BGS Long Reads of the Week // June 19

Summer approaches, the heat and humidity are here, at BGS South in Nashville the fireflies are alight every night, and it’s the perfect season for a porch swing reading session (if you can stand a little sweatin’).

The BGS archives will keep you stocked for just such an occasion! Each week, as we share our favorite longer, more in-depth articles, stories, and features to help you pass the time, we post our #longreadoftheday picks… yes, daily across our social media channels [on FacebookTwitter, and Instagram]. But of course, here’s the weekly round-up, too. Get your long reads wherever you like!

This week’s stories cast daylight, share wisdom, get toes tapping, revisit old memories, and much more.

Grace Potter Sets the Scene with Dramatic Daylight

An excellent long read for starting us out, with this one you’ll get a bit of fresh air and a whole lotta Daylight, Grace Potter’s most recent album, which was released last fall. Our interview explores the cinematic quality of the album, how Potter built her band post-Nocturnals, and little things too — like how bluegrass and southern California resonate within her. Grace Potter’s voice is commanding, on the stage or on the page. [Read the interview]


Hear Six of Our Favorite Instrumentals on IBMA’s Second-Round Ballot

We debuted Tunesday Tuesday in January 2018 for a pretty simple reason. Roots music has a world-class stable of talented pickers, and unlike other more commercial genres, that talent is something of a prerequisite — especially in bluegrass! This short list-formatted Tunesday is a perfect long read/listen, and even though the IBMA Awards’ second-round ballot is now closed, you may need to do some studying for the final ballot still to come this summer! [Get listening]


Doc Watson: Live Memories and Moments

Anyone who ever had the extreme good fortune of seeing Doc Watson perform live can easily recount their favorite moments remembered from his time on stage. Lucky for any of us who can’t get enough of those memories, Watson put so many of them down on recordings and live tapes. Stroll a bit back through the catalog of those live performances with BGS. [Read more]


Counsel of Elders: Taj Mahal on Understanding the World

And he understands it! The wisdom and storytelling gifted to us by blues innovator and legend Taj Mahal in this 2016 interview is not only perfect for a long read pick, but it was perfect for a #ThrowbackThursday, too. The voices and perspectives of our elders are vital as we struggle for a more just future, and our musical elders have plenty of insight to pass on, as well. [Read the whole interview]


Bluegrass Pride Invites LGBTQ+ Roots Music Fans to Porch Pride Festival

In a little over a week our friends at Bluegrass Pride will hold their online Pride festival, Porch Pride, featuring performances by queer artists, musicians, and bands and their allies — such as Jake Blount, Tatiana Hargreaves, Cathy Fink & Marcy Marxer, and Molly Tuttle. In advance of the event, we spoke to Bluegrass Pride’s Executive Director, Kara Kundert, and artist Amythyst Kiah about Pride, roots music, and what to expect from the festival. [Read more]


Photo of Amythyst Kiah: Anna Hedges

LISTEN: Grace Potter, “Eachother” (Feat. Jackson Browne, Marcus King, & Lucius)

Artist: Grace Potter (Featuring Jackson Browne, Marcus King, and Lucius)
Single: “Eachother”
Release Date: May 22, 2020
Label: Fantasy Records

In Their Words: “The chorus of the song just kind of exploded out of my heart all at once. It was about five days into the quarantine, and I had just gotten off the phone with a friend who was having a really tough time with the isolation. I was in our living room, watching my son and husband fixing our broken train set and found myself flooded with an overwhelming sense of gratitude and contentment. The onset of COVID-19 was a shock to humanity’s system and has brought on so many reality checks. We may not all be affected in the same ways, but we are all going through this pandemic together as a human race. It is incredibly humbling. It’s invited me to really take account of the things that matter most, which aren’t things at all…they’re people.” — Grace Potter


Photo courtesy of Fantasy Records

Grace Potter Sets the Scene with Dramatic ‘Daylight’

Grace Potter possesses one of the most commanding voices in popular music — which is a good thing, because on Daylight she’s got something to say.

Potter co-wrote much of the new solo album with producer Eric Valentine, with whom she fell in love while still married to a member of her band — which is now broken up, too. After their divorces, Potter and Valentine married, started a family, and now live in Topanga Canyon, California.

The overwhelming emotions of these dramatic life changes are channeled into Daylight, with many of the songs written with Valentine, and on occasion, his longtime buddy Mike Busbee, who died in September.

