Tag: Old Salt Union
WATCH: Old Salt Union, “Tell Me So” (Feat. Bobby Osborne)
Artist: Old Salt Union
Hometown: St. Louis, Missouri
Song: “Tell Me So” (Featuring Bobby Osborne)
Album: Where the Dogs Don’t Bite
Release Date: August 16, 2019
Label: Compass Records
In Their Words: “‘Tell Me So’ was an old song idea we had that we brought back to life with the help of Bobby Osborne. You know, an honest tune with simple lyrics about daily frustrations and uncertainties. I think really the track pays homage to traditional bluegrass and parlor-style call-and-response.” — Justin Wallace, mandolin
Photo credit: Sekondtry
IBMA Special Awards and Momentum Awards Nominees Announced
The International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA) announced the nominees for this year’s Special Awards and Momentum Awards.
The Special Awards nominees are selected by specially appointed committees made up of bluegrass music professionals who possess significant knowledge of that field. The recipient of each award is decided on by the Panel of Electors, an anonymous group of over 200 veteran bluegrass music professionals selected by the IBMA Board of Directors.
The 2018 Special Awards nominees are:
Graphic Design
Drew Bolen & Whitney Beard: Old Salt Union by Old Salt Union
Lou Everhart: A Heart Never Knows by The Price Sisters
Richard Hakalski: Portraits and Fiddles by Mike Barnett
Corey Johnson: Sounds of Kentucky by Carolina Blue
Karen Key: Big Bend Killing: The Appalachian Ballad Tradition by Various Artists
Liner Notes
Craig Havighurst: The Story We Tell by Joe Mullins & The Radio Ramblers
Steve Martin: The Long Awaited Album by Steve Martin & The Steep Canyon Rangers
Joe Mullins: Sounds of Kentucky Grass by Carolina Blue
Ted Olson: Big Bend Killing: The Appalachian Ballad Tradition by Various Artists
Peter Wernick: Carter Stanley’s Eyes by Peter Rowan
Bluegrass Broadcaster of the Year
Larry Carter
Michelle Lee
Steve Martin
Alan Tompkins
Kris Truelsen
Print Media Person of the Year
Derek Halsey
Chris Jones
Ted Lehmann
David Morris
Neil Rosenberg
Songwriter of the Year
Becky Buller
Thomm Jutz
Jerry Salley
Donna Ulisse
Jon Weisberger
Event of the Year
Bluegrass on the Green – Frankfort, Illinois
County Bluegrass – Fort Fairfield, Maine
Emelin Theatre – Mamaroneck, New York
Flagler Museum’s Bluegrass in the Pavilion – Palm Beach, Florida
FreshGrass Festival – North Adams, Massachusetts
Sound Engineer of the Year
Dave Sinko
Stephen Mougin
Gary Paczosa
Tim Reitnouer
Ben Surratt
The Momentum Awards recognize both musicians and bluegrass industry professionals who, in the early stages of their careers, are making significant contributions to or are having a significant influence upon bluegrass music. These contributions can be to bluegrass music in general, or to a specific sector of the industry. The Mentor Award, in contrast to the other Momentum Awards, recognizes a bluegrass professional who has made a significant impact on the lives and careers of newcomers to the bluegrass industry.
Starting with recommendations from the IBMA membership, nominees are chosen through a multi-stage process by committees made up of respected musicians and industry leaders in the bluegrass world.
