WATCH: The Weight Band, “Out of the Wilderness”

Artist: The Weight Band
Hometown: Woodstock, New York
Song: “Out of the Wilderness”
Album: Shines Like Gold (produced by Colin Linden)
Release Date: April 1, 2022
Label: The Weight Band Records

Editor’s Note: The Weight Band’s origins are tied to Woodstock, New York, and its famous inhabitants, The Band. Jim Weider, a Woodstock native, served as The Band’s lead guitarist from 1985-2000. In the late ’00s, he joined the Levon Helm Band, with Brian Mitchell playing keyboards. Alongside Weider and Mitchell, The Weight Band lineup includes bassist Albert Rogers, drummer Michael Bram, and keyboardist Matt Zeiner.

In Their Words: “‘Out of the Wilderness’ is about being lost and being found (‘stumbling thru the forest, thought that I was cursed’), coming out of the darkness and into the light. Getting rid of your worries and troubles (‘gonna shed this crown of thorns’) and feeling free of all your burdens (‘feel like a baby being born’). The song was originally written for Rick Danko when I was writing with Colin Linden for The Band’s Jericho album and was never used for that album. Colin had a big hand and footprint on this record. We go back, so there is a comfortableness working with him. We filmed the video at the Clubhouse Studio in the Catskill Mountains of New York, where we recorded the album, and during a live show at The Warehouse in Fairfield, Connecticut.” — Jim Weider, The Weight Band


Photo Credit: Bob Feather

WATCH: Rick Lang Feat. Becky Buller, “They Sawed Up a Storm”

Artist: Rick Lang feat. Becky Buller
Hometown: Kingston, New Hampshire
Song: “They Sawed Up a Storm”
Album: A Tale to Tell
Release Date: February 25, 2022
Label: Dark Shadow Recording

In Their Words: “‘They Sawed Up a Storm’ is a highlight track from my new story song album, A Tale to Tell. The song itself is based on a true-to-life story about the heroism of 13 women who operated a sawmill at Turkey Pond, New Hampshire. They led a salvage operation to save millions of feet of timber knocked down by the devastating Hurricane of 1938. A colleague of mine, Sarah Shea Smith, wrote a book about the story, which became the basis of this song. ‘They Sawed Up a Storm’ is a celebration the heroism of these 13 women. The song track and video features Becky Buller on banjo and lead vocals, with guitarist Jana Mougin and fiddler Laura Orshaw on supporting vocals. So glad to be able to share this inspiring story song with folks.” — Rick Lang


Photo of Rick Lang: Amanda Kowalski. Image credit of Jana Mougin, Becky Buller and Laura Orshaw: Stephen Mougin

LISTEN: Chris Haddox, “Streets of Danville”

Artist: Chris Haddox
Hometown: Morgantown, West Virginia
Song: “Streets of Danville”
Album: Chris Haddox
Release Date: March 25, 2022

In Their Words: “Years ago I was on a job in Danville, West Virginia, for a week of tree-planting on a mountaintop removal site. We’d be up at sunrise, head to the jobsite, plant trees all day long, get back to the Park Avenue motel, have a meal, play some tunes, then hit the bed. Once it was lights out, however, I tossed and turned until eventually getting up and wandering around the dark and quiet streets of the town in the wee hours of the morning until I was finally tired enough to get to sleep, only to be up and at it again in a few short hours. Fortunately, the boss was a good friend and didn’t can me when I got a little tired towards the end of each day’s shift!” — Chris Haddox

Chris Haddox Music · 5 – Chris Haddox – Streets Of Danville

Photo Credit: Amelia Haddox

WATCH: Valerie June, “Use Me”

Artist: Valerie June
Hometown: Humboldt, Tennessee
Song: “Use Me”
Release Date: March 18, 2022
Label: Fantasy Records

In Their Words: “As a bridge between modern music and traditional songs, ‘Use Me’ vacillates between upbeat pop and weaves in the old, familiar hymn, ‘Will the Circle Be Unbroken.’ Coming full-circle, this represents multiple layers of how through love, families, and communities, whether publicly or personally, in life and beyond death, we can use each other to create gorgeously positive changes. Oftentimes, the voices of encouragement are from the women in our lives. We use the guidance of mothers, sisters, aunts, and daughters. I’m thrilled to release this song in celebration of International Women’s Month because it was my very first time working with a female producer, Jennifer Decilveo. Female producers are not easy to come by in the music industry, so this collaboration was extra special.” — Valerie June


Photo Credit: Renata Raksha

The Infamous Stringdusters’ Travis Book and Jeremy Garrett Take the Long View

Now in their 17th year, the Infamous Stringdusters have established themselves as one of the most prominent and prolific bands in modern bluegrass. Asked if he ever thought the Stringdusters would be together that long, bassist Travis Book candidly replies, “Yes. That was the plan when we started the band, not to be side guys working for someone else or to go it alone. If we needed to, any of us could be a bandleader at this point. When we started, our plan was to do this for as long as we could. Looking at each other, we all wanted this group to keep making music together for 30 or 40 years. I hope that’s not conceited or hubris to say.”

