The 2016 International Bluegrass Music Awards Winners

The 2016 International Bluegrass Music Association awards were handed out last night. Winners are in bold. Congratulations to all!

Entertainer of the Year
Balsam Range
The Del McCoury Band
The Earls of Leicester
Flatt Lonesome
The Gibson Brothers

Vocal Group of the Year
Balsam Range
Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver
The Earls of Leicester
Flatt Lonesome
The Gibson Brothers

Instrumental Group of the Year
The Earls of Leicester
Frank Solivan & Dirty Kitchen
Punch Brothers
Sam Bush Band
The Travelin’ McCourys

Song of the Year
“Black River” — Sierra Hull (artist and songwriter)
“Long Way Down” — the SteelDrivers (artist), Elizabeth Mala Hengber, Tammy Rogers King, Jerry Salley (songwriters)
“Radio” — Steep Canyon Rangers (artist), Graham Paul Sharp (songwriter)
“Thunder & Lightning” — Lonesome River Band (artist), Adam Wright (songwriter)
“You’re the One” — Flatt Lonesome (artist), Dwight Yoakam (songwriter)

Album of the Year
Bridging the Tradition — Lonesome River Band
It’s About Tyme — Russell Moore & IIIrd Tyme Out
Runaway Train — Flatt Lonesome
The Muscle Shoals Recordings — the SteelDrivers
Weighted MindSierra Hull

Gospel Recorded Performance
“All Dressed Up” — Joe Mullins & the Radio Ramblers
“In The Heat of the Fire” — Flatt Lonesome
“Rocking of the Cradle” — Lonesome River Band
“The Savior Is Born” — Becky Buller
“Won’t You Come and Sing for Me” — Laurie Lewis & the Right Hands

Instrumental Recorded Performance
“Cazenovia Casanova” — Frank Solivan with Sam Bush and Jerry Douglas
“Fireball” — Special Consensus featuring Rob Ickes, Trey Hensley, and Alison Brown
“Hogan’s Goat” — the Boxcars
“Hogan’s House of Music” — Ron Block
“Smartville” — Ron Block

Emerging Artist
Band of Ruhks
The Lonely Heartstring Band
Mountain Faith
Sister Sadie
Steve Gulley & New Pinnacle
Town Mountain

Recorded Event
“Fireball” — Special Consensus featuring Rob Ickes, Trey Hensley, and Alison Brown
“Highway 40 Blues” — Special Consensus with Della Mae
“In the Pines” — Carl Jackson and Brad Paisley
“Longneck Blues” — Junior Sisk and Ronnie Bowman
“Pretty Woman” — Frank Solivan with Del McCoury

Male Vocalist
Shawn Camp
Del McCoury
Buddy Melton
Tim O’Brien
Danny Paisley

Female Vocalist
Becky Buller
Dale Ann Bradley
Claire Lynch
Amanda Smith
Rhonda Vincent

Banjo Player
Charlie Cushman
Jens Kruger
Mike Munford
Noam Pikelny
Sammy Shelor

Bass Player
Barry Bales
Alan Bartram
Mike Bub
Missy Raines
Mark Schatz

Fiddle Player
Becky Buller
Jason Carter
Michael Cleveland
Stuart Duncan
Ron Stewart

Dobro Player
Jerry Douglas
Andy Hall
Rob Ickes
Phil Leadbetter
Josh Swift

Guitar Player
Chris Eldridge
Jim Hurst
Kenny Smith
Bryan Sutton
Josh Williams

Mandolin Player
Jesse Brock
Sam Bush
Sierra Hull
Frank Solivan
Adam Steffey

7 Artists We’re Stoked to See at IBMA’s World of Bluegrass 2016

April may be the cruelest month, but September is by far the coolest one because we get to head to Raleigh, North Carolina, for one of our favorite events — IBMA's World of Bluegrass. Taking place September 27 – October 1, the event brings bluegrass fans from around the globe together for the pickin'- and grinnin'-est party this side of, well, anywhere. If you're heading to Raleigh and struggling to get your schedule together — we get it, there's a lot to choose from! — allow us to do some of the heavy lifting for you and check out seven of the acts we can't wait to see.

