WATCH: Mumford & Sons, “Forever (Garage Version)”

Artist: Mumford & Sons
Hometown: London, England
Song: “Forever (Garage Version)”
Release Date: May 8, 2020

Editor’s Note: The demo recording heard in this video was performed almost completely live and rediscovered while going through some of the band’s recording archives during the coronavirus lockdown.

In Their Words: “Back in 2013, off the back of touring Sigh No More and Babel we decided we needed to take a bit of a break from the road, catch our breath and regroup. The first time we really hung out to make music together was after a couple months living our lives, and it was in the back garden of a friend’s house deep in Brooklyn. That friend was Aaron Dessner from The National and he had a built a studio in the garage in his garden. Between catching up, eating burritos, and having a couple of drinks, we messed around a bit with some new song ideas. This was one of those moments.

“Many of the songs that began in that garden ended up on Wilder Mind, whereas the later version of this song we saved for Delta. We just thought it’d be fun to share the journey that these songs go on sometimes. Hope everyone is staying safe x” — Mumford & Sons


Photo credit: Gavin Batty

MIXTAPE: Mike McKenna Jr.’s Canadian Dream

We have some very chill vibes happening north of the border, so I’ve put together a playlist of my current isolation favourites, with a focus on the music scene here in my adopted home of Montreal. This is not a who’s who of club bangers or country twangers, although there’s a time and a place for both. Instead it’s my special collection of laid-back, Canadian, genre-fluid, slow afternoon-drive royalty. — Mike McKenna Jr.

Foxwarren – “Sunset Canyon”

I’ve been into this song somethin’ fierce lately so it’s at the top of the list, and it honestly makes me want to melt into my couch just hearing it now. If an ice cream sandwich started a band it would probably sound like Foxwarren, and no I don’t have any idea what I mean by that.

Deadhorse Beats – “Inglaterra”

When I first met Patrick Wade (AKA Dead Horse Beats) here in Montreal, through the small but tight-knit Nova Scotia community, we seemed to have skipped over the fact we were both musicians. Turns out he had some really fresh tracks up his sleeve, eventually showcased in his 2019 record Inglaterra, and since it dropped I’ve had it on repeat.

Hanorah – “Saturn Return”

One night I went out to meet a friend at a local dive bar, who told me she’d be singing backup for this artist named Hanorah. The bar was an absolute pile of trash, but as the music started this confident, natural voice cut through the nonsense… it was holiness.

Leif Vollebekk – “Elegy”

Another true Montreal gem, Leif is a piano and chill mastermind, with several other great songs from this album worth mentioning like “Vancouver Time” and “Into the Ether.” His music has a simple beauty and “Elegy” was a must include, or me getting stoned and making a playlist didn’t happen.

Buffy Sainte-Marie – “Helpless”

“Helpless” may have been written by Neil Young and first recorded by both Crazy Horse and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, but there is something raw and badass about Buffy’s 1971 rendition. She’s an icon, and this throwback has a little je ne sais quoi that I connected with as soon as it hit my ears.

Bahamas – “Lost In The Light”

The first time I heard Toronto-born songwriter Afie Jurvanen’s “Lost In The Light,” I was lost on a documentary binge, and it stood out while watching a short-doc about a guy from Nova Scotia living on a sailboat and cruising around the Caribbean. The melody cemented that image into my head; the clear turquoise water, the fresh fish, the freedom, the cool pocket knife… funny how vividly a great song can transport us somewhere.

Rosier – “Vie peníble”

This pastel-adorned, traditional turned indie band has strong roots in the folk music community here in Quebec, and it shows subtly throughout their youthful dream-pop songs à la française. My own newest release At the Edge of the World features two members of Rosier, so yes you’re right that I’m very biased, but unapologetically so.

Colter Wall – “Kate McCannon”

We’re deep into the session so we needed a dark horse, and “Kate McCannon” is not only an epic and old school tale, but my sister’s name happens to be Kate. So it sounds a hell of a lot like Kate McKenna to me sometimes when it’s on in the background, and then I have to stop whatever I’m doing and plan to avenge her death at the hand of this s.o.b. prairie boy. But honestly this song is captivating, vivid storytelling and I’m into it big time. Respect!