Fiddle player Jeremy Garrett adds, “I’ve been in side bands and seen the writing on the wall as to how far you can go that way, as opposed to taking the risk of taking the leap yourself. Many struggle and have difficulty with that. Every time I think about it, I’m glad we took the risk. It’s a big step to believe in yourself enough to do that, and I feel lucky that we realized that early on. We’ve all spent a long time in the trenches, building it up. Looking back, we have an awesome band and business, and we still love each other. We’re having the time of our lives out here.”

The band’s musical passion and mutual respect are evident on their new album, Toward the Fray, and indeed throughout their catalog. In April, they’ll head to Las Vegas where A Tribute to Bill Monroe is nominated for a Grammy Award in the Best Bluegrass Album category. (They won their first Grammy for their 2017 project, Laws of Gravity.) BGS caught up with the Stringdusters — our Artist of the Month for March — for a series of three conversations on the road. Here is part two with Book and Garrett, who each wrote multiple songs for Toward the Fray.

Editor’s Note: Read our BGS Artist of the Month interview with Andy Hall and Andy Falco.

BGS: So you’re up for another Grammy, and of course you’re going, right?

Travis Book: We are. When they rescheduled it to April in Las Vegas, that just so happened to be the weekend we’ll be at Wondergrass. We have Sunday off and it’s within driving distance, so we’ll bus down there. We went the first two times, too. Even though it’s a massive undertaking and not cheap, you’ve got to go. We make it a priority. It can be hard for people who aren’t intimately involved with the music industry to understand what we’re doing. You know, aunts or uncles thinking “our nephew and his little bluegrass band.” Winning a Grammy definitely helped them have a better perspective on us having some success. It especially made my dad happy. He’s a hardcore music fan, subscribes to the magazines. He’s the one who turned me onto Pearl Jam and Radiohead. He was happier about it than anybody.

Were you into alternative rock first, before bluegrass?

Book: That and classic rock — Led Zeppelin, Jethro Tull, Pink Floyd. That was the music that really got me, although I remember wearing out Red Hot Chili Peppers’ Blood Sugar Sex Magik in middle school. Getting from there to bluegrass wasn’t that complicated. I was into Grateful Dead and Phish when I ran into some guys in a garage jam band that needed a bass player. When that ended, the guitar player asked if I’d ever played bluegrass. He was from Georgia, turned me on to Yonder Mountain String Band, Old and In the Way. We started jamming on bluegrass and the harmony singing is what really got me into it.

I grew up singing hymns with my parents, and those three-part harmonies really resonated as fundamental. Singing is my jam, it’s why I got into music in the first place, and singing harmonies is what drew me in. It was not long until bluegrass was all I wanted to do, go to bluegrass and folk festivals. I’d go to the college library and print off pages and pages of traditional bluegrass lyrics. Bluegrass Album Band, I learned all that stuff. I thought it was so cool that you could go anywhere with acoustic instruments, no electricity required, and have this massive shared lexicon you could play with people.

On the new album, your song “Pearl of Carolina” is particularly good.

Book: I co-wrote that with Jon Weisberger, my neighbor in Brevard, North Carolina. The hook to that song came from me writing a script for my show, Travis Book Happy Hour, which livestreams from the Grey Eagle in Asheville. I’d say it’s Late Night meets eTown. I was trying to write an introduction: “Live from Asheville, it’s BLANK of Carolina.” I was wondering what should go there, “pearl” came to mind and then I thought, “That should be a song.” The melody and chord change came to me while I was riding my bike, and I sang that into my phone. It felt a little “country” to me and I did not have the guts to finish it. That descending chord change seemed a little down the middle. The main thing Jon helped with was making sure I didn’t dilute it and miss the opportunity to write it right. He really kept me on track. It’s a song that feels like it wrote itself.

Jeremy, you have side-hustle projects, too — a new solo record, right?

