LISTEN: Sarah Morris, “The Longest Night”

Artist: Sarah Morris
Hometown: Shoreview, Minnesota
Song: “The Longest Night”
Album: Here’s to You
Release Date: May 5, 2023

In Their Words: “‘The Longest Night’ is the last song we recorded for the album. Written over the ending days of 2020, and the first few moments of 2021, I was circling around a wave of realization of how much had changed; how much we had lost over the past year. We had just journeyed through the holidays, and the solstice. I liked the idea that we had possibly reached our darkest day and were now heading toward the light.

“In our local music community, among the many profound losses, one of our friends became ill and eventually passed. She was diagnosed almost in tandem with the pandemic hitting, but weeks before that, she’d released a new album. She’d been at my house, singing a song for my YouTube series. I kept thinking about how much I didn’t know at that moment we were singing together. About how often that happens to us — the not knowing.

“We went into RiverRock Studios on my birthday to record this track — producer Dave Mehling, guitarist Thomas Nordlund, and myself — and we recorded it live. After sitting with the recording, Dave asked bandmates Lars-Erik Larson and Andrew Foreman to add drums and bass — not the most traditional path to a band recording, but Lars and Andrew know my music so well, I think they added the just-right pieces.” — Sarah Morris

sarahmorrismusic · The Longest Night

Photo Credit: Emily Isakson

The Show On The Road – Trampled by Turtles

This week, we call into Minnesota to talk to frontman and lead-songwriter Dave Simonett of the innovative jamgrass pioneers Trampled by Turtles.

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Celebrating a new record, Alpenglow, produced by Jeff Tweedy of Wilco, the six-piece band has gone from storming shaggy local bars in Duluth to playing their famously fast roots-n-roll in the biggest venues and festivals in the world.

Twenty years in, Simonett is keeping it fresh by letting masters like Tweedy bring his punky minor chord sensibility to the band’s warm acoustic camaraderie (bassist Tim Saxhaug, banjo player Dave Carroll, mandolinist Erik Berry, fiddle player Ryan Young, and cellist Eamonn McLain round out the group) with standout songs like “Starting Over” not shying away from the expectations that come from recognition and giving your art to the world — with the brightness of the banjo always leading the way.


Editor’s note: Trampled by Turtles is the BGS Artist of the Month for November. Check out our Essential Trampled by Turtles playlist and keep an eye out for more exclusive interviews and content throughout the month.

Photo Credit: Zoe Prinds

Basic Folk – Ondara

When Ondara was a little boy growing up in Nairobi, Kenya, music was both everywhere and just out of reach. He walked around the market listening to vendors playing music from stereos, stopping to listen when he heard something that caught his attention. His family couldn’t afford musical instruments, and the household radio was constantly in demand so he would wait until everyone was asleep so that he could listen to music by himself. He began writing poems, and eventually a cappella songs. He figured that if Bob Dylan could create a legacy setting insightful poems to music, so could he.

 

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In 2013, Ondara won the green card lottery and moved to Minneapolis, because a) he had a family member there, and b) his hero Bob Dylan came from there. Ondara quickly discovered that Minnesota was a little different than he had dreamed. He was working temp jobs to buy his first guitar, writing dozens of songs that would eventually become his debut album, Tales of America, and getting his foot in the door in the Minneapolis open mic scene. But he found that it was difficult to put a band together, that the life of a songwriter was lonely, and that, in America, the color of his skin came with a whole set of expectations about how he should behave (and even about what kind of music he should create).

Ondara has worked to understand these expectations without bowing to them. He shared during our conversation that being Black in America means joining a tradition of art and resistance, and that helping The Cause matters to him. And his ability to contribute to the cause has grown exponentially, since Ondara hit the road in support of his hit debut album, and opening for artists like Neil Young, Lindsey Buckingham, and the Lumineers.

Since then, Ondara has looked outward for subject matter, releasing a pandemic-inspired album in 2020 based on his friends’ stories of quarantine dating and struggling to pay the rent. He has also undertaken a significant spiritual journey as he struggles to reconcile fame and the demands of capitalism with his desire to become a grounded, useful, wise, grown-up adult. His solution, for now, comes in the form of the Spanish Villager, the hyper-performative character at the center of his new album.


