BGS 5+5: Darrin Bradbury

Artist: Darrin Bradbury
Hometown: Nashville, Tennessee
Latest Album: Artvertisement

What’s your favorite memory from being on stage?

It’s not from being on stage, but this one time, my tour manager Josh and I broke down an hour outside of Charlotte, North Carolina, on the way to opening for Robert Earl Keen. The van just up and died. We were on the side of the highway wondering what to do when we called AAA. It turned out that we were just below the amount of miles that AAA would tow — making our arrival to open for Robert Earl Keen, pulling up right behind the tour bus in a tow truck, jumping out of said tow truck, running on stage, plugging in and playing.

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

Unfortunately, I find that often characters hide behind me, making me speak for them as they cower behind me, quite frankly it’s exhausting. I wish they’d just speak for themselves, I just keep collecting them, as voices in my head.

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

Before every show I’m usually pretty antsy. Offstage I’m fairly introverted. One of my best friends from back in New York wrote this song about a decade ago on a road trip we were on through the Midwest called “Moon in the Blue Sky.” I always find a quiet spot to sing it to myself.

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

Abstract expressionism, gestural painting, de Kooning, Pollock, Picasso, as well as authors Kurt Vonnegut, Charles Bukowski, John Fante. I also dance when no one’s looking.

What’s the toughest time you ever had writing a song?

Every song is the toughest, roughest, most pain in the ass, shit kicker, tooth knocker, sock rocker, and you don’t always win.


Photo credit: Weston Heflin

WATCH: Nashville Covers Dylan for SAFPAW, “All I Really Want to Do”

Artist: Nashville Covers Dylan for SAFPAW
Hometown: Nashville, Tennessee
Song: “All I Really Want to Do” (Bob Dylan)
Release Date: November 18, 2019

In Their Words: “Each person involved with this project donated their time and skills to make this happen. We all see what Laurie Green of Southern Alliance for People and Animal Welfare (SAFPAW) is doing for our community, and we love the spirit and songs of Bob Dylan, so we have merged concepts and talents to raise awareness for something truly worthwhile.” — Tim Easton

Donations can be made here.

Editor’s Note: New West Records artist Aaron Lee Tasjan, ANTI- artist Darrin Bradbury, Cafe Rooster Records artists Brian Wright, Sally Jaye, Jon Latham, and Nikki Barber of The Minks, spearheaded by Tim Easton and producer Gabe Masterson, gathered at Club Roar Recording studio to record Bob Dylan’s “All I Really Want to Do” to raise awareness for SAFPAW (Southern Alliance of People and Animal Welfare). Directed and edited by Stacie Huckeba, the live video session marks the fifth consecutive year that Easton, Huckeba, and Masterson have partnered to record and film a Bob Dylan cover for a Nashville-based charity.

WATCH: Darrin Bradbury, “Breakfast”

Artist: Darrin Bradbury
Hometown: Nashville, Tennessee
Song: “Breakfast”
Album: Talking Dogs & Atom Bombs
Release Date: September 20, 2019
Label: ANTI- Records

In Their Words: “In an age of exponentially shrinking attention spans, most music we consume (which is an awfully odd term, I mean cancer consumes healthy cells, lions consume zebras, people consume French fries — it’s hideous language that ought to be reconsidered, same goes for the modern use of the word viral)… Anyhow, it’s often reduced to a savvy-click worthy headline followed by a relatable personal anecdote and a hi-res press photo.

“This is not that. This is a song about breakfast and my thoughts while consuming it, including but not limited to: squirrel drama — a civilization of oat-based creatures who meet their untimely demise by the hands of their creator, a few observations about the nature of the modern telephone, a reference to the Death Star and a mostly failed attempt at rhyming the name “Howie” with “Maui” (it, like, only kinda works).

“Honestly, and I mean this sincerely, I thought this is was the kinda sh*t everybody thinks about over breakfast.” — Darrin Bradbury


Photo credit: Danielle Holbert

3×3: Darrin Bradbury on Coffee & Cigarettes, Calvin & Hobbes, and the Coming Post-Modern Revival

Artist: Darrin Bradbury 
Hometown: Ridgewood, NJ
Latest Album: Elmwood Park: A Slightly Melodic Audiobook

 

Just so ya'll have a clear understanding of whose in charge around here @trackmarksjunkshop #mrsfixit

A photo posted by Darrin Bradbury (@darrinbradbury) on

If Jesus, Buddha, Krishna, and Mohammed were in a band together, who would play what?
I'm not quite sure, but I do know their fans would be quite a handful. Press would be tough being that Mohammed can't take any pictures. The whole thing would be a mess. I wouldn't open for them. The world is a safer place, if they all just focus on their solo careers. 

If you were a candle, what scent would you be?
Coffee & Cigarettes

What literary character or story do you most relate to?
Some days Calvin, some days Hobbes.

How many pairs of shoes do you own?
Two: a pair of flip flops and a pair of boots, constantly in flux between extremes.

What's your best physical attribute?
None of the above or below.

Which is your favorite Revival — Creedence Clearwater, Dustbowl, Elephant, Jamestown, New Grass, Tent, or -ists?
I'm holding out for the post-modern revival.

Animal, mineral, or vegetable?
Mineral

Rain or shine?
Rain, it makes doing nothing easier.

Mild, medium, or spicy?
Trick question: Lemmy is God.

7 Acts We Can’t Wait to See at Americana Music Festival

It's finally starting to cool off outside and the leaves are just beginning to fall, so you know what that means … the Americana Music Festival is right around the corner. Dozens of performers are taking over Nashville's best venues from September 20 – 25 to make this the festival's biggest and best year yet. With so many amazing artists to choose from, making a schedule can be a bit overwhelming, so we did a little of the leg work for you and rounded up seven acts that we can't wait to see at this year's AmericanaFest. See you there!

Darrin Bradbury

East Nashville folk singer and satirist Darrin Bradbury just released his newest album, Elmwood Park: A Slightly Melodic Audiobook. Check him out, if you've got a thing for love songs about meth labs.

William Bell

William Bell was an integral part of the Stax Records family before the label's shuttering in 1975 and he continued to put out new music on his own in the following years. Now he's back with This Is Where I Live, a soul record that conjures plenty of that famed Memphis sound.

Molly Parden

She may have gotten her start as a back-up singer, but indie folk songwriter Molly Parden is a veritable solo talent. She released a stellar EP, With Me in the Summer, this past July.

Dwight Yoakam

We're fans of anything our September Artist of the Month Dwight Yoakam does, but we're particulary excited about his forthcoming bluegrass album — Swimmin' Pools, Movie Stars — and we'd be willing to bet a guitar or a Cadillac that his AmericanaFest set is going to be a memorable one.

Kaia Kater

Banjo wiz and Quebec native Kaia Kater will bring her singular, old-time-influenced Appalachian sound to AmericanaFest. Her wonderful LP, Nine Pin, came out this Spring.

Brent Cobb

Brent Cobb got a lot of attention earlier this year for "Down Home," his contribution to his cousin Dave Cobb's compilation, Southern Family. Now he's earning heaps of solo recognition for his forthcoming album, Shine on Rainy Day, due out October 7.

Rose Cousins

Nova Scotia's Rose Cousins is one of a few great artists holding it down for Canada at this year's AmericanaFest, heading down south with thoughtful folk-pop tunes in tow. Rumor has it, she'll be premiering material from her upcoming, Joe Henry-produced album.


Lede photo by Polina MourzinaSaveSave

SaveSaveSaveSave