Jeremy Garrett: Yep, River Wild. Music abounds. It’s a really good time right now, music flowing out of everyone. I’m stoked to be coming out of the pandemic with great new songs and tunes to play. There’s the Stringdusters album, and my record is out March 25. We can’t stop creating, writing about things in our world. As a musician and aspiring poet, I want to put things into words and share them.

Since you’re writing material for both the group and your own thing, how do you know where a song should go?

Garrett: There’s definitely a Stringdusters flavor, to where I can usually tell if something will be a Stringdusters song right away. Not always, I do get surprised sometimes. When we do the show-and-tell song-sharing, I’ll keep one wildcard song I throw out to see what everyone thinks and sometimes that’s the one that catches their ears. A lot of times I know the spice level needed to bring to the Stringdusters pot — a certain energy that will go over good live. That’s our MO, bringing the live show in the hottest way we can.

Travis, you mentioned that “Pearl of Carolina” initially felt too country. Another of your songs here, “I’m Not Alone,” seems like it could also pass for country.

Book: I try to stay out of my own way with that stuff. I remember Paul McCartney saying about early Beatles songs, “We didn’t write them to be memorable, we wrote them that way because we had to remember ’em ourselves.” There’s something to be said for songs that stick with you and are memorable. I can come up with crazy ideas, but the stuff that keeps running around in my head days later, that’s when I know I’m onto something. The older I get, the less afraid I am about writing stuff that’s straightforward. You want to make music that’s quality and creative, complex, interesting. But it’s better if it resonates and sticks, becomes a part of lives and minds.

All three songs I wrote for this album are in that vein. “Pearl of Carolina” is a little more complicated, but “I’m Not Alone” is just that one-line chorus. The first three lines are the same melody, the third line I reharmonize; change the chord structure, then the last line the lead drops down to something very similar to the baritone part from the first two lines. It’s such a simple idea, but it still knocks me on my ass when I listen. It makes the chorus pop right out. The old me might have thought it was too sappy or not complicated enough. I feel fortunate to have grown up enough to get past that. It seems so simple, but essential, like a mantra.

Beyond who plays what instrument, how would you summarize each person’s role in the Stringdusters?

Garrett: I think we are that rare democracy among bands. Everyone has their individual talents, things they’re better suited for. But I think we’re all into the big picture. That’s something we often discuss all together, vibing on the same wavelength about the band’s trajectory, how to create records and unify messages with five different guys. There are issues where we disagree, but we almost never have to vote on it. We just talk it out and eventually come around to being of the same mind about it almost all the time. We’re lucky that way. Panda (banjo player Chris Pandolfi) is very technically minded, handles a lot of the business, and Travis is a great booking agent, keeps an eye on the schedule because he knows how to make that flow. We hope to all bring something to the table. It’s always been that way.

Book: Everyone can kind of choose their level of engagement. We’re all allowed to integrate and contribute however we want. Business, music, interpersonal stuff all continues to move along and different people are engaged with different parts at different levels. But every year, we grow more alike. Every tour, we’re more on the same page. Ten years ago, there were a lot more differences of opinion than there are now. To me, the decision-making on goal-setting, recording, the way to approach shows and everybody’s role musically is all so much easier now than a decade ago.

Garrett: Even a decade ago, it was already better than most bands. We’ve always been lucky for sure.

Book: A major priority is keeping everyone involved and equal and on the same page to make sure everyone gets what they need out of this. Everyone has an equal say and there’s no bandleader. That can make it challenging to be a fan. So much is going on and everybody gets a chance to lead. If you just want to be fed the same singer doing the same type of songs all night, we’re maybe not the band for you. It’s highly dynamic. Any given song or even moment, a different guy can be the leader. That’s part of what keeps us interesting as a band — everybody getting a chance to take the reins, get support and then on to the next thing. We’re Jeremy’s backing band during his solo, then mine when I’m singing the hook. Moment to moment, everyone is fully supported.


Want to win tickets to see the Infamous Stringdusters at the Echoplex in Los Angeles? Enter our ticket giveaway.

Photo Credit: Jay Strausser Visuals

BGS Top 50 Moments: The 50 Greatest Bluegrass Albums Made by Women

March is #WomensHistoryMonth (although, let’s be honest, shouldn’t we be celebrating 51% of the population’s history every month?!) so it seems like a fitting time to revisit our comprehensive — but by no means exhaustive — list of the 50 Greatest Bluegrass Albums Made By Women.