10 String Symphony

Nashville duo 10 String Symphony, also known as Christian Sedelmyer and Rachel Baiman, are no strangers to the stage, with Sedelmyer a member of Jerry Douglas's touring band and Baiman having fiddled alongside the likes of Kacey Musgraves. Their project together, though, brings those individual talents together for an acoustic, genre-defying sound that is truly like no other.

Missy Raines and the New Hip 

Missy Raines has more Bass Player of the Year IBMAs than anyone out there, and there's no better way to find out why that is than to watch her kicking bass and taking names on stage. She and her band, the New Hip, fuse elements of jazz and Americana with her more traditional bluegrass leanings.

Bill and the Belles

Johnson City, Tennessee, quartet Bill and the Belles pay homage to their mountain upbringings with Tin Pan Alley covers and Appalachian-inspired arrangements. They're a joy to watch live, and we bet you can't make it through their set without smiling.

Hot Buttered Rum

With a name like Hot Buttered Rum, the music better be good, and, sure enough, it is. Just like the drink, a live set from Hot Buttered Rum goes down easy and leaves you with a smile on your face.

Molly Tuttle Band

Nashville multi-instrumentalist Molly Tuttle has a sonic range unlike many musicians out there, able to captivate listeners with tender vocals just as easily as she is with virtuosic guitar chops. This full band set should deliver, as the kids say, all the feelings.

Ricky Skaggs and Kentucky Thunder

If one of the greatest living mandolin players doesn't tickle your fancy, well, you just might be at the wrong festival. Whether you've never seen Skaggs live or this will be your 12th rumble with Kentucky Thunder, this is a set you won't want to miss.

Greensky Bluegrass

Just over a decade-and-a-half into their career, Greensky Bluegrass has never sounded better. Their forthcoming album, Shouted, Written Down and Quoted, is a sure sign that bluegrass is still alive and well.

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ANNOUNCING: 2016 IBMA Award Nominations

Nominees for the 2016 International Bluegrass Music Association awards were announced this morning. Judging by the list, modern bluegrass is alive and very, very well. From Sam Bush to Sierra Hull, so many artists we love got tapped. And, of course, it's no surprise that the Earls of Leicester and Del McCoury racked up a bunch of nods. Hats off to you all!

Entertainer of the Year
Balsam Range
The Del McCoury Band
The Earls of Leicester
Flatt Lonesome
The Gibson Brothers

Vocal Group of the Year
Balsam Range
Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver
The Earls of Leicester
Flatt Lonesome
The Gibson Brothers

Instrumental Group of the Year
The Earls of Leicester
Frank Solivan & Dirty Kitchen
Punch Brothers
Sam Bush Band
The Travelin’ McCourys

Song of the Year
“Black River” — Sierra Hull (artist and songwriter)
“Long Way Down” — the SteelDrivers (artist), Elizabeth Mala Hengber, Tammy Rogers King, Jerry Salley (songwriters)
“Radio” — Steep Canyon Rangers (artist), Graham Paul Sharp (songwriter)
“Thunder & Lightning” — Lonesome River Band (artist), Adam Wright (songwriter)
“You’re the One” — Flatt Lonesome (artist), Dwight Yoakam (songwriter)

Album of the Year
Bridging the Tradition — Lonesome River Band
It’s About Tyme — Russell Moore & IIIrd Tyme Out
Runaway Train — Flatt Lonesome
The Muscle Shoals Recordings — the SteelDrivers
Weighted MindSierra Hull

Gospel Recorded Performance
“All Dressed Up” — Joe Mullins & the Radio Ramblers
“In The Heat of the Fire” — Flatt Lonesome
“Rocking of the Cradle” — Lonesome River Band
“The Savior Is Born” — Becky Buller
“Won’t You Come and Sing for Me” — Laurie Lewis & the Right Hands

