrass album that I bought was the Bluegrass Album Band. I didn’t know who J.D. Crowe and Vassar Clements and Jerry Douglas were, but all I knew was that on the cover of this CD at Turtle’s Records & Tapes in Atlanta was guys holding banjos and guitars and mandolins. So I bought that album and to this day it’s one of my favorite albums. I’ve never asked Jerry Douglas about this, I should, but it felt like the intention of those albums was to kind of just be the ultimate catalog of, you know…

Amy: I mean, it’s called the Bluegrass Album Band.

Ed: Right. They just called themselves the most generic name. And it’s almost like they were just trying to create a library of excellent bluegrass artists playing the canon or something. Or maybe they were really ahead of their time with like meta irony and they were just like, “We’re going to call ourselves the Bluegrass Album Band, ’cause it’s hilarious.”

And of course Tony Rice’s guitar playing on that – I was very much into guitar at the time, I later picked up a banjo – Tony’s guitar playing was so magical to me. I could not understand how human hands could play what he was doing. I would just pour over these solos. I remember the solo to “Your Love Is Like a Flower,” it just was like, how the hell is that being played? I could not wrap my head around it. And I listened to it a million times, and I didn’t have the technology to slow it down, so I couldn’t do that.

Amy: That album and that band really represent a generational shift. It’s not newgrass. It’s playing the canon, but with this mix of the new guard and some folks with some real cred from the second generation.

Ed: You’re right. It isn’t an old sound, what they’re doing. It’s a new sound at that time, because no one was doing Tony Rice licks before Tony Rice. But the harmonies are timeless and the structure of the songs is very traditional. That album means so much to me and I listen to it to this day and I’m still blown away! I actually can play that solo from “Love Is Like a Flower” now, but only at about half speed. And it’s one of the proudest things, when I finally found – someone had transcribed it in tablature, and I was like, “This is string theory explained. This is like if you had Carl Sagan sit you down and explain the mysteries of the universe.” I was like, “Holy shit, I got it! The holy grail!”

Amy: Yeah. To me, it’s still magic. ‘Cause I am not someone who can play an instrument, at least very well, so when I first heard bluegrass, I was just like, “How does that happen? How do you even get the notes from your brain to your fingers and do it so well, and in a way that I’ve just never heard before?” It still kind of blows me away.

Ed: Can I ask you the same question? Where did you first connect to bluegrass music?

Amy: I grew up in rural Pennsylvania, and there was a lot of country and bluegrass around there. Admittedly, I didn’t like it because to me it represented… I mean, I was really busy listening to showtunes and learning Sondheim lyrics and stuff. I was that kid. And I just thought country and roots music was inherently uncool and representative of this place that I felt like I was stuck in.

It wasn’t until I went to college in North Carolina… It was probably the first few weeks of school, one of my housemates who is still a very dear friend of mine invited me to a show, and it was Nickel Creek. I had never heard of them. I had no idea what I was going in to and Erin said, “I just think you’re going to like this. Just come with me to the show. I’ll drive. We’ll go.” And I can honestly say, that show changed my life. I can still remember the whole show so clearly.

Ed: What year are we talkin’?

Amy: 2005? Somewhere around there. I was kind of reeling from it, because it had been a really long time since I felt like I had been challenged by music that was being played by young people, that I really connected with, but also was just kind of flummoxed by. From there it became a deep dive. I was really fortunate going to school where I did, that there was great bluegrass around. I mean, there was this bar about 30 minutes away called The Cave in Chapel Hill, and we used to go see the Steep Canyon Rangers play there every month. And I mean, this is a tiny underground basement bar, maybe holds 50 people, and they would just have bluegrass jams.

Ed: How close were you to Asheville?

Amy: It was about three hours from Asheville. Asheville is where we went for, like, fall break and our little weekend trips and stuff. We would go to Boone and Asheville, and even Mount Airy had a bluegrass fest that we went to. So that’s when I really started getting into it. And I could say, I think my first significant album purchase was pretty soon after that first concert. It was Why Should the Fire Die? by Nickel Creek. I played that into oblivion and had it in my car for like, 10 years, back when we kept stacks of CDs in our cars.

