Sarah Jarosz Looks to Her Texas Hometown for Inspiration (Part 1 of 2)

After years spent living in New York City and traveling the world on tour, Sarah Jarosz has turned to a source of inspiration she’s never mined before: her hometown.

With her fifth album, World on the Ground, the Grammy-winning artist gleaned her own folktales from the everyday rhythms of her life in Wimberley, Texas. Her time away from Friday night football games and the shadows of cypress trees allowed her to look on Wimberley’s details with fresh eyes, from the Ford Escape her parents drove and the dusty trails it kicked up to conversations about out-of-reach dreams with old friends (that she examines on “Maggie,” which came from an actual heart-to-heart she had with an old friend at her high-school reunion).

Jarosz found a breakthrough in the most familiar folds of her memory, but this perspective was also molded by the city that guided her as she retraced her steps through the Texas Hill Country in her lyrics. On “Pay It No Mind,” the single that gives World on the Ground its name, Jarosz alludes to this ability to find meaning and movement at a distance: she sings of the frightening, and often destructive, churn of life in our current moment from the point of view of a “little bird stretching her wings” who takes in the chaos from the seventh floor.

“I think being able to write and make this record mostly about my hometown, in New York, from far away, was an interesting part of the process,” she says. “It’s almost what allowed me to take on the role of the little bird on the seventh floor in a way, because I think it took leaving Wimberley and being away from it for quite awhile to be in a place where I could actually write about it in this way.”

In the first half of our two-part interview, Jarosz walks BGS through the little Texas town that became her muse, how her work with bluegrass supergroup I’m With Her left an impact on her creative process, and more.

For some people, going back to their hometown is a traumatic event, a negative, damaging experience. There’s clearly a lot of compassion for the voices you explore on World on the Ground, which was inspired by your own hometown. If you were to visit Wimberley with fresh eyes, how would you describe it?

Jarosz: One of the things that stands out about it compared to other towns of its size in Texas — and I think this would be obvious, even if you’d never been there and were taking a drive through town — it seems like it’s a little more balanced. It has one high school, and one football team, and a lot of the small town culture does revolve around that, around this sort of Friday Night Lights idea of a small Texas town.

But there’s also this incredible artsy kind of community in Wimberley. One of the big draws of Wimberley is its market days, which I think happens once a month — maybe it’s every weekend in the summer, I can’t remember. Arts and crafts and even the fact that there was a bluegrass jam every Friday night, that was why I fell in love with all this music in the first place. It feels a little more balanced in that way.

I truly feel, probably in a biased way, that it’s a very magical place. A lot of people who drive through it, if they’re driving around the hill country in Texas, would agree that it’s one of the towns that stands out from the rest. It has this kind of shimmery quality to it — that’s the word that comes to mind.

I love the contrast of “Maggie,” then, in which you’re singing from the perspective of a friend of yours from high school who can’t wait to leave the small town behind. I appreciate “Maggie” because it’s a real conversation you could be having with anyone who’s stuck where they are. The location is almost insignificant, because it’s about whatever’s holding you — it doesn’t necessarily have to be the town you’re in.

Exactly. The “football games and processed food” line definitely puts it in a place, but I feel like [the song] could also be anywhere. I purposely tried to make that happen. It was such an eye-opening thing for me to actually have this conversation with this friend — we were really close friends in childhood, then just drifted apart over the years, and ran into each other at my tenth high school reunion. She actually didn’t go to my high school, she went to a different school and that’s why we drifted apart.

She was asking me about my touring and my life and everything, and I think I was probably saying, “I wish I could be in one place more. I wish I had more of a home sense at this point in my life.” She was sort of saying, “All I want is to do what you do, travel and see the world.” It’s funny how sometimes the things that seem so obvious take just a simple moment of someone saying it to your face, and then you realize, “Oh! Duh!” That really happened for me there. That song is all about empathy and compassion for anyone who wants their circumstance to be different than it is and might not necessarily have the means to make that happen, but still having the dreams to hopefully one day change.

