WATCH: Hannah Miller, ‘Falling Star’

Artist: Hannah Miller
Hometown: Nashville, TN
Song: “Falling Star”
Album: Midnight Morning
Release Date: March 6, 2018
Label: Sorted Noise Records

In Their Words: “I think this is a song about wanting something you can’t have — and wishing you didn’t want it. It’s a special song to me because it just landed in my lap one night almost fully formed, like, ‘Hey, sing me.’ Those kinds of songs always make me wonder … where do they come from and who are they for? It’s a mystery, but a really fun thing to be a part of.” — Hannah Miller

WATCH: Tim Easton, ‘Old New Straitsville Blues’

Artist: Tim Easton
Hometown: Nashville, TN
Song: “Old New Straitsville Blues” (alternate take)
Album: Paco & the Melodic Polaroids
Release Date: April 13, 2018

In Their Words: “New Straitsville is a small town in Southeast Ohio where they have a Moonshine Festival. Also, an infamous coal mining strike occurred there in 1884, when the miners gathered in a nearby cave to unionize … and probably drink a lot of moonshine. They ended up setting the mine on fire.

I went into that cave with Paco, my Black Gibson J45 acoustic guitar, and set out to write a historic coal mining tune, but then realized I knew nothing about coal mining, and just wrote verses that were truer to my own life.” — Tim Easton


Photo credit: Michael Weintrob

LISTEN: Robby Hecht & Caroline Spence, ‘Over You’

Artist: Robby Hecht & Caroline Spence
Hometown: Nashville, TN
Song: “Over You”
Album: Two People
Release Date: June 8, 2018

In Their Words: “‘Over You’ is the last song Caroline and I wrote before going in to record the album, and I think the comfort level we’ve reached writing together shows in the honesty of the lyrics.” — Robby Hecht

“We talk about blind curves in this song, and I remember chasing the melody of this one blindly, as we wrote it. That can be the gift of co-writing: chasing down an unfamiliar idea and, when you find it, it’s yours. Robby and I write well together because we are both open to that chase.” — Caroline Spence


Photo credit: Ryan Newman

WATCH: Rod Picott, ‘On the Way Down’

Artist: Rod Picott
Hometown: Nashville, TN
Song: “On the Way Down”
Album: Out Past the Wires
Release Date: March 30, 2018
Label: Welding Rod Records

In Their Words: “’On the Way Down’ is song about taking account of what is important to you. It’s a song born out of watching people cling, white-knuckled, to the very things that are pulling them down. Some people grab onto the anchor to keep themselves from drowning. Watching that sort of slow motion suicide is incredibly painful, when it is someone you care about. You just want to shake them. That’s what this song is — an attempt to grab someone by the collar and pry their fingers from the anchor.” — Rod Picott


Photo credit: Neilson Hubbard

LISTEN: Ned Hill, ‘Where Ya Gone, Virginia?’

Artist: Ned Hill
Hometown: Nashville TN
Song: “Where Ya Gone, Virginia?”
Album: Six Feet Above Ground
Release Date: March 9, 2018

In Their Words: “This one is fairly autobiographical and deals with the unexpected end of a long relationship and hopes to get across the immediate feeling of loss, confusion, and anger associated with it. This song is actually a second recording of the song; the original being a rocked-up version on Ned Van Go’s 2013 release, Lost in the Trouble. This version is closer to the way it was originally written and hopes to get closer to a Steve Earle/Richard Bennett feel.” — Ned Hill


Photo credit: Alex Arakelian

LISTEN: Lynn Taylor, ‘If You’re Gone’

Artist: Lynn Taylor
Hometown: Nashville TN
Song: “If You’re Gone”
Album: Staggered
Release Date: February 9, 2018

In Their Words: “Three years ago, I got together with my friend Will Logsdon to write a song. I had a riff, and he had a beautiful melody line for a chorus. We tinkered with some lyrics — ‘I see your smile skipping across the water. I feel like a man with a bridge on fire’ — and a few throw away lines, but the song didn’t seem to have much direction. We filed it.