From there it kind of fell into the background, because I was studying film and I moved to New York. I was working all the time and didn’t really make space in my life for music. By the time I moved out to LA, I was working for a producer and I had one or two friends out here that I knew. Again, working a lot, not making any money and trying to find my place in the city, and not really connecting with a lot of the other assistants that I was meeting at the agencies. And I remember going to see the Get Down Boys at some bar on the west side of LA and having this thing reignited in me that I had felt back in college and was like, “OK, I think these are my people.” There was this momentum happening in LA at that particular time. And that’s how I started getting to know the scene out here and had the idea for the BGLA blog.

Ed: Tell us about BGLA.

Amy: I admittedly was a little bored at work. I was working at the Academy of Motion Pictures at this point, which was exciting, especially for three months of the year around the Awards, but the rest of the time was kind of slow. So I started this Blogspot and wrote about what was happening on the scene in Los Angeles. And then people started pitching me, cause I don’t think anybody was really covering it out here. So suddenly I was getting inquiries to interview these people… I mean, I started going really deep in the music and the history and background and getting to know the scene out here. But I remember getting connected to Sean Watkins (of Nickel Creek), and it was this beautiful, full-circle moment. It was the first time I met Sean and got to talk to him, and we became friends and kind of opened a whole other door to the roots music scene and what it could be. And then I think I met you pretty soon after that.

Ed: So when did we meet? I cannot remember.

Amy: Well, I remember when we first met, but I doubt you remember when we first met. I remember this because it was probably the most nervous I’ve been in my whole life. I saw you at a Sarah Jarosz show at Hotel Cafe. And I walked up to you and gave you one of my business cards for Bluegrass LA. And I was like, “I think you’ll like my blog.” That was it! And I don’t imagine you remember that, but that is technically the first time I met you.

Ed: At some point we had a cup of coffee to talk about possibilities.

Amy: Yes, that’s true.

Ed: But then maybe we bumped into each other… I assumed it was Largo, but I have the vaguest memory of getting a business card from you. So yeah, that part tracks.

Amy: Why don’t you talk about the LA Bluegrass Situation, because that predates me.

Ed: You weren’t even a part of the first LA Bluegrass Situation?

Amy: No. I was there. I went one night. But we didn’t know each other at that point. I just went as a fan.

Ed: The first time I ever went to Largo was when John Krasinski took me to see Aimee Mann playing at the Fairfax Largo. We went in through the back and I just was like, “Whoa, what is this incredible vibe?” This whole place is just so, so cool. And eventually Flanny (the owner of Largo) invited me to do stand-up on some people’s shows, and one night he said, “Why don’t you do a show?” And I thought, “OK, cool. It’d be fun to mix music and comedy.” So I think the first show that I did at Largo was called “Hams and Jams.” [Laughs] The idea was like, “Oh, it’s hams, like comedy people, and jams, music people!” And I just mixed up some comedians and musicians with a terrible name that Flanny was so gracious about rolling with.

We really loved that combination, but I was really struggling to wrap my head around the LA bluegrass scene. It just was so disparate, but somehow we managed to get excited about trying to cultivate the scene and coalesce things a little bit more. And I think that was the idea… that was the sort of original inertia behind the first LA Bluegrass Situation. The name literally just came from Flanny talking about it before we named it. He just kept talking about it as the bluegrass situation that we were dealing with. So then when it came time to be like, “What are we going to call it?” I was like, “Well, you’ve been saying this awesome thing because there’s something a little cheeky about a ‘situation.'” Like, it feels like, you know, “We got ourselves a situation, here!” Like it just kind of has some irreverence built into it.

So that’s what we named it, and Flanny and I both pulled as many strings as we could with whatever relationships we had at the time and put a totally magical lineup together. Like I still can’t wrap my head around it. I mean, it was Dave Rawlings and Gillian Welch and Steve Martin and Steep Canyon Rangers and Nickel Creek and Punch Brothers and the Infamous Stringdusters… Oh, and of course the Lonesome Trio, my crew, with my friends Ian and Jake. We were sort of the hosts.

Amy: I remember I got an email from you not long after that, which was pretty shocking. What was the impetus of that, do you remember?

Ed: Yeah, I think that I was feeling pretty heady after that first LA Bluegrass Situation and probably getting over my skis a little bit and being like, “We can create the ultimate hub of bluegrass for Los Angeles and it will be this Tower of Babel that everyone will flock to!” I had so many ideas. There were so many things that I found lacking in Los Angeles that I had taken for granted in New York. There are just so many website resources. “You want a banjo teacher? Look here, there’s tons in New York City. You want to see what shows are happening? Look here!” You could just find stuff in New York City and you couldn’t find stuff in Los Angeles.