Andy Shauf – “The Magician”

The opening track to Andy Shauf’s 2016 record, The Party, sets the tone for an album written by an incredibly observational songwriter, and entirely about one awkward, eventful night. He’s the only artist to be featured twice on this list, and deservedly so, since he also happens to be the lead singer of Foxwarren.

City and Colour – “Sleeping Sickness”

This song reminds me of driving across Canada for the first time a few years ago, passing by fields and endless trees and more lakes than you could imagine. Although it doesn’t say in the title, “Sleeping Sickness” includes a guest spot by the late Gord Downie of the Tragically Hip, which makes this one a bit more special.

Geneviève Racette – “Magnetic Love”

My good friend, and a truly exceptional songwriter in both French and English, Geneviève Racette got some serious national attention last year after releasing her album No Water, No Flowers. It’s no accident that I placed this one right after City and Colour, since it was upon hearing her new track “Parachute” that lead singer Dallas Green became incredibly vocal about how strong of a record this truly was.

Jon Bryant – “Paradise”

People from my home in the Canadian Maritimes love to champion someone as our own, and even though Jon Bryant has relocated to the West Coast we know he’s a bluenosin’ Nova Scotian. “Paradise” is my favourite track from his new record, Cult Classic, and it demonstrates that he’s absorbed a lot of that laid-back, free-spirit energy BC is known for.

Mike McKenna Jr. – “At the Edge of the World”

It was suggested, maybe even encouraged, that I include at least one of my own songs, so I chose the single and title-track from my just released 8-song album, At the Edge of the World. It features some lush, dreamy production courtesy of Victoria, BC’s Quinn Bachand (Brishen, Kittel & Co., Rosier), and a ’70s-inspired, harmony laden, pedal-steel infused backing band.

Les Louanges – “La nuit est une panthère”

Yesterday I asked my bandmate Colin Savoie-Levac (Rosier, the Duhks) if he wanted to throw something into the mix that he’s really into right now. His pick was this sweaty, sexy number from Quebec’s indie pop powerhouse, Les Louanges, and I wasn’t disappointed!

Rose Cousins – “Freedom”

A live video recording of “Freedom” is what originally pulled me into a deep Rose Cousins wormhole, but the studio version is such a dramatic, powerful and universal piece of work. My natural conclusion is she’ll go down as one of our greats.

Mac DeMarco – “This Old Dog”

This song has been in a few of my playlists lately, as it’s strange but smooth lull makes me feel like I’m floating on a druggy cloud. Although I know “Chamber of Reflection” or something from his outstanding 2014 album Salad Days might be an easy crowd-pleaser, I really like the stripped-down, tight, melodic nature of “This Old Dog.”

Wild Rivers – “Thinkin ‘Bout Love”

I’ve been following the trajectory of this band for a while now, ever since we’d both entered a national song contest and I came across their soulful, catchy pop song “No Ribbons.” It was released under a different name, but when they launched into the mainstream as Wild Rivers and dropped “Thinkin ‘Bout Love,” I wasn’t surprised to see them selling-out shows and thriving.

The Sheepdogs – “The One You Belong To”

Trying to remember where I was when I first heard the Sheepdogs, but the memory is smothered by a thick cloud of smoke. The retro, soulful, southern-rockish band out of Saskatoon hits my nostalgia buttons with a Woodstock-esque punch, making this jam a perfect way to finish off my list!


Photo credit: Elena Samuel

WATCH: Anya Hinkle, “Road of the Winds”

Artist: Anya Hinkle
Hometown: Asheville, North Carolina
Song: “Road of the Winds”
Label: Organic Records

In Their Words: “We are constantly moving closer toward our own homeland, a place we sense is there, somewhere, if we can just pay attention and listen closely to our inner voice. It takes tremendous courage and faith to believe that we can grow to become the person we were meant to be, doing the work we are meant to be doing. We are embarking on a great journey with each sunrise, with each day we are alive. This song helps me feel free to move ahead in new directions with boldness and conviction even though I don’t exactly know where it will all lead. But once you leave the shore you are committed to the journey – there is no turning back.” — Anya Hinkle


Photo credit: Rose Kaz

The String – Katie Pruitt

Katie Pruitt has been known as a phenom ready for big things in Nashville for a few years now. With patience and enough maturity to get the music exactly as she intended, Pruitt has now made her debut on Rounder Records.


