WATCH: Daniel Sherrill, “Frosty Morning”

Artist: Daniel Sherrill
Hometown: Ashland, Oregon
Song: “Frosty Morning”
Album: from a heritage tree
Release Date: June 17, 2022
Label: American Standard Time Records

In Their Words: “I love the minor mystical-ness to this version of ‘Frosty Morning.’ I originally learned it from a library book, and it seems to me that this version lives more in the traditional old-timey repertoire, versus some of the newer versions that I’ve heard that flip the A and B parts. The decision to add a harmony started just as a fun way to improvise in a jam, but I liked it so much I wanted to add it to the final version. On the full album each tune has its standard melody paired with a harmony part, which makes each one almost two songs. Near our airport there’s this stack of vehicles, a mountain of color, distorted metal, and a monument to broken down cars. It’s beautiful. I called the auto-wrecking yard; they were so kind and agreed to let us shoot a video in their crush pile.” — Daniel Sherrill


Photo Credit: Gaur Groover

WATCH: Anna Tivel, “Outsiders”

Artist: Anna Tivel
Hometown: Portland, Oregon
Song: “Outsiders”
Album: Outsiders
Release Date: August 19, 2022
Label: Mama Bird Recording Co.

In Their Words: “I wrote ‘Outsiders’ sitting on the floor in front of the TV between fragments of the Apollo 11 documentary. The news was feeling especially dark, full of pain and distorted truths, and watching all that beautiful footage from the ‘69 moon landing hit me right in the gut. For just that one moment in a time of great upheaval, it seemed like everyone paused to look up in wonder at something incredible that humankind was able to achieve for the very first time. When I listened back to the way the song was recorded, all raw and live-to-tape in a circle of good friends, it made me feel weightless and free and I wanted to capture that emotion in video form. I found a cheap old trampoline on craigslist and sewed these ridiculous fluttery red pants with visions of slow-motion flying up high enough to look back from a great distance at the whole strugglesome and stunning thing. Music is so visceral and sensory to me, tastes and images and movement, but I’ve never had the camera know-how or means to bring that dreamworld into being.” — Anna Tivel


Photo Credit: Vincent Bancheri

WATCH: The Delines, “Surfers in Twilight”

Artist: The Delines (Willy Vlautin and Amy Boone)
Hometown: Portland, Oregon
Song: “Surfers in Twilight”
Album: The Sea Drift
Release Date: June 24, 2022 (vinyl)
Label: Jealous Butcher Records

In Their Words: “Amy and I cut this live in the studio. At that time we had been listening to a lot of spaghetti western records, and this is what came of it. Her vocals on this one just kill me. It’s the story of a woman in a coastal town getting off work and walking down the street to see her husband thrown against a wall and handcuffed by the police. She doesn’t know what he’s