“What Do I Do” is a companion song to that, in a way: It’s sung by someone who wants to be home more, who wants to be still for a minute. What inspired that song?

A lot of these songs feel like gifts, in the sense that I generally feel like a very, very slow lyrical writer. The music comes more quickly to me, but that song and a lot of the songs that I wrote with John Leventhal were similar experiences. If he had the music written and sent it to me, the lyrics seemed to come very quickly. “Pay It No Mind” and “Orange and Blue” were two of those.

“What Do I Do” was another one where it almost felt like a dream to write. It’s similar to “Maggie” in the sense that it’s that same sort of longing for wanting something else than what you currently have, but then it’s also a thankfulness and acceptance in that. It almost feels like a mantra-type song where it’s repeated and it goes to a different place — very simple chords in the verses, and then it opens into this washy vibe in the, “What do I do, what do I do?” It was one of those gifts of a song.

You’ve been collaborating with your friends Sara Watkins and Aoife O’Donovan for years. Now that you’ve written albums and toured together, do you hear, or did you feel, the imprint of your time with I’m With Her going into this record in a new way?

I felt it in a creative way, personally. I think all of us were just so positively influenced by that experience [of] touring and putting out that record. What that allowed all of us — I’m speaking for myself, but I’d imagine they probably feel a similar way — was just the chance to step back and take a breath. Not in a busy sense, because we were just constantly working and on tour, but creatively.

I had never been in a band before; I had only ever put out my solo records. I think after Undercurrent, I couldn’t really imagine going straight into another solo record or album push because I just wasn’t inspired to. I had reached a point where I had wanted to experience something new. There was something so rewarding about feeling like I was a part of a team. We were all on each other’s team and carrying the load together. It was just so wonderful and magical. It definitely gave me the creative juice to just be so psyched about making this record.

With Sarah and Sean making their Watkins Family Hour duo project, and Aoife making Bull Frogs Croon, I love those projects so much because [we] all seem so inspired. I think that is because we all allowed ourselves this chance to step back from our own things, be a part of a team and give ourselves the gift of this renewed inspiration, almost. I definitely felt that. I hope they do, too. I’m so grateful for them.

Editor’s Note: Read the second half of our interview with BGS Artist of the Month Sarah Jarosz here.


Photo credit: Josh Wool

A Minute in West Virginia with Charles Wesley Godwin

Welcome to “A Minute In …” — a BGS feature that turns musicians into hometown reporters. In our latest column, Charles Wesley Godwin takes us through West Virginia, a state that inspired much of the music on his notable new album, Seneca.

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Mountaineer Home Football Game
There’s no place like Morgantown, West Virginia on a football Saturday. I once heard that Morgantown accounts for one percent of the nation’s beer sales on game day. I have no idea if that’s true, but I like it. Make sure you don the ol’ gold and blue, haggle with a ticket scalper, bring a case of beer and you’ll be sure to get invited to join a tailgate in the Blue Lot. Afterwards, go fill up at Black Bear Burritos and continue drinking your face off with dozens of WV craft beers. A wise man once said, “They shouldn’t have played the ol’ gold and blue!” – the late, great, coach Bill Stewart.


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The Purple Fiddle
Tucked away in beautiful Thomas, West Virginia, The Purple Fiddle is putting on some of the best shows in the country almost every night of the week. If you want to experience a little piece of Appalachian heaven, go dance your boots off at a Purple Fiddle show. Then, be sure to take the weekend to enjoy Thomas & Davis, Blackwater Falls, Canaan Valley and Dolly Sods. The owner, John Bright, has his ear to the ground like no other. He was opening his doors to bands like The Avett Brothers, Greensky Bluegrass and countless others back when they were being passed over by comparable venues. The Fiddle has welcomed me ever since I got started, and I’m very grateful for that.