Amy: I look at the branding of that initial site and that first logo — I think DKNG did our first logo in Santa Monica — and I remember being really proud of the fact that we didn’t look stereotypical of the era.

Ed: You’re so right. And I give you so much credit for that because the very first LA Bluegrass Situation, Hatch Show Print did a bunch of posters for us. And they were so cool. I still have a bunch and I’m really proud of that, but it was also leaning really hard into a very conventional, stereotypical bluegrass aesthetic. It was a funny wake-up call for me – that plus your input. It helped me realize that what we wanted to do and where we wanted to go as fans and supporters of this idiom was not retro, like it was…

Amy: Forward-thinking.

Ed: Forward. And that artists like Chris Thile were doing that musically, right? But there was a little bit of a reckoning of “What’s our brand going to feel like? What do we want it to evoke? And who do we want to connect with? Do we want to connect with young people who are finding this stuff for the first time and finding it really fresh and exciting?”

Amy: That was always the crux of it for me. To a large extent, that aesthetic is still very alive and well within the roots music community. I had an inkling that there was an audience that had different tastes, but still could love this music and that it didn’t all have to look the same way. I could have never predicted where it went and what we’ve worked on since, but I think at the beginning we were very “of the moment.” It was the same time that Mumford & Sons and the Lumineers were on the top of the charts, and there was this kind of “authenticity” movement taking place.

Ed: I remember going to business meetings with Hollywood producers and one guy had a banjo in his office. And I was like, “You play the banjo?” And he’s like, “No, no, but I want to learn!” But you’re right. It was a moment. I’ve felt like an old fuddy duddy since I was 12 years old, but I was like, “Was I ahead of the curve here?”

Amy: Yeah, similarly, I’ve kind of always felt like an old soul; I never really felt like I truly fit in to my time, so I think there was something that really drew me in to that zeitgeist, but what amazed me was that once we really got into it, it was so much more complex and modern and exciting than I ever expected.

Editor’s Note: Look for the next part of this conversation with Ed Helms and Amy Reitnouer Jacobs in the weeks ahead.

Basic Folk – Steve Forbert

Steve Forbert is not a dramatic person. His stories are fairly straightforward even though he’s lived a pretty incredible life, which began in Meridian, MS as a young musician.

LISTEN: APPLE • SPOTIFY • STITCHERAMAZON • MP3

In the hometown of Jimmie Rodgers, Steve found a great guitar teacher in Virginia Shine Harvey, who claimed she was a relation to the famous singing brakeman. Ms. Harvey taught Steve music through performance and connected him to other young musicians in the area, who then went on to form a couple of bands. He left his town for New York City in his early 20’s where he pounded the pavement as a singer-songwriter for a couple years before catching a break. During his climb upwards, Forbert found acceptance in New York’s punk scene, especially at the historic CBGB’s where club owner Hilly Kristal gave him a chance and introduced him to his manager. From there, Steve went on to start making records. His second album, Jackrabbit Slim, gave him his hit song, “Romeo’s Tune,” which he credits giving him his career and “a ticket into the show.” He’s releasing his latest, Moving Through America, with more character studies and focuses on life’s oddities.

It’s not easy to get Steve to talk about himself and his reflections, but he’s up for giving it a shot. He wrote a memoir in 2018, Big City Cat: My Life in Folk-Rock, which sounds like it was a challenge for him to revisit and write about his past – not because it seems like it was filled with mistakes and scandal, but because it was sooo much about himself. He seems grateful for the opportunity to still have a career and does not take it for granted. He also makes some very hip and hot music references in our conversation: like bringing up rappers Megan Thee Stallion and Jack Harlow. Color me impressed, Steve Forbert is watching the Billboard Hot 100.


Photo Credit: Marcus Maddox

LISTEN: Jess Jocoy, “Living in a Dying Town”

Artist: Jess Jocoy
Hometown: Nashville via Bonney Lake, Washington
Song: “Living in a Dying Town”
Album: Let There Be No Despair
Release Date: May 20, 2022