Instrumental Recorded Performance
“Cazenovia Casanova” — Frank Solivan with Sam Bush and Jerry Douglas
“Fireball” — Special Consensus featuring Rob Ickes, Trey Hensley, and Alison Brown
“Hogan’s Goat” — the Boxcars
“Hogan’s House of Music” — Ron Block
“Smartville” — Ron Block

Emerging Artist
Band of Ruhks
The Lonely Heartstring Band
Mountain Faith
Sister Sadie
Steve Gulley & New Pinnacle
Town Mountain

Recorded Event
“Fireball” — Special Consensus featuring Rob Ickes, Trey Hensley, and Alison Brown
“Highway 40 Blues” — Special Consensus with Della Mae
“In the Pines” — Carl Jackson and Brad Paisley
“Longneck Blues” — Junior Sisk and Ronnie Bowman
“Pretty Woman” — Frank Solivan with Del McCoury

Male Vocalist
Shawn Camp
Del McCoury
Buddy Melton
Tim O’Brien
Danny Paisley

Female Vocalist
Becky Buller
Dale Ann Bradley
Claire Lynch
Amanda Smith
Rhonda Vincent

Banjo Player
Charlie Cushman
Jens Kruger
Mike Munford
Noam Pikelny
Sammy Shelor

Bass Player
Barry Bales
Alan Bartram
Mike Bub
Missy Raines
Mark Schatz

Fiddle Player
Becky Buller
Jason Carter
Michael Cleveland
Stuart Duncan
Ron Stewart

Dobro Player
Jerry Douglas
Andy Hall
Rob Ickes
Phil Leadbetter
Josh Swift

Guitar Player
Chris Eldridge
Jim Hurst
Kenny Smith
Bryan Sutton
Josh Williams

Mandolin Player
Jesse Brock
Sam Bush
Sierra Hull
Frank Solivan
Adam Steffey

Here’s Your Full 2015 IBMA Awards Winners List

The Earls of Leicester, Becky Buller and Steve Martin were all big winners at last night's IBMA Awards in Raleigh, NC. Check out the full winner's list below:

Entertainer of the Year: The Earls of Leicester

Female Vocalist of the Year: Rhonda Vincent

Male Vocalist of the Year: Shawn Camp

Vocal Group of the Year: Balsam Range

Instrumental Group of the Year: The Earls of Leicester

Song of the Year: “Moon Over Memphis,” Balsam Range

Album of the Year: The Earls of Leicester, The Earls of Leicester (produced by Jerry Douglas)

Gospel Recorded Performance of the Year: “Who Will Sing for Me,” the Earls of Leicester

Instrumental Recorded Performance of the Year: “The Three Bells,” Jerry Douglas, Mike Auldridge, Rob Ickes

Emerging Artist of the Year: Becky Buller

 

Emerging Artist of the Year winner Becky Buller backstage! Oh yeah, she won Songwriter of the Year and Recorded Event of the Year for "Southern Flavor"

A photo posted by International Bluegrass Music Association (@intlbluegrass) on

Recorded Event of the Year: “Southern Flavor,” Becky Buller with Peter Rowan, Michael Feagan, Buddy Spicher, Ernie Sykes, Roland White and Blake Williams

Bluegrass Songwriter of the Year: Becky Buller

Banjo Player of the Year: Rob McCoury

Bass Player of the Year: Tim Surrett

Dobro Player of the Year: Jerry Douglas

Fiddle Player of the Year: Michael Cleveland

Guitar Player of the Year: Bryan Sutton

Mandolin Player of the Year: Jesse Brock

Inductees into the Bluegrass Hall of Fame: Bill Keith and Larry Sparks

Distinguished Achievement Awards: Alison Brown, Murphy Henry, the International Bluegrass Music Museum, “Bashful Brother” Oswald Kirby and Steve Martin

 

Greg Cahill & Distinguished Achievement Award recipient Alison Brown backstage at the Special Awards Luncheon. #wob #banjos

A photo posted by International Bluegrass Music Association (@intlbluegrass) on

Get Your First Look at Tom Hiddleston as Hank Williams

The above photo, shot by Alan Markfield, is your first look at Tom Hiddleston as Hank Williams in the biopic I Saw the Light, coming to theaters November 27. Read more about the film and its release at Entertainment Weekly.