After Kim passed away, I revisited what Will and I had started. The lyrics pretty much wrote themselves, at that point … It’s a difficult song for me to listen to, but I’m very pleased with how it turned out.” — Lynn Taylor


Photo credit: Stacie Huckeba

WATCH: Caroline Spence, ‘I Can’t Complain’

Artist: Caroline Spence
Hometown: Nashville, TN / Charlottesville, VA
Song: “I Can’t Complain”
Album: Spades & Roses

In Their Words: “I was a fan of the artwork of Jane Beaird — aka Quiet Creature — on social media and loved the videos she would post of her painting. I found it fascinating and satisfying to see the process of how she makes her art. I wanted that for this video because that simple act of painting — the concept of building something beautiful out of nothing, of going from black and white to color — fit perfectly with the sense of grounded wonder in the song.

Writing this song made me late to a party on New Year’s Eve, 2015. It was the year that my first record came out and the first year I got to spend most of my time making and playing music rather than working other jobs. I was feeling reflective and thankful, and this is what came out. I knew I wasn’t exactly where I wanted to be, but I was close to the road I wanted to be on, and that realization filled me with overwhelming gratitude. I play this song most nights at the end of my set as a way to settle back into myself and realize what a gift it is to be on a stage singing any song for anybody.” — Caroline Spence


Photo credit: Kate McGaffin

STREAM: Matt Hectorne, ‘Work’

Artist: Matt Hectorne
Hometown: Nashville, TN
Album: Work
Release Date: January 19, 2018

In Their Words: “I feel it’s my most realized work, as far as my work as a writer, singer, arranger, producer, and frontman. I think it sounds more like me than most things I’ve done. I hope that my family and friends (and fans) can see the growth, thematically and musically. Music is how I process and express, so it’s so good to finally be able to share what I’ve been thinking, working through, and working on for the past year-and-a-half.” — Matt Hectorne

Hangin’ & Sangin’: Peter Bradley Adams

From the Bluegrass Situation and WMOT Roots Radio, it’s Hangin’ & Sangin’ with your host, BGS editor Kelly McCartney. Every week Hangin’ & Sangin’ offers up casual conversation and acoustic performances by some of your favorite roots artists. From bluegrass to folk, country, blues, and Americana, we stand at the intersection of modern roots music and old time traditions bringing you roots culture — redefined.

Hey everybody! Welcome to Hangin’ & Sangin! I’m Kelly McCartney from the Bluegrass Situation. With me today at Hillbilly Central, Peter Bradley Adams over there in the middle, flanked by Caitlin Canty and Evan Galante as support folks and court jesters, in the case of one Caitlin Canty!

Caitlin Canty: [Laughs]

We were dishin’ a little bit before we went live. We’ll get to that later.

Peter Bradley Adams: Heckler.

Yeah, heckler. So Peter, latest record, A Face Like Mine, came out April?

PBA: April

I got that right. Didn’t even write it down!

PBA: It seems so old!

Well, it took us like six months to get you pinned to come on here. We’ve been trying!

PBA: I’m sorry, its all my fault.

Okay, as long as the people know.

PBA: But I’m glad to be here, and I’m glad these people came with me.

I said this to Andrew Combs, when I had him on, but it fits you. As a singer, to me, and this is, again, part of why I feel drawn to your stuff in certain moods. But you’re like a drummer who just sort of hangs back in the pocket a little — like you’re not pushing the beat, you’re just right on the back end. And what you’ve done by creating the soundscape that you have, it’s like you’ve created this musical world that supports that so well.

PBA: Thank you.

That’s an observation more than a question.

PBA: I mean, for me, it feels like I’m just kind of hiding and trying not to mess anything up. [Laughs] It’s all fear! But I understand what you’re saying. It does kind of sit in there, but I’m growing weary of just sitting in there so nicely.

Interesting.

PBA: So I’m trying. I’m not there yet, but eventually, I’ve gotta get out of that little soft pocket.