In Their Words: “I had the honor of attending a songwriting camp up in the Catskills a few years ago, put on by The Milk Carton Kids (the Sad Songs Summer Camp). We were a couple days in and up till then I hadn’t really written anything I was proud of, but I was sitting in a workshop with another camper and he was sharing and asking for input on a song he’d written about change — a somewhat satirical piece if I remember correctly. This song didn’t have a title so I suggested ‘Living in a Dying Town.’ Much to my blessing, that title didn’t really fit his song, but it encouraged me to sit outside in a lawn chair after the workshop and write the initial version of ‘Living in a Dying Town’ in about 20 minutes or so. I labored over it for a few more hours, really digesting what I’d written and realized it was a song about my mom’s hometown, a small little copper mining town turned ghost town on the Arizona/Mexico border called Ajo. I grew up hearing stories of Ajo but have only traveled there a couple of times. Still, it’s one of those places that feels a part of you, if only through ancestry. It’s about the resilience of the ones who stay behind; the ones whose roots are planted too deep to dig up.” — Jess Jocoy


Photo Credit: Sam Wiseman

BGS 5+5: Aaron Raitiere

Artist: Aaron Raitiere
Hometown: Danville, Kentucky
Latest Album: Single Wide Dreamer
Personal Nicknames: Rat

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

I was in high school and went to see a band called Leftover Salmon at the All Good Music Festival in Virginia. It was the first time I had ever seen grown people gettin’ wild in the mountains. A true mess of music, community, and insanity. Leftover took the stage and Vince Herman was dancing around with a big foam cheeseburger on his head. The band went into the traditional bluegrass song “Hot Corn, Cold Corn” and Vince grabbed a burlap sack full of corn and started throwing it at the crowd just yelling out “CORN!” — that was the moment I knew I wanted to be a musician. I couldn’t believe that guy was getting paid. What a job.

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

The deals that take the longest to make are the deals that last the longest. And never write anything down on paper that you don’t want someone else to know.

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

My mom just retired from 40 years as a Case Manager in the ER in Central Kentucky. When I was tryin’ to figure out what I wanted to do she always said she didn’t care what I did as long as I helped people. I try to help people with my songs. I think my mission statement would be “Help People.”

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

I’m a water baby. A lifetime swimmer. I prefer a river over a pond, lake, or an ocean. But most any water will do. I’ve got a spot I like to spend time at just north of Nashville. It’s quiet. Silence is golden, right?

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

The best songs are found in the truth. When I’m writing, the You is always Me or some version of a Me. It’s someone I can relate to. Someone with similar opinions and feelings. Someone I can write down what they are saying. It’s hard to hide behind anything anymore. People aren’t stupid, and there are cameras everywhere.


Photo Credit: Alysse Gafkjen

WATCH: Delta Spirit, “What’s Done Is Done”

Artist: Delta Spirit
Hometown: Southern California
Song: “What’s Done Is Done”
Album: One Is One
Release Date: May 20, 2022
Label: New West Records

In Their Words: “My parents have run a day program for people with disabilities in Massachusetts for the past 50 years, so inclusion and authentic representation in the film industry has always been an initiative for me as a filmmaker. With inclusive films like CODA and Crip Camp getting recognized at the Oscars, it’s encouraging to see some progress being made in the film industry, but it’s much harder to identify progress in the music industry. We hope that the existence of this music video will encourage labels and artists to think in more inclusive terms going forward and that people will support the Global Down Syndrome Foundation.” — Michael Parks Randa, video director

“I believe that everyone should be included in everyday activities and be represented in all aspects of the media. Our world is made up of all types of individuals with different backgrounds and lifestyles, and music is a common thread with everyone. We can all learn from each other and be inspired when we see something new, exciting, and possible around us. Let’s all keep music in our heart.” — Jamie Brewer, actor

“I want people to see what’s inside our hearts. We are warm. We are kind. We are sweet. That is who we are. People with Down syndrome want to be in love and spread that love and joy, like me and Jamie in the music video.” — Zack Gottsagen, actor

“Before starting Delta Spirit, I worked in an adult transition program for people with disabilities and it was such a rewarding experience. As a society, we really underestimate the capabilities of the disability community, especially in the creative arts. We’ve been collaborating with Randa for years, and after seeing his inclusive film Best Summer Ever, we were energized by the idea of doing our part to help further inclusion in the music industry. When he brought Zack and Jamie to the table to tell a love story between two people with Down syndrome, the band was so excited. They’re both incredibly talented — I loved Peanut Butter Falcon and American Horror Story. Having a niece with Down syndrome, it’s really important for her to see herself on screen and feel included and to know that an amazing organization like the Global Down Syndrome Foundation is working hard to create a brighter future for her.” — Matthew Logan Vasquez, Delta Spirit


Photo Credit: Andrew Thomas Lee