Other Roots Music News:

• Dolly Parton and Jennifer Nettles gave Rolling Stone Country the lowdown on the Coat of Many Colors movie. 

• Jason Isbell performed "24 Frames" on Conan.

• ICYMI: IBMA announced their 2015 awards nominees. 

• In other Dolly news, Curbed explores how Dolly Parton's childhood home became Dollywood. 

• Wilco brought Jenny Lewis and Ben Gibbard on stage for a performance of "California Stars" at a recent show in Washington.

Ryan Adams Is Gonna Party Like It’s ‘1989’

There's never a dull moment in the career of Ryan Adams, but he may have just topped himself with his latest move: covering Taylor Swift's chart-topping 2014 release 1989 start to finish… in the style of the Smiths. He's already shared a clip or two, and it sounds pretty epic.

Read more at Rolling Stone.

Other Roots Music News:

• Go behind the scenes of the making of Indigo Girls' "One Lost Day."

• Ashley Monroe covered John Mellencamp's "Pink Houses."

• Bruce Springsteen earned the distinct honor of serving as Jon Stewart's last Moment of Zen. [Consequence of Sound

• Laura Marling performed "I Feel Your Love" on The Late Late Show with James Corden.

• IBMA announced their film festival selections. [Bluegrass Today

Ryan Adams photo by Alice Baxley, courtesy of Nasty Little Man

Watch Traveller Perform “Western Movies”

Traveller may be a supergroup, but the trio (which features Robert Ellis, Cory Chisel and Jonny Fritz) is more than the sum of its parts. Case in point: this excellent, humorous live video of their new tune "Western Movies," which they put together for NPR Music. Like what you hear below? Listen to their debut tune, "Nobody Makes It Out," here

Other Roots Music News:

• Famed steel guitar player Buddy Emmons passed away. [Rolling Stone

• "Happy Birthday" may be in the public domain. [Consequence of Sound

• A Kentucky distillery plays music for its booze. [A.V. Club

• The IBMA Awards nominees will be announced August 12 on SiriusXM's Bluegrass Junction. [Bluegrass Today

• Watkins Family Hour covered Ella Fitzgerald's "When I Get Low, I Get High" at Newport.

IBMA’s Big Move

BY THOMAS GOLDSMITH 
GUEST COLUMNIST

 

Please come to Raleigh in 2013.

That’s the message being sent out by the International Bluegrass Music Association and from my hometown of Raleigh, North Carolina.

After checking out a number of different locations, the IBMA announced this May that its annual World of Bluegrass event would land in Raleigh for the years 2013, 2014 and 2015. It will stay in Nashville again this year and previously was in Owensboro and Louisville, Ky.

But why Raleigh?

There are plenty of good reasons. (I promise I will get to a few drawbacks here in a minute…) One major plus consists of a new downtown convention center, an outdoor amphitheater across the street and a walking-distance complex of three performance halls.

Also, not only Raleigh but also the neighboring towns of Chapel Hill, Durham and Cary have thriving bluegrass, acoustic and old-timey music scenes. That means there will be ready-made audiences for the public parts of the event.

We don’t (yet) have an Allison Krauss or a Del McCoury living here, but the immediate area is home to folks such as picker-dealers Jim Mills and Tony Williamson; bands such as Russell Johnson and Grass Cats and Carolina Road; record company founders such as Barry Poss and Dave Evans; old-timey legends such as Alice Gerrard and the Red Clay Ramblers; and new standard-bearers such as the Steep Canyon Rangers. Thrown in the burgeoning jam-grass field symbolized by Charlotte’s Avett Brothers and you’ve a little world of bluegrass right around home.