LISTEN: APPLE PODCASTS

The album Expectations is a bold, ambitious, and succulent collection, and vividly honest as well, with songs documenting a difficult journey from a conservative family in Georgia to a proud gay woman in Music City. This is a 25-year-old singer, songwriter, and guitarist poised for big things. Also in the hour, the journey of Arkansas born fiddler Jenee Fleenor. She was named CMA Musician of the Year and she’s releasing her first recordings of her own music after years supporting others.

BGS Podcast Roundup // May 8

In this week’s podcasts, we take you everywhere from Nashville’s Lower Broadway, to Compass Records, to the culinary scene in Montreal, and even back to a time when touring was a thing.

If you enjoy spending your weekend with the BGS Podcast Network, make sure to follow along on our social media [Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram] and right here, where we’ll consistently gather our new episodes, as well as some past favorites:

The Show on the Road – Jamestown Revival

On the latest episode of The Show On The Road, we feature Jonathan Clay and Zach Chance, two Texans and expert harmonizers who for the last decade have toured the world as Jamestown Revival.

Right before all tours got sent home, host Z. Lupetin was able to hop on the Jamestown Revival tour bus to discuss their intimate new record, San Isabel. While their previous record, The Education of a Wandering Man, saw them harnessing the muscular roots-rock that can be heard at their powerful live shows, San Isabel strips everything back to their intimate two-voices-around-one-mic, “southern and Garfunkel” sound that brought them together in the first place — and has rightfully won them hordes of fans coast to coast.

They say sibling harmony can’t be compared and we’ve had several sets of twin bands on the podcast, but what about soul-brother harmony? If one thing is clear just sitting on the bus and listening to them weave their stories and songs together, it’s that Clay and Chance were born to sing together.

San Isabel was laid down at Ward Lodge Studios overlooking the San Isabel National Forest in Buena Vista, Colorado and often includes the natural sounds of the nature all around them. Give it a listen — it’s peaceful and powerful and raw and maybe just what we all need right now.


Toy Heart – Alison Brown

Banjoist and record label head Alison Brown speaks with host Tom Power from her studio at Compass Records headquarters in Nashville, Tennessee. They begin with her early records made with Stuart Duncan, “finding her people,” and winning the Canadian National Banjo Championship (as an American), then on to her time at Harvard, where playing banjo became “something you’d talk about at cocktail parties.”

She describes the moment she decided to leave investment banking and commit to music full time, her cocktail napkin dream, and the two talk women in bluegrass, women in banjo, and the First Ladies of Bluegrass. The story they dive into together is ultimately about figuring out what makes you happy, and pursuing it bravely, against all odds.


The Shift List – Chef Dyan Solomon (Olive et Gourmando, Foxy) – Montreal

This week, The Shift List closes out its miniseries focusing on the food of Montreal with chef, restaurateur, and cookbook author Dyan Solomon. If you’re from Montreal, Dyan Solomon needs no introduction. She’s the co-owner of multiple restaurants there, including Foxy, one of the city’s essential fine dining establishments. Back in November 2019 she released the Olive + Gourmando cookbook, a collection of 150 recipes from the namesake cafe that put Solomon on Montreal’s culinary map when it opened back in 1999.

Host Chris Jacobs checked in with Chef Dyan via email the other week to see how her restaurants have been affected by the stay-at-home orders in Canada. She replied with cautious optimism, saying that while all of her restaurants are closed until further notice, they are surviving and trying to remain positive about the future.

If you’ve listened to the last two episodes of The Shift List with Chef John Winter Russell of Restaurant Candide, you’ll know that he highlighted the work that’s being done to help support the Montreal Restaurant Workers Relief Fund, an organization set up to provide emergency relief to restaurant employees who are facing economic hardship due to COVID-19. Coincidentally, the fund was set up by Kaitlin Doucette, the Sommelier at Solomon’s fine dining restaurant Foxy, and donations are still being accepted at mtlrestorelieffund.org.