The 2018 Momentum Award nominees are:
Festival/Event/Venue
Anderson Bluegrass Festival – South Carolina
Farm & Fun Time – Virginia
Hovander Homestead Bluegrass Festival – Washington
Red Wing Roots Music Festival – Virginia
SamJam Bluegrass Festival – Ohio
Industry Involvement
Megan Lynch Chowning and Adam Chowning
Justin Hiltner
Kris Truelsen
Mentor
Daniel Boner
Cathy Fink
Scott Napier
Jon Weisberger
Pete Wernick
Band
Cane Mill Road – Nort Carolina
Man About a Horse – Pennsylvania
Midnight Skyracer – United Kingdom
The Trailblazers – North Carolina
Wood Belly – Colorado
Vocalist
Ellie Hakanson (Jeff Scroggins & Colorado, Greg Blake Band)
Will Jones (Terry Baucom & the Dukes of Drive)
AJ Lee (AJ Lee & Blue Summit)
Evan Murphy (Mile Twelve)
Daniel Thrailkill (The Trailblazers)
Instrumentalist [three are chosen in this category]
Tabitha Agnew (Midnight Skyracer)
David Benedict (Mile Twelve)
Catherine (“BB”) Bowness (Mile Twelve)
Thomas Cassell (Circus No. 9)
Hasee Ciaccio (Molly Tuttle Band)
Matthew Davis (Circus No. 9)
Bronwyn Keith-Hynes (Mile Twelve)
Aynsley Porchak (Carolina Blue)
Trajan Wellington (Cane Mill Road)
The 2018 Special Awards are sponsored by the California Bluegrass Association and Homespun Music Instruction, while the 2018 Momentum Awards are sponsored by the Bluegrass Situation.
The recipients of the 2018 Momentum Awards will be presented with their awards at a luncheon on Wednesday, September 26, and the recipients of the 2018 Special Awards will be presented with their awards at a luncheon on Thursday, September 27 in Raleigh, North Carolina, as part of IBMA’s World of Bluegrass event.
Hangin’ & Sangin’: Old Salt Union
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.
With me today at Hillbilly Central, Old Salt Union!
All: Hey!
John, Justin, Jesse, Rob, and Ryan.
Jesse Farrar: That’s right. That’s right.
Ryan Murphey: That’s a first!
Is it?
RM: People usually mix it around a little bit.
Heck no, I’m a professional here, guys. I do appreciate the alliteration of it all, so that is helpful.
JF: It’s like a sonnet!
…
So you guys have your latest record, it’s a self-titled release. Fourth release? Not fourth album, necessarily, but fourth release.
JF: Yeah it’s the fourth release, ‘cause we did a vinyl as well, a four-track vinyl. So, yeah, it’s our fourth release.
First on Compass Records.
JF: First on Compass Records, that’s right. And it’s self-titled as it’s kind of a culmination of all the stuff we’ve done prior. We reimagined it here in Hillbilly Central, and we rearranged it and re-recorded a lot of it, so it was kind of a “Best Of” if there ever was one.
Yeah, I was wondering about that, in terms of whether you felt like those older songs didn’t get a fair shake the first time around, or they had evolved some as you’ve played them over the years?
JF: Both really, yeah, I think we play 250 shows a year, so every night you’re trying to spice it up. Some things stick, some things don’t.
…
Alison Brown produced this one. You guys met her a few years back. So what is it about how she gets what you guys are doing? Is there something special about that?
JF: I just know from personal experience, she has such an open, creative mind and so, when you sit down with her at a table like we did, it’s really, really inspiring because you just bounce new ideas off of her and she doesn’t turn any ideas down. She’s open to explore. And I think artists, in general, sometimes don’t necessarily explore. Even if they don’t like an option or even if it’s not maybe their first option, they’ll kind of shut it down. But Alison’s very good at exploring these options, and not only that, but she has such a great ear and she’s such an amazing musician. So not only will she explore this idea, but she’ll find a way to make it really work.
Yeah, I was gonna say that, to me, the producers who are artists as well, because, this is actually quoting her, they’ve been on both sides of the glass, so they know how to extract a performance, they know how to take a song in a different direction instead of what’s brought.
…
Now you said you guys do 250 dates a year. … I think being road dogs is what develops a band and a fan base. Tell me where you started and the process and what that’s done both for the chemistry and the whole thing?