Maybe just as significantly, the Triangle (consisting of Raleigh, Durham and Chapel Hill) can also claim a rich history involving the dawning years of bluegrass. It was while appearing on local powerhouse radio station WPTF that brothers Bill and Charlie Monroe built a huge audience in the Carolinas and made their first recordings for Victor. Of course, they also broke up their partnership in Raleigh, but how else was Bill going to start the original Blue Grass Boys?

WPTF was also home to Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs in 1952, when the Foggy Mountain boys took up residence in Raleigh at least long enough for Earl’s son Randy to be born here. Generations of hillbilly music fans kept their radios locked in to 680 AM to hear the Stanley Brothers, Jim Eanes, Mac Wiseman, Clyde Moody, Kitty Wells, Johnny and Jack, Chet Atkins and countless others who did stints at WPTF.

“In terms of the history, I think North Carolina is every bit as much the birthplace of bluegrass as Kentucky,’ mandolinist Williamson told me during an interview for the local paper newspaper, The News & Observer.

Moving into the 1960s, the beginnings of the newgrass movement found an early welcome in the Triangle, with the homegrown New Deal String Band and frequent visitors New Grass Revival building a fan base for their rock-influenced sound and long-haired look among the area’s tens of thousands of college students. Through the decades bluegrass, has kept a strong hold on listeners in North Carolina, from small-scale picking sessions to major festivals such as North Wilkesboro’s Merlefest.

And those drawbacks? Raleigh often shows up on national best-of lists in categories such as business environment, percentage of college graduates, low crime and livability. It’s a great place to raise children in and … local voices tend to trail off before muttering the b-word: ‘Boring.’

At one point, true enough. Until quite recently, a big night in downtown Raleigh might consist of trying to get into one of the few restaurants that stayed open after business people headed home to the suburbs, then maybe locating one of the few clubs that featured live music. And there’s the city’s symbol of a giant acorn in a city park, eh? Not perhaps the most riveting trademark: ‘The City of Oaks, where you can watch trees grow.’
But in the last few years, a new public and private emphasis on downtown has brought thousands of new residents and plenty of good restaurants to the area that includes the convention center and walking distance thereof. There are also a number of of live-music spaces expected to feature live bluegrass during the IBMA event.

It should be noticeably less expensive to be in Raleigh than in Nashville for several days. And attendees will be surrounded by locals who are crazy about music of all kinds. 
While far from a traditional bluegrass show, folk-pop-rocker Natalie Merchant recently had to pop out from backstage after she had performed for about 90 minutes at the Meymandi Concert Hall, one of the top-level venues near the convention site. A packed house had been standing, cheering, pleading for an encore for close to 10 minutes when Merchant came back out and signaled for quiet.

‘We’re coming back!’ she said, ‘It’s just intermission.’
   
For more information about the International Bluegrass Music Association, or to register for this year’s World of Bluegrass conference, visit http://ibma.org/.  For a list of other events to visit while in North Carolina check out www.carolinamusicfests.com

MIXTAPE: Jon Weisberger

If the name Jon Weisberger doesn’t immediately ring a bell, it soon will…. this Renaissance man of the bluegrass world is a well-respected bassist for Chris Jones and the Night Drivers, music writer for Nashville Scene and The Tennessean, and IBMA Vice Chair, amongst other various roles in the industry (another recent addition to his resume is winner of IBMA’s 2012 Songwriter of the Year Award).  And now he can add his role as the latest addition to The Bluegrass Situation team.  Starting this month, Jon will be dispensing his wealth of wisdom in a monthly editorial column, waxing poetic on any variety of topical subject and music history.

We’re thrilled to have Jon on board, and thought we would introduce him to Sitch readers by having him curate our latest MIXTAPE.  And as if we needed any more convincing, our suspicions were confirmed:  the man’s got damn good taste…

Track:   Roll Muddy River
Artist:  Osborne Brothers

‘My friend Amber Digby, a great honky tonk singer whose dad played with the Osborne Brothers back in the 70s, is working on putting together a tribute to Bobby and Sonny, so I’ve been listening to a lot of their stuff lately.  But honestly, I listen to a lot of their stuff pretty regularly.  Bobby makes the most bad-ass singing look effortless.’