“Love Is Love,” a potent opener to the project, grabbed immediate attention as the first single, but in this interview with BGS, Potter goes deeper into musical pathway that ultimately led her to Daylight.

“Release” is about the aftermath of the breakup. Who was the first person you played that for when you finished it?

Grace Potter: Eric. Busbee actually texted it to Eric but it was only half the song. Our voice recorder cut off before we finished. But he just wanted Eric to hear where we were at with the writing and Eric had to pull over the car because he was bawling listening to it. And Eric doesn’t cry easily. So that was a really important moment and one that I didn’t expect.

That song, I’d started it myself in the bathtub and it had sat in my voice memo bank for like a year and a half before Eric had heard it and was like, “Let’s not sleep on that one. Let’s pursue that and see where it goes.” Obviously it went and went and went and it’s definitely the one that gets under my skin, every time. It’s hard to play live actually.

And you’re setting yourself up as the character that set this all in motion, too.

Yeah. “I know that I caused this pain…” And that really is the full taking ownership and being accountable for your choices and knowing that those choices are not always this self-righteous, “I can do no wrong” thing. Humans are vulnerable. Humans do make mistakes. Humans change their mind. Lives and careers and happiness and financial fortitude – it all shifts and changes over the time that we live. And the more I’ve lived, the more I realize that it’s okay to give yourself permission, to be that vulnerable.

You quoted the opening line to “Release,” and the opening line on “Shout It Out” sets up that song’s storyline, too. I’ve always thought that those opening lines are something you do really well, but I didn’t realize until researching for this interview that you went to film school.

Oh yeah.

So I’m curious, do you think there’s a correlation there? Because when you make a movie, you have those establishing shots in the beginning, and in your songs you have those establishing opening lines.

And sometimes I like to mislead. I like that opening line to take you in, like, a Quentin Tarantino direction. But it’s actually like a Nora Ephron romance. But I really love storytelling. It’s the same thing I do when I’m writing my sets too. Every single song and every musical experience has to take you on an emotional journey. So there’s a launch point and there’s a revelation, which you know, within the first 20 minutes of a movie, you’re always supposed to basically set up the premise of the movie and potentially introduce one twist. For me, my life was full of so many twists while I was writing Daylight that it wasn’t hard.

After the Nocturnals ended, you had to start a band again. What’s an audition process like to be in your band?

I just want to be around people I like first. Then hopefully they’re good at music. For real. Life is too short to be in a band with people that don’t fit into your ethos or feel, or just don’t feel right. You get these feelings, you get a sense when you’re in a room with someone, if they suck the air out of the room and they have that negative energy, it really changes your entire life and your entire demeanor.

You can feel yourself going kind of gray. I call it the Eeyore effect. You know, it’s this “uhhhhh” feeling. So I generally avoid Eeyores. Although an occasional well-balanced, calm person who doesn’t talk all the time is a wonderfully welcomed part of the road because we can’t all be psychotic extroverts. It’s enough with just me and my baby. But I really enjoy finding musicians who specialize in something that’s just one step quirkier than what you would expect.

Busbee, what I loved about him was that not only was he an amazing songwriter, he played the trombone. Just randomly, like, “I studied trombone.” Really? Eliza Hardy Jones, my keyboard player and singer in my band, is a next level, Olympic champion quilter. Quilting is her thing. She’s actually got a huge show in 2020. She’s doing a massive exhibition in Nebraska at the quilt museum.

Our new drummer, Jordan West, was working for Roland demoing the audio equipment, but actually was hiding in plain sight for so many people. I was looking for a female drummer who could sing, or a female bass player who could sing, or a female guitarist who could sing. I just wanted two female voices that could do all the Lucius parts. So it was fitting the puzzle pieces together for me. Instead of auditioning a bunch of people saying, “I know exactly what I’m looking for,” I just waited until I found a flow of people that felt right. And if they happen to play an instrument I needed, then you’re hired.

Kurtis Keber, our bass player, who’s been with us since last year, came into our world through my previous drummer, Matt Musty, who is now out with Train. We miss him all the time, but these happy accidents happen where you find your people. I saw Kurtis the other day. I was like, “Kurtis, what are you doing? Are you in the studio?” He goes, “No, no, I’ve been building. I’m helping do some carpentry.” My longtime guitarist [Benny Yurco] is now becoming obsessed with recording and becoming one of those crazy studio guys — from the humble beginnings of not even using one guitar pedal to this mad scientist lab they have in Burlington, [Vermont] now.