JF: Not to berate or bash anyone, necessarily, but we hit the ground running and we never really looked back. And I do agree. I come from kind of a musical family, so I saw these other guys in my family do that, which is, you just put your pedal to the floor and you just go. And that’s how you develop a sound, that’s how you develop a fanbase, that’s how you develop everything. And you see some bands skip that step. Whether they have financial backing or whatever, they kind of skip those hard times. I think those are vital to really find out who you are as individuals and as artists as a whole.
…
Other than pure sweat, what do you think it takes to rise above the fray in the world of string bands? Because there are a lot of dadgum string bands.
RM: There definitely are. I mean there’s the obvious that everybody tells you — persistence. I mean expecting to get knocked back, and you just have to keep pushing, keep chomping at the bit, keep continuing, progressing, and growing, and it’ll come.
JF: I think, musically speaking, there’s some people that kind of close off walls. They say, “Well, we’re a string band. We can’t go this direction. We can’t explore these ideas.” And that’s never been the case for us. I think the thing that maybe separates us is that we’re really open to anything. If John writes a song or Justin writes a song and it’s this crazy polka, we’re gonna explore it. I think that’s why working with Alison worked so good, as well, because we kind of had that same mindset. But, yeah, you’re right, there’s all sorts of string bands we run across every single night, a different breed, a different flavor. Yeah, persistence, and I think having fun and enjoying the music that you’re playing plays a big part. I think that translates to the audience members, sitting at home on a computer or at the venue.
…
There are a lot of different influences that you’re folding in here. But you had to start with a foundation of bluegrass, right? Or no?
RM: Kind of the opposite, almost. At the time we started, Justin had been playing mandolin for a few months, I had just bought a banjo, John was playing classical music, and Jess was pursuing his hip-hop career. [Laughs]
…
JF: Rob’s been in the band for over a year now. He’s the most recent member, but he probably came into it with the most bluegrass mindset, as far as pieces of the puzzle connecting. He kind of had a bluegrass mindset whereas I was doing hip-hop, alternative, classical, and I was a jazz major, and Rob was also a jazz major. So we had all these different things and we thought, “How can we take these instruments and let all of those genres kind of bleed into it?”
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STREAM: Old Salt Union, ‘Old Salt Union’
Artist: Old Salt Union
Hometown: Belleville, IL
Album: Old Salt Union
Release Date: August 4, 2017
Label: Compass Records
In Their Words: “Old Salt Union is the most honest representation of our band to date. With the help of the amazing Alison Brown, we were finally able to capture the energy of our live shows, dig deeper into our musical arrangements, and showcase our pop sensibility. This project has been a long time coming and we are proud of it. This is Old Salt Union.” — Jesse Farrar
3×3: Old Salt Union on Pork Rinds, Big Time, and Rain or Shine
Artist: Old Salt Union
Hometown: Belleville, Il
Latest Album: Cut & Run
Rejected Band Names: Schmubbs, Big Time, DSM, Jeffe Fartat, Dethrustin'
If Jesus, Buddha, Krishna, and Mohammed were in a band together, who would play what?
Pretty sure they would be that one band that all six members play one acoustic guitar and cover Gotye songs.
If you were a candle, what scent would you be?
Any scent that smells the opposite of our bus. Pork rinds, though, if we had to choose.
What literary character or story do you most relate to?
Jack Kerouac in On the Road.
What's your favorite planet — and why?
Uranus, for obvious reasons. But Jupiter and its countless potentially habitable moons.
What's your best physical attribute?
One of us has two belly buttons. I think that physical attribute is certainly the best for all of us.
Who is your favorite Jennifer: Lawrence, Lopez, or Love-Hewitt?
Lawrence. Hands down.
Cat or dog?
Cats. Particularly the ones that don't run in front of our bus.
Rain or shine?
Shine makes for positivity. Rain makes for good writing.
Mild, medium, or spicy?
As spicy as it can get, and one of us will drink it through a straw.