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Fly-Fishing
There’s no better place to wet your fly line than West Virginia. Of course, I might be biased, but West Virginia’s got some of the most beautiful trout streams and rivers in the world. Go fishin’ on the North Fork of the South Branch, Elk, South Branch of the Potomac, Dryfork, Cheat, Greenbrier, Potomac, Shenandoah, New and countless other rivers. Find yourself a nice little tributary and you can catch native trout all the way up the holler. Hell, come see me and we’ll fish Seneca Creek.


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Muriale’s Restaurant
One little-known fact outside of our borders is that West Virginia is home to a huge (by West Virginian standards) Italian population in north-central WV. Like a monument to their greatness, Muriale’s Restaurant stands in Fairmont right next to Interstate 79, calling all travelers to her great table. If Muriale’s could speak, I’d imagine she’d cry out her own version of Emma Lazarus’ “The New Colossus.” Something along these lines, “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to try the meatball, the wretched refuse of your teeming states. Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me, I will feed them well!”


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Seneca Rocks
Standing high above the land where generations of my family have lived and died, and the Native Americans before them, the rocks remind us all of how long the forces of nature have been at play. I won’t begin to act like I know the ins and outs of how it was formed, but I’ll just take geologists’ word for it that it took hundreds of millions of years. You can hike right up to the top of this crag and I promise it’ll give you a hell of a view. One so nice in fact, that I asked my wife to marry me there.


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Mothman Festival
Each year, on the third weekend of September, comes the Mothman Festival in Point Pleasant. There’s music, there’s vendors, there’s the Mothman museum, there’s wild, ancient alien type dudes tellin’ all kinds of crazy stories. Go check it out. It’s a really fun time.


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Greenbrier Valley Brewing Co.
Just outside of Lewisburg, Greenbrier Valley Brewing Company is spitting out some of the best beer in the world. They’ve got something that’ll fit your taste no matter what kind of beer drinker you are. Bring your dog and enjoy a Devil Anse, Zona’s Revenge, Mothman or Wild Trail. While you’re at it, just take the whole week to enjoy Lewisburg, The Greenbrier, and all that is Almost Heaven. It’s gorgeous down that way.


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Live on the Levee
On the banks of the pristine waters (just kidding) of the Kanawha River, there’s a summer series of concerts in downtown Charleston every Friday night. For Live on the Levee, they bring in a bunch of killer national touring acts to put on a hell of a show for the good people. Thousands of West Virginians from high and higher come out to enjoy the music, the food trucks and spend a night on the town. Afterwards, if you didn’t get enough music to tickle your fancy at the Levee show, just cross the street to catch another show at The Boulevard Tavern.


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Country Club Bakery
Pepperoni rolls are a staple of the Mountain State. They were originally created as a lunch food option for the coal miners. Guiseppe “Joseph” Argiro sold the very first one at Country Club Bakery in 1927. The comfort food of all comfort foods is at your fingertips in small bakeries and gas stations all around the state, but if you stop by Country Club to a pick up a fresh dozen, you’re in for a treat. I feel a deep sense of sadness every time I’m looking for a proper gas station snack out of state. I don’t know how y’all make it without roni rolls.


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New River Gorge
The New River Gorge Bridge sits 876 feet above the ancient New River. While driving across it, it’s sure to freak out anyone scared of heights. There is an annual Bridge Day festival where adrenaline junkies from all around the world meet up and BASE jump off of it. For those of us who are not so extreme, myself included, you can whitewater raft down the New River guided by Ace Adventure. After you’re done on the river, you can grab a bite to eat at Secret Sandwich Society in Fayetteville, and catch a show at The Grove.


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Snowshoe Mountain
Snowshoe is home to the best skiing on the east coast. Come November, the snow is already piling up and it doesn’t melt all the way until May. If skiing’s not your thing, you can take a snowmobile tour, ride the air tubes, enjoy the spa and catch a show in the winter village. If you miss the snow, don’t worry, you can still go mountain biking or enjoy some guided fly-fishing.


Photo of Charles Wesley Godwin by Ashley Stottlemyer