 

Track:  The Game That I Can Win
Artist:  Lonesome River Band

‘One of the things I love about bluegrass is the longevity of careers.  You can go see folks who were making music professionally back before JFK was elected President, and a lot of them are still at the top of their games.  Tim Austin, a founding member and leader of the Lonesome River Band until he quit in the mid-90s, put up a bunch of videos of the early 90s edition of the band—Tim, Sammy Shelor, Ronnie Bowman and Dan Tyminski—a while ago; this is a great reminder of how killer—and how influential—these guys were a couple of decades ago and still are today.’

 

Track:  Pea Soup Reel
Artist:  Don Messer

‘I spent a couple of years playing with a fabulous Ottawa Valley fiddler, stepdancer and singer, April Verch, and came away from it a fan of Canadian fiddle styles—and I was already a fan of the glorious quirkiness of musicians from back in the days before people started making up rules.  Here’s a band with twin fiddles and drums, a piano, a 5-string banjo and a soprano sax, playing a good old fiddle tune made for dancing—and sure enough, the dancing is sensational.   I just found this recently and can’t stop watching.’

 

Track:  On My Mind
Artist:  Harley Allen/Mike Lilly Band

‘Harley Allen, who passed away about a year and a half ago, is pretty well known in the country world as a great songwriter, but a lot of bluegrass folks think that he was an even better singer, and I’m one of them.  Mike Lilly plays some powerful banjo on this—the chordal thumb stuff in his break is amazing—and sings some stout lead on the choruses, but Harley’s vocals make you forget about everything else.  He had a style of ornamentation and phrasing that was simultaneously unexpected and exactly right; it never sounded premeditated, and it never sounded wrong.’

 

Track:  He Ain’t Never Done Me Nothin’ But Good
Artist:  The Isaacs

Track:  More Than A Hammer And Nails
Artist:  The Staples Singers

‘Gospel music is one of the great meeting grounds of southern popular music.  I love that, as different as these two sensational performances are, they have just three chords between them—not to mention a feeling of joy that’s unmistakably real and more than a little contagious.’

 

 

You can check out Jon’s editorial column every month exclusively at The Sitch beginning next week.

ARTIST OF THE MONTH: The Gibson Brothers

The fact that reigning IBMA “Entertainer of the Year” siblings THE GIBSON BROTHERS hail from the Adirondacks of upstate New York might surprise some, but dedicated bluegrass fans will be quite familiar with this highly-regarded band, fronted by Eric and Leigh Gibson. Since nabbing IBMA’s “Emerging Artist of the Year” honors in 1998, the group has built a reputation through their memorable live performances and impressive recordings.

Eric, the banjo-playing brother, shared his thoughts about his band, the IBMA victory and their new Compass Records release They Called It Music.

What went through your mind when you heard your band’s name announced as “Entertainer of the Year?”

Shock! We didn’t expect it at all. The competition was all friends of ours. We thought another band would win it because of this or that; I never thought about us. Maybe it was our turn – that we were just being rewarded for hanging in there and consistency. I’ve had a lot of people say to me: ‘Eric, you guys deserved it; you’ve earned it.’ I think we’ve made some music to be proud of.

Did winning the award influence how you recorded your new album?

I think we went in to the recording studio with more confidence, but not cockiness or overconfidence. This is about the music; not about hype. I didn’t see bringing in a ton of guest players just because we won an award. I love my band.

I was thinking about it the other day. We made an album with five guys who have probably played together 300 shows together or more. There’s a comfort level there. Making good music is about being comfortable and having musical conversations with the guys you’re making music with. You can put the hottest musicians together and it’s not glued together like a band that has traveled and worked on the road together. I think you develop a sound that way.

The album has a rather wide range of covers (from Loretta Lynn to Pee Wee King to Mark Knopfler). How do you pick a song to record?