The String – Paul Burch, Thomm Jutz

Paul Burch moved from Indiana to Nashville in 1995 when his friend Jay McDowell (BR549) told him about the burgeoning indie country music scene on sleepy Lower Broadway.

In the 25 years since then, Burch has made uncompromising and original music with shades of classic honky tonk and timeless rock and soul. On the latest episode of The String, we talk with Burch about his role in the fascinating band Lambchop, the evolution of his band the WPA Ball Club and his new album Light Sensitive. Also in the hour, German-born bluegrass songwriting star Thomm Jutz.


 

LISTEN: Gillian Welch, “Happy Mother’s Day”

Artist: Gillian Welch
Song: “Happy Mother’s Day”
Release Date: May 8, 2020
Label: Acony Records

Editor’s Note: “Happy Mother’s Day” comes from a newly rediscovered cache of demos and home recordings from the early 2000s.

In Their Words: “We can’t always be with the ones we love, but that can’t stop us from saying ‘I love you.’ I wrote this song one May when I was far away and couldn’t be with my mom on Mother’s Day. Then I called and sang it into her answering machine when I knew everybody’d be sitting down to eat. Here is the original home demo for the song, recorded on a portable reel to reel.” — Gillian Welch


Photo credit: David Rawlings

The Show On The Road – Jamestown Revival

This week on The Show On The road, we feature a conversation with Jonathan Clay and Zach Chance, two Texans and expert harmonizers who for the last decade have toured the world as Jamestown Revival.

LISTEN: APPLE PODCASTSMP3 

Right before all tours got sent home, host Z. Lupetin was able to hop on the Jamestown Revival tour bus (sorry for the engine hum) to discuss their intimate new record, San Isabel, and their journey from meeting as curious singing teenagers in Magnolia, TX to their move out west and back home again. While their previous record, The Education of a Wandering Man, saw them harnessing the muscular roots-rock that can be heard at their powerful live shows, San Isabel strips everything back to their intimate two-voices-around-one-mic, “southern and Garfunkel” sound that brought them together in the first place — and has rightfully won them hordes of fans coast to coast.

They say sibling harmony can’t be compared and we’ve had several sets of twin bands on the podcast, but what about soul-brother harmony? If one thing is clear just sitting on the bus and listening to them weave their stories and songs together, it’s that Clay and Chance were born to sing together.

San Isabel was laid down at Ward Lodge Studios overlooking the San Isabel National Forest in Buena Vista, Colorado and often includes the natural sounds of the nature all around them. Give it a listen — it’s peaceful and powerful and raw and maybe just what we all need right now.

BGS 5+5: American Aquarium

Artist: American Aquarium
Hometown: Raleigh, North Carolina
Latest album: Lamentations

Answers provided by BJ Barham

Which artist has influenced you the most … and how?

I can confidently say that I wouldn’t be the songwriter I am today if it weren’t for the discovery of Bruce Springsteen and his music in my early twenties. A friend played me Nebraska and I was floored. Must have listened to that album for a month straight. He was one of the first artists I have a clear memory of hearing and saying, “I want to do that.”

He writes these elaborate short stories set to music. The songs are expansive and cinematic. The characters are all people we know personally. Intimate snapshots into the lives of the working class. He speaks the universal language in a way not many people will ever be able to. There is something so simple, yet so complex about the way he tells stories. I don’t trust a songwriter who says they aren’t a fan of Springsteen.

What other art forms — literature, film, dance, painting, etc — inform your music?

I read a lot. I usually prefer fiction, but I’ll occasionally do a deep dive into a music-related autobiography. I tend to go for Southern writers and gravitate to the darker side of the genre. My songs take place in the darker corners of the Southern experience, so it doesn’t surprise me that my literary taste tend to go there as well. Faulkner, O’Connor, Harper Lee. The greats are what sucked me in.