Published five years ago as an unofficial extension of NPR’s Turning the Tables project, our list included a wide array of female talent from over a century of bluegrass, old time, string band, and other traditional styles of recorded music, from Ola Belle Reed to Laurie Lewis & Kathie Kallick to Molly Tuttle and everything in between.

“We dare not be so bold as to claim that every important bluegrass album created by women is included. We are simply striving to illustrate the far-reaching, undeniable influence that these incredible artists have had on the music, as a whole. Each contributor, many of them groundbreaking, trail-blazing artists themselves, has chosen albums that are personally impactful. Glaring omissions and oversights are almost guaranteed, but therein lies the beauty of this conversation: This collection is merely a starting point, a springboard for a greater dialogue about the place of female creators, artists, musicians, and professionals in the telling of the history — herstory — of bluegrass.”

There’s no question that there are plenty of amazing albums that should be added to the canon since 2017, but each new addition wouldn’t have been given an inch of foothold in the genre without the strength, determination, heart, and amazing music of the women who came before them.

Revisit our list of the 50 Greatest Bluegrass Albums Made By Women here.

LISTEN: Michael Johnathon, “The Ballad of Bojangles” (Feat. John McEuen)

Artist: Michael Johnathon
Hometown: Upstate New York
Song: “The Ballad of Bojangles” (Feat. John McEuen)
Album: Cosmic Banjo
Release Date: January 21, 2022
Label: PoetMan Records

In Their Words: “I’ve known John for a long time and worked with the NGDB, so the song has always been important to me. Jerry Jeff Walker wrote the great American classic with ‘Mr. Bojangles,’ but I always felt there was another part of that story, another point of view that would touch the emotion of loss in the character of Bojangles. My song is more than just a rewrite; it is my way of looking at the song with a brand new point of view. I wanted to focus on the character’s sense of complete loss … for his family, his life and his dreams. When John McEuen agreed to be part of the recording, it helped validate the idea of ‘The Ballad of Bojangles.’ It was important that the song be reminiscent of ‘Mr. Bojangles’ and yet completely original at the same time, so I made it banjo-driven and added a 21-piece string section and, of course, John on the mandolin.” — Michael Johnathon


Photo Credit: WoodSongs/Larry Neuzel

WATCH: Lydia Luce, “Yellow Dawn” (Live)

Artist: Lydia Luce
Hometown: Nashville, Tennessee
Song: “Yellow Dawn”
Album: Garden Songs EP
Release Date: June 24, 2022

In Their Words: “This is a song I wrote to myself as a reminder to keep going. One of the biggest lessons realized through the pandemic is that we never really know what is ahead of us. The only thing that is certain is one day we will die. Right now, my goal is to be present and persist. As an artist, my job is to create, and it remains that even when I have no idea what I’ll do with the projects I make. ‘Yellow Dawn’ is the unknown that I must keep plunging into even when I’m unsure and afraid.” — Lydia Luce


Photo Credit: Jason Lee Denton. Video by Jason Lee Denton and Aliegh Shields

LISTEN: Jewel, “Long Way ‘Round”

Artist: Jewel
Hometown: Homer, Alaska
Song: “Long Way ‘Round”
Album: Freewheelin’ Woman (produced with Butch Walker)
Release Date: April 15, 2022
Label: Words Matter Music

In Their Words: “‘Long Way ‘Round’ is a song about overcoming something difficult, even if it requires getting lost or taking the longer way around. I’m celebrating some of the things I’ve overcome as well as the choices I’ve made that have brought me to where I am today. The heart and mind are powerful muscles that are always willing to adapt and grow when you let them.” — Jewel


Photo Credit: Dana Trippe

LISTEN: Colin Hay, “Now and the Evermore” (Ft. Ringo Starr)

Artist: Colin Hay
Hometown: Los Angeles, California
Song: “Now and the Evermore”
Album: Now and the Evermore
Release Date: March 18, 2022
Label: Lazy Eye/Compass Records

In Their Words: “‘Now And The Evermore’ is a reminder to myself, to make the most of what time I have left walking around on top of the planet. When I listen to it, it transports me back to when I thought I had all the time in the world. It is a song which is unashamedly inspired by the majesty of The Beatles, and the gift they gave us all. Having Ringo Starr play on the track is more than icing on the cake.

“I’m deeply grateful for the life I have, and I think my natural tendency has always been towards optimism and humor. Lately, though, I’ve had to be more intentional about it. I’ve had to actively seek out the positive, to let new rays of hope shine on some seemingly dark situations.” — Colin Hay


Photo Credit: Paul Mobley