Leigh and I talked a lot about this in getting ready for this record. We wanted to vary our tempos and themes – to have each song have a different feel from every other song on the album. We are always on the lookout for a good song. We love Mark Knopfler. That song (“Daddy’s Gone To Knoxville”) has been in the back of our minds for a few years, and we never cut a Delmore Brothers song before. It felt great to play tribute to them, plus it’s a great gospel song (“Home On A River”). We thought our harmonies sounded as tight as they ever have on that song.

How do you work out singing harmonies with your brother Leigh?

Leigh and I have been singing together since our teens, so maybe it comes easier than somebody who hasn’t been doing it that long, but we still work at it. All those vocals were done live on one mic facing each other. It sounds like we do live on a good night. We’ve been doing that on the last several records. It works a lot better for us than having one guy going in and singing his lead and then the other guy going in and trying to harmonize with that.

There aren’t a lot of brother duets in the business right now. It’s kind of our calling card. I think that is the biggest factor in us choosing material. We thought about doing a brothers’ tribute record, which is something we will do at some point, but we got writing a bunch of songs and the ones we ended up using were ones that lent themselves to harmony.

How do you write the songs with your brother?

It all depends. My brother loves to swoop in on a song that is 90% done and make a suggestion that I can’t ignore. My natural inclination is that it is good the way it is and then I think “dang it, he’s right.’

This time around I had more stuff; Leigh didn’t contribute as many original songs as he normally does. Maybe next time he’ll have more stuff ready. I am proud of the originals on this record. I think it is some of the strongest writing we’ve done.

Are there ones that you are particularly proud of?

I really like the title track. That one kind of wrote itself. I was given the idea by Joe Newberry; he’s written a lot of songs for us for the last few albums. He told me a story about asking an old man who played the banjo what they called his music when you were a young man. Did they call it country or bluegrass or old time folk? ‘Son, they called it music.’ We just had a good laugh about that. Then it occurred to me weeks later that it’s a song and I have to write that. I called Joe up and said ‘Joe, we wrote a song.’ I would never have written that song if it wasn’t for him.

I also thought about how important music has always been to people – the music that was never recorded and the music that was made not to make a buck. I remember my grandfather singing me a song that he had learned in the lumber camps and thinking ‘how cool is that?’

The one we wrote with Shawn Camp (“Something Comin’ To Me”) is another favorite. We wrote that less than a month after our dad died. Shawn is one of our heroes and we’d been wanting to write with him forever, and we finally got the chance but nothing was happening.  It wasn’t him; it was us. We just had this cloud over us but we didn’t realize it. He was very nice and said ‘boys, some days I just don’t have it’.”

He got up and left the room, and we looked at each other like we blew our chance to write with Shawn. He came back in and I was noddling around on the guitar. He asked, ‘What do you have there?’ and I said, ‘Nothing, it’s just something coming to me’.” And we wrote a song called, ‘Something Comin’ to Me’.” What a master that guy is. We can’t help but improve as writers being around guys like him.

How do you view the current state of the bluegrass scene?

I think bluegrass could benefit from the popularity that having the most popular band in the land (Mumford & Sons) has a banjo. We shouldn’t be close-minded if young people come to acoustic music through that way. I hope I’m not shooting myself in the foot and making anyone mad here. I’m just saying I think we have to mix it up. We want the young folks hopefully to come to bluegrass, to come to Bill Monroe. And you’re hearing this from a guy whose favorite bluegrass is hardcore bluegrass. I still love the old stuff the best. If I want to listen to bluegrass, I crank Jimmy Martin, but I think we have to be more inclusive as a genre for this to grow.

What should fans expect from the Gibson Brothers this year on tour?

We’ll definitely lean on this album pretty hard. We made a record that is really fun to play, but we will also be mixing favorites and, of course, we always try to honor as many requests as possible.

We don’t even know what we are going to play ‘til we are heading on the stage. We’ve always prided ourselves on doing a different show every night. One woman last year went to 17 shows and I want her to see 17 different shows. We play songs on stage that we never record. I want to keep it fresh for us and the audience. We’ve always tried to make it about the music. We have never been the best people in the world about marketing us. I’m proud of my band and what we have done.