Well, you’ve been stepping forward a little.

PBA: Yeah, I’ve been leaning in a little bit.

How do you feel like you’re gonna [push for it]? What’s next? You have the physical voice — what you’re born with — so how do you take that further? You’re not a crooner.

PBA: Yeah, I don’t know. For me, it’s just about … to sort of find the sound which is [natural]. I mean, I can’t have a different voice, so just trying to find that sound. And also don’t spend so much time styling it, trying to make it sound nice. Which then you immediately lose the way you sound. I mean, it still can be effective for some people and the intention can be there, but I guess that’s kind of what I’ve been thinking about a lot — just how to strip off all the affectation, and I definitely haven’t figured it out yet.

At this point, what’s your process for figuring out your phrasing? Because I know that was something that, particularly on this latest record, you were very intentional about your phrasing and things like that. So what’s your process for polishing that up without falling into the pretense?

PBA: Well, I don’t know. I think you’ve just gotta …

You’re a mystic, Peter Bradley Adams!

PBA: [Laughs]

CC: You do know! I’ve written a lot of songs with Peter, and he’s like our construction man! Like, you’ve said this term, “the way the words feel in your mouth,” the way they come with the vowel sounds. You’re really good at the bricks of building a song, the foundation is really strong.

PBA: Thank you.

CC: I’m like a mosaic maker, like “Ooh, that’s pretty!” And I try to cobble all the other stuff together and figure out how it fits. But you always have the good, solid [foundation] of everything.

PBA: It could be that I’m just being overly controlling, like “Oh, no, you need to hold that out just a little longer then do that little turn at the end there.” Because, to me, that’s important …

CC: It is!

PBA: But then I’m like possibly squeezing the life out of it, you know? By telling you, I mean, she’s had a lot of experience with me asking her to phrase stuff differently. [Laughs]

CC: Well, that’s when I’m singing to your stuff, but when we’re writing, it’s like figuring out the words. And I think you sing based on what word sounds best in the rhythm. So it’s like you’re just reacting naturally to it, sort of. That’s how you’ve talked about it before. Just inserting myself!

PBA: Then, what she said! That’s how I do it! [Laughs]

Because your songs are sort of ridiculously rich with that sort of, to me at least, what I hear in them, is that sort of spiritual seeking and self-examination and that stuff. And I know not all of it is based in your day-to-day reality. I mean, it’s storytelling, but you’re still in them, you’re still putting yourself out into the world to be under a microscope.

PBA: Yeah.

How does that feel? Do you have any qualms about that, or is there just no choice — you kind of have to?

PBA: Yeah, I kind of have to. I mean, I have some regrets about some stuff I’ve put out, you know, a little “ugh,” a little cringey. [Laughs] Not much, I mean everyone does.

Because of the writing or because of what you revealed?

PBA: I think, maybe both. [Laughs] How it was performed or sung, but I’ve let that stuff go. Yeah, I don’t [have a choice] and I don’t set out to write a song about something — ever. It just kind of happens. You sort of start and these words start coming kind of unconsciously, and then, when you figure out where it’s going, then for me, it’s this very conscious, tedious effort to really hone it in. And that’s the harder work part, the less kind of flowy part. But yeah, then there is some sort of running theme, I think, onto a lot of the stuff.

Do you feel like you can express your fill-in-the-blank emotion better through music or through words?

PBA: Well, that’s a good question. I mean, since I’ve just gotten back into writing some instrumental music, it’s been really liberating in a way.

Yeah, because melodies can express things that words never can touch.

PBA: Yeah, absolutely. And I think that a lot of my lyrics work well and they resonate really well with the melody, but you wouldn’t want to sit there and read them as a poem. [Laughs] It’s not something that I would ask anyone to do … I don’t think songs have to achieve that. I think that they’re sung for a reason.

Watch all the episodes on YouTube, or download and subscribe to the Hangin’ & Sangin’ podcast and other BGS programs every week via iTunes, Podbean, or your favorite podcast platform.