I’ve been reading a lot of Cormac McCarthy, David Joy and Barry Hannah as of late. There is a familiarity of place that I really enjoy about them. I think a lot of the flaws in the characters of my songs are a direct result of the books I read in my leisure time. In my lifetime, literature has informed so much of what I know about people, I would be lying if I said it didn’t have an effect on me as a writer.

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

The first time I played songs in front of people I was hooked. I was double majoring in political science and history at NC State University with every intention of going to law school after my undergraduate work. Then I fell in love with songs. I remember the first show like it was yesterday. Me and some friends from high school played (horribly) at Tate Street Coffee in Greensboro, North Carolina, in front of about 20 people. I was hooked. I became a student of every aspect of the trade. Songwriting. Performing. Business. There was no looking back after that first show. I had found my calling.

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

I played a lot of sports growing up and every time I would complain about a loss or another player just getting a “lucky” shot, my father always said that “luck was the product of hard work” and that is something that has always stuck with me. Work Hard. Get Lucky. It’s so simple, yet so profound. I have those words tattooed across my chest to remind me every morning that luck is not just something that happens to people. There’s a really great quote about luck being the intersection of hard work and opportunity. I think that was what my Dad was trying to say all those years ago, just a little less poetic.

When I started this band back in 2005, I knew I wasn’t the best writer. I knew I didn’t have the best voice. The one thing I did have control over was how hard I was willing to work. I truly believe that willingness to outwork anyone that was better than me is the only reason that I am where I am today. I get to earn a living from writing songs and playing them for people because I dedicated myself to the craft of songwriting and refused to take no for an answer. Some friends always say that I’m so lucky to be able to play music for a living. I just smile and silently thank my father for the lessons he instilled in me at such an early age.

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

When I first started writing songs, they were extremely detailed and autobiographical accounts of my youth. The partying, the mistakes, the love lost. As I got older, I started moving more toward character based fictional narrative. Don’t get me wrong, there’s a little bit of myself in every single one of my characters. Some more than others. I believe it’s important to always add those dashes of personal experience into the songs. It makes them more believable to the listener and allows you to fall into those characters as you perform these songs every night.

The fiction is where you have the ability to make the songs universal and not just about you. The bigger picture versus the guy looking back at you in the mirror. I think part of the craft of songwriting is learning that balance. The greats came out of the gate with that gift. The rest of us had to learn it the hard way. It took me quite a few years to stop writing about the person that I currently am and start writing about the better versions of myself that I hope to become.


Photo Credit: Cal & Aly

LISTEN: Sarah Jarosz, “Orange and Blue”

Artist: Sarah Jarosz
Hometown: Wimberley, Texas (now living in New York City)
Single: “Orange and Blue”
Album: World on the Ground
Release Date: June 5, 2020
Label: Rounder Records

In Their Words: “I wrote this song with John Leventhal. He had most of the piano melody written and recorded, and within moments of him playing it for me I had this very clear vision of the cypress trees in my hometown of Wimberley, Texas. I rode the subway home from John’s studio that evening with the melody in my inbox and the lyrics just poured out of me. We tweaked the form and a couple of lines the next day. This is one of those songs that feels like it was always a part of me but was waiting for the right time to emerge.” — Sarah Jarosz


Photo credit: Josh Wool

LISTEN: Rod McCormack, “Fingerprints”

Artist: Rod McCormack
Hometown: Terrigal, NSW, Australia
Song: “Fingerprints”
Album: Fingerprints
Label: Sonic Timber Records

From the Artist: “‘Fingerprints’ was written for my beautiful wife Gina. As I flew over to the States to record this album, she reminded my that I hadn’t written a love song for her yet — and after 20-odd years I thought it was about time. I was so glad to work with John Scott Sherrill on this song idea, and then to have Gina sing on it with me was a real treat. I really wanted ‘Fingerprints’ to have an Appalachian feel to it, and hearing the fiddle and banjo weave around the acoustic guitar still takes me back to our early years together. Along with the current single, ‘Shimmers,’ ‘Fingerprints’ is probably the most requested song from the album.” — Rod McCormack


Photo credit: Steve Kearney