Editor’s Note: Basic Folk is currently running their annual fall fundraiser! Visit basicfolk.com/donate for a message from hosts Cindy Howes and Lizzie No, and to support this listener-funded podcast.

Photo Credit: Nate Ryan

Artist of the Month: Trampled by Turtles

At a steady pace, Trampled by Turtles have built an international following for their acoustic music from their home base of Duluth, Minnesota. They have maintained a DIY aesthetic for nearly two decades, yet they opted for a new approach for their latest album, Alpenglow. Using an outside producer for the first time, the band enlisted Jeff Tweedy to helm the project, which was recorded at Wilco’s recording studio in Chicago.

“I came in with songs I thought were finished, and then Jeff was really great about taking them apart, adding something here, taking something away there,” says Trampled by Turtles frontman Dave Simonett. “He gave us fresh ears on songs and new ideas for how to present them. We all just sat in a circle and played. It’s scarier to record that way now, since it’s easy to fix everything or record everything separately so you can hear it all perfectly. But for me, it’s so much fun to just stick a few mics up and play. That’s where we’re at our best.”

Tweedy also brought one of his own songs, “A Lifetime to Find,” to the fold. Although Simonett has written a bulk of the songs recorded by Trampled by Turtles over the years, he welcomed the chance to include the composition. “It’s a really simple song, but also not simple in some ways,” says Simonett. “I love how Jeff uses language so much. It was a real honor for us to record one of Jeff’s songs. I love the story he tells and the way he tells it. A conversation with death — who hasn’t had one of those?”

Of course, Tweedy counts himself as a fan of Trampled by Turtles, too. He observes, “I enjoy TBT’s musicianship and ability to stick hard inside a genre, all the while stretching that same genre. It’s like you need to infiltrate it before you can pull it apart. They have a brotherly thing going on, too, which is always a great feel.”

Alpenglow is named for the effect of the sun setting over mountains, with the light tinting them pink and red. It’s only natural to pause and reflect at the splendor of such magnificent scenery, and the title hints at the introspection that may be found throughout the album, particularly after the pandemic put their touring plans on hold for a year or more.

Simonett says, “In your 40s with kids, not many people get to say, ‘Man, do I have the chance to do something completely different if I want to?’ I ended up finding out that I really enjoyed what I do. It was good for me to think about that and really appreciate it. So once we were back, it felt like a second go — and I think a lot of these songs came from that little feeling of renewal.”

The Bluegrass Situation is proud to reveal Trampled by Turtles as our BGS Artist of the Month for November. Look for an exclusive interview in the weeks ahead, along with some content from our archives (like this Cover Story from 2018). We’re pretty excited to see them on the Cayamo Cruise in 2023 as well. In the meantime, enjoy our BGS Essentials playlist for Trampled by Turtles.


Photo Credit: Zoe Prinds

LISTEN: Luke LeBlanc, “Now”

Artist: Luke LeBlanc
Hometown: Minneapolis, Minnesota
Song: “Now”
Album: Fugue State
Release Date: October 28, 2022

In Their Words: “Lyrically, ‘Now’ revolves around the child-parent relationship, from the kid’s perspective. No matter who you are or how old you get, it’s always one of those complicated, ever-evolving things. Now that I’m in my mid-twenties, while I don’t know everything, I’m beginning to learn that even adults are still children at heart, trying their best to figure things out. Musically, I tuned my guitar to a drop-D tuning, the first time I’ve done so on a recording. In the background, Eric Heywood’s pedal steel oscillates between soothing notes to experimental, almost chaotic, low-end tones that reflect the spectrum of emotions the lyrics try to capture.” — Luke LeBlanc

Luke LeBlanc · Now

Photo Credit: Sarah Bel Kloetzke

On a Dylan Tribute, The Cactus Blossoms Cover a ‘Nashville Skyline’ Classic

Minnesota’s very own The Cactus Blossoms have announced a new EP titled If Not For You (Bob Dylan Vol.1), a collection that can only be described as a sincere love letter to the music of the great folk music forefather.

“When we were finishing up our One Day album we were itching to get back in the studio and keep the creativity flowing,” says Jack Torrey, who formed the duo with his brother Page Burkum. “We had recorded a version of ‘Went to See The Gypsy’ a while back and we were thinking about doing an EP of other people’s songs, but then it just made sense to stick with all Dylan tunes. He’s written a million songs and he’s always been an inspiration for us. So many of Bob Dylan’s songs are filled with wonderful phrasing that doesn’t really lend itself to harmony singing, so we got together and started singing some of his songs to see which ones we could bend into our world.”

The four-song EP includes “Tell Me That It Isn’t True,” which first appeared on Dylan’s landmark 1969 record Nashville Skyline, and the boys from up north deliver an absolute gem. With reverb, pedal steel, and a muted Motown bass sound, the track feels like it was made 60 years ago. It has a similar glow to many of those old records we love best while still being clear and pristine. Set for a September 30 release, this new project serves as a friendly reminder that the classics are the classics for a reason. Enjoy the Cactus Blossoms’ rendition of “Tell Me That It Isn’t True” below.


Photo Credit: Jacob Blickenstaff

WATCH: Mark Joseph & The American Soul, “Early Riser”

Artist: Mark Joseph & The American Soul
Hometown: Minneapolis, Minnesota
Song: “Early Riser”
Album: Vegas Motel
Release Date: November 19, 2021

In Their Words: “‘Early Riser’ is a really special song to me and writing it and recording it was truly a joy. It was a concept I came up with early one morning and developed into a beautiful vehicle for Ryan Young (Trampled by Turtles) to create his amazing melodic and harmonic fiddle soundscapes. In some ways I feel like I wrote this subconsciously for Ryan. When we started tracking it in the studio, (co-producer) JT Bates and I just looked at each other and knew we had something very special. It came together very naturally and showcases the genuine brothership and 20 years of history that Ryan and I share together. Enjoy! Thank you for listening!” — Mark Joseph


Photo Credit: Brent Snyder

LISTEN: Chris Castino & Chicken Wire Empire, “Kangaroo”

Artist: Chris Castino & Chicken Wire Empire
Hometown: St. Paul, Minnesota
Song: “Kangaroo”
Album: Fresh Pickles
Release Date: February 4, 2022

In Their Words: “My love for bluegrass began (in earnest) in 1993. As a guitarist in a jam band then, the mid ’90s were full of wonderful crossovers: Leftover Salmon was emerging, The Pizza Tapes were floating around, my favorite Tony Rice record …Sings Gordon Lightfoot came out, heck, even Phish was playing bluegrass. A lot of that music was lively, fun, and irreverent. And that’s what ‘Kangaroo’ (written in 1995) is as well. The tune is bouncy — fitting, I suppose. And little kids love it, which makes me happy!” — Chris Castino

chris castino · Kangaroo

Photo Credit: David Jackson

LISTEN: The Cactus Blossoms, “Hey Baby”

Artist: The Cactus Blossoms
Hometown: Minneapolis, Minnesota
Song: “Hey Baby”
Album: One Day
Release Date: February 11, 2021
Label: Walkie Talkie Records

In Their Words: “I have been on so many road trips that shouldn’t have worked out, but did. The first big one was driving a 1978 Datsun Chinook camper down to Texas, over to California and up the coast, and back to Minneapolis in my early 20s. Since then, it’s mostly been with a band in a van that most people would be scared to drive across town. Being off the road because of the pandemic got me reminiscing about some of those wild times, so I wrote a little song about it.” — Jack Torrey, The Cactus Blossoms


Photo Credit: Jacob Blickenstaff

WATCH: Charlie Parr, “Last of the Better Days Ahead”

Artist: Charlie Parr
Hometown: Duluth, Minnesota
Song: “Last of the Better Days Ahead”
Album: Last of the Better Days Ahead
Release Date: July 30, 2021
Label: Smithsonian Folkways

In Their Words:Last of the Better Days Ahead is a way for me to refer to the times I’m living in. I’m getting on in years, experiencing a shift in perspective that was once described by my mom as ‘a time when we turn from gazing into the future to gazing back at the past, as if we’re adrift in the current, slowly turning around.’ Some songs came from meditations on the fact that the portion of our brain devoted to memory is also the portion responsible for imagination, and what that entails for the collected experiences that we refer to as our lives. Other songs are cultivated primarily from the imagination, but also contain memories of what may be a real landscape, or at least one inspired by vivid dreaming.” — Charlie Parr


Photo credit: Shelly Mosman