I like jack-of-all-trades people who like doing lots of things. Those are the things that attract me to people. Their strangeness. Their idioms, their specific obsession with just the tiniest little thing. You know, loose leaf tea. You can talk for an hour and a half about loose leaf tea? I’m in, count me in.

I read the lineup of your Grand Point North festival this year and you did an acoustic set on that Sunday night. What is it about that presentation that you enjoy?

Well, Warren Haynes from Gov’t Mule has been a longtime collaborator and it’s been something that we have talked about doing because we share a joy of being musical and not really knowing what’s going to happen. And not having the stakes be so high that there’s an entire band behind you train wrecking. You know what I mean?

Usually you have to rehearse and really gain a mastery over every single song and arrangement, but when you’re doing an acoustic set, there’s so much freedom to explore. Warren’s musicality and my musicality are complementary to one another where we can take it in a lot of different directions and kind of wring out the towel different every night.

We’d done it a lot backstage and not in front of people, but we felt like it would be a cool thing to share because so many musicians, they just get out there and they run the Ferris wheel, they crank the thing up and they do the same show night after night. There’s been nine years of my festival. People have seen me play with my band. They’ve seen Warren play. He’s played three times in my festival. So I really wanted to treat the audience to a different experience.

Is part of that perspective because you went to a lot of festivals growing up?

Yeah. I came from the jam band world. Warren really ushered me into it. I was very much standing in the shadows of some amazingly talented people who paved the way for me. The festival circuit is really the only way that I was able to break out on my own and be noticed and stand out. I think it’s because of those festivals that I have the sense of diversity. I can take it in a lot of different directions and it’s more fun that way.

And if you’d go to a music festival, you’re going to hear seven, eight, ten genres of music in one place and love every single one of them. I think my instincts took me in that direction, to continue on in my career through creating in the moment, more than creating for a forever thing. …

I think none of my records have ever done my musicality justice because it’s like a high school photo album. It’s this one moment — and maybe it was a very manipulated moment that isn’t even the real reflection of what I was feeling in that moment. So Daylight was the opportunity to completely break that down, take away that premise, take away this idea of having to bottle lightning, and package it and sell it to the world. And instead have an experience. Be vulnerable and open to it and see where it takes you.

As you were talking about festivals, I was wondering, did you ever get an ear for bluegrass?

Absolutely. I grew up listening primarily to Appalachian and Celtic music, which have so many deep connections. And from my family’s record collection, I was obsessed with traditional English, Irish, and Scottish songwriting because the storytelling has these archetypes in it. It’s like the Brothers Grimm. There’s these really intense, very dark stories of women that are shape-shifting and there’s these evil goblins, and then they turn into a beautiful woman. This is a combination of fantasy and reality and love and lust and danger and war. There’s all these amazing cinematic storytelling moments in those songs.

So I grew up around that, but then bluegrass came into my world because in the festival scene, there was so much crossover. I got to meet and be in a songwriter circle early on in 2006 with Béla Fleck, Chris Thile, Jim Lauderdale, and Buddy Miller. It was such a cool lineup, pulling all these people together from all these walks of life and just playing. And it was very humbling. It made me realize I got to get my shit together, my instrumentation, because these guys know how to hold it down.

I understand that you’ve moved from Vermont to Topanga Canyon, which must’ve made your inner hippie very happy.

Oh man! My inner hippie became my outer hippie. I walked to the store two days ago in a pirate shirt with a Burberry trench coat, sweatpants, Doc Martens, and a flower crown. And I didn’t even think about it until somebody sent me a photo of it and I was like, “I did what?” That was just my usual day-to-day getup. That’s Topanga. I live and breathe that lifestyle and those people really get me.

It’s a real community too. It’s a small, small group of people. And again, I think the thing I’ve been finding that I want in life is accountability. And in a big city like L.A., you can hit someone with your car, drive away and never see them again and not really ever worry about getting caught. But if I, or anyone in town, sees anything out of the ordinary, we check in on each other. That’s how tight-knit we are, and how much we care about one another. And it’s a really, really wonderful community to be a part of.

What do you hope that fans will take away from the 2020 version of Grace Potter on tour?

You know, everything about my life has been unexpected, even to me, so I certainly can’t tell people what to expect yet because I just — every bit of it has been this ride. And as I’ve gone on as a musician, I realized that my favorite part of being a musician is inviting people into that ride with me. Instead of presenting them with a packaged thing, that is what it is, I don’t know what it is! I don’t know how this is all going to work. I’ve got a baby now and my life has fundamentally changed in so many ways. I can’t wait to see how it manifests onstage. I guarantee you there will still be headbanging, that’s for sure!


Photo credit: Pamela Neal

Bourbon and Beyond Music Lineup Revealed

Bourbon & Beyond, the world’s largest bourbon festival, will return to Louisville, Kentucky, on September 20-22, expanding to three days full of incredible music, unique culinary events, and unmatched experiences from the region’s best distilleries at the new Highland Festival Grounds At Kentucky Expo Center.

In total, more than 45 artists will play on three stages, including Alison Krauss, Del McCoury Band, Lukas Nelson & Promise Of The Real, and Margo Price. The bluegrass stage will be curated by the genre’s leading authority, The Bluegrass Situation. The BGS lineup includes Greensky Bluegrass, Mipso, Amythyst Kiah, The Travelin’ McCourys, Cedric Burnside, Ben Sollee, Dustbowl Revival, Lil Smokies, Front Country, with more to be announced.

The event will be headlined by Foo Fighters, Robert Plant And The Sensational Space Shifters (returning after originally being scheduled to appear in 2018) and the Zac Brown Band. Additional acts include John Fogerty, Daryl Hall & John Oates, and many others.

Bourbon & Beyond exclusive VIP packages, General Admission tickets, camping and hotel packages, as well as special event tickets, go on sale Friday, March 15 at 12:00 PM EDT.

The current music lineup for Bourbon & Beyond is as follows (subject to change):

Friday, September 20:
Foo Fighters, John Fogerty, Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats, The Flaming Lips, +LIVE+, Joan Jett & The Blackhearts, Lukas Nelson & Promise Of The Real, Greensky Bluegrass, Blackberry Smoke, Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Pearl, Mipso, Amythyst Kiah

Saturday, September 21:
Robert Plant And The Sensational Space Shifters, Daryl Hall & John Oates, Trey Anastasio Band, Alison Krauss, Grace Potter, Squeeze, Jenny Lewis, Del McCoury Band, Samantha Fish, The White Buffalo, Maggie Rose, Patrick Droney, The Travelin’ McCourys, Cedric Burnside, Ben Sollee

Sunday, September 22:
Zac Brown Band, ZZ Top, Leon Bridges, Edward Sharpe And The Magnetic Zeros, Kurt Vile And The Violators, Margo Price, Little Steven And The Disciples Of Soul, Edie Brickell & New Bohemians, White Reaper, Whiskey Myers, Southern Avenue, Caroline Jones, Dustbowl Revival, The Lil Smokies, Front Country

Finding Your Folks the Festival Way

Last July, Brandi Carlile stood on a hand-built timber frame stage at the annual FloydFest music and arts festival. Before launching into the next song in her set, she pitched her guitar over her shoulder and stepped up to the microphone. “Our music wouldn’t exist without these mountains,” she announced to a roaring crowd.

Carlile’s brand of powerful folk-rock does find its origins in the bluegrass and old-time music harvested in the Blue Ridge Mountains, which encircle the festival grounds. Perched high above the crowd, they provide the backdrop for this idyllic musical playground nestled deep in the foothills of Southwest Virginia. Since the 18th century, Appalachia has been a melting pot of Native American music, spirituals, gospel music, and fiddle tunes. By tapping into the roots of the region, FloydFest co-founders Kris Hodges and Erika Johnson have cultivated a rare environment that’s all spirit and diversity.

“It's not just about, you know, throwing together the most popular bands and hoping for the best with a bunch of drugs,” Hodges says. “We wanted a more holistic lifestyle. We wanted to introduce the regular person into conscious living, and that was really the initial vision and intent behind FloydFest.”

Hodges and Johnson, along with their production company, Across the Way, have been improving upon FloydFest since its inception in 2002, finding new ways to connect with the community and pay homage to its rich heritage.

“People were saying, ‘Well you need to get this band,’ and they were just throwing out all these jam bands cause the jam band thing was really on the move. We're like, 'No. Look where we are. We're in the Appalachias,'” Hodges remembers. “And so that was always a huge part of what we were trying to create. We wanted to make an authentic event that was geographically relevant.”

Cue the Virginia Folklife Workshop Porch, which has become one of the most treasured stages of the festival. With a façade that looks like a front porch, it harkens back to the long-standing tradition of pickin’ parties. It’s where big-name acts play stripped-down versions of songs, tell stories, and host a Q&A session before their headlining set on the main stage.

“Every stage is a different experience and that's the idea,” Hodges explains. “The workshop porch definitely represents that: Let's bring it back home and let's get intimate here; let's actually truly engage with the artist. It's not just there's an artist on stage — but they're a part of the festival. We're all the same, we're all equals, and we all inspire each other so the porch is definitely a launching pad for that.”

FloydFest newcomer Shakey Graves got a taste of this homegrown feeling when he made his debut on the Workshop Porch this year.

“When it really comes down to stuff like this, the people are people and it’s really more about the community,” he said. “It’s really nice to come home to a festival like this. It’s not lost on me and it means a lot.”

Another way FloydFest promoters stay true is by making use of patron feedback. They painstakingly comb through every survey and social media comment made by attendees, doing what they can to incorporate suggestions. In 2015, they responded to patrons’ requests for more female performers by presenting a female-topped bill. In addition to Carlile, headliners included country legend Emmylou Harris and rock ‘n’ roll powerhouse Grace Potter.

“I think FloydFest really prides itself on the intimacy of the festival and the personal experience,” Potter says. “It's about feeling not like 'We built this city and we're all living in it and we're all just like ants on the anthill,' but feeling like we all have our own anthills that have all come together in this beautiful colony that is this music festival for these two or three days.”

It’s the same model of audience engagement and participation that Potter brought to the table in 2011 when she launched her own festival, Grand Point North. Taking place at Burlington’s Waterfront Park in her home state of Vermont, Grand Point North was a long time coming. “I've always dreamt of starting my own music festival,” she says. “My sister and I used to sit around and draw pictures of what we thought it would look like when we were kids.”

No stranger to the festival circuit, Potter’s made the rounds for the better part of 10 years, lending a veteran perspective. “I think I have a platform and I have an individual voice. And I've seen so many music festivals: I've seen the good, the bad, and the ugly,” she says. “So I can potentially advise on this and create a really cool situation — even if it's just one weekend a year — that would be powerful for people.”

For Potter, the festival is a way to embrace social awareness. She describes how her childhood growing up in Waitsfield, Vermont, inspired her vision. “There were farmers' markets every weekend and we could go out. You'd see Phish concerts and, even as a young kid, I felt safe in those environments. I didn't feel like it was like a scene that I was wandering into the middle of,” she reminisces. “It's this feeling of 'I've arrived; I'm with my people. This is my tribe.'”

For this year’s event, Potter and her sister reached out to Vermont’s Governor’s Institute on the Arts in order to identify area youth that may be interested in getting involved. And it was through the Institute that she connected with another tribe. “We tapped into the Abenaki tribe which is actually the indigenous tribe to the Winooski River in Vermont,” Potter explains. “So we’ve been in touch with the tribe itself and we’re gonna record a woman telling the story of the land and describing the relationship between the land, the people, and the lake of Lake Champlain where the festival takes place.”

Fostering relationships and championing a region’s natural elements are key to developing the special quality that’s unique to smaller, grassroots festivals. Even FloydFest’s theme this year — “A Tribe Called FloydFest” — was accompanied by the mantra: “Find your tribe, y’all. And love them hard.”

“Our intention is definitely providing a heart space for people to enjoy each other in a diverse setting that is healthy and supportive,” FloydFest’s Kris Hodges says. “And as a rock 'n' roller, of course, you know, we wanna share that with as many people as possible.”


Photos courtesy of FloydFest and Grand Point North

3×3: Janiva Magness on Husbands, Lawyers, and the Battle Between Vinyl and Digital

Artist: Janiva Magness
Hometown: Los Angeles, CA by way of Detroit, MI
Latest Album: Love Wins Again
Personal Nicknames: Sis, Magna, Magneeto, The Boss

Your house is burning down and you can grab only one thing — what would you save?
My husband, my cats, my laptop. I would grab all of them in that order. 😉

If you weren't a musician, what would you be?
Maybe a lawyer or a school teacher, if I could stand school!

Who is the most surprising artist in current rotation in your iTunes/Spotify?
Jordi Savall and Hesperian XX

What is the one thing you can’t survive without on tour?
Yoga

If you had to get a tattoo of someone's face, who would it be?
Pippi Longstocking

Who is your favorite superhero?
Iron Man

Vinyl or digital?
Both — why do I have to choose?

Dolly or Loretta?
Loretta

Meat lover's or veggie?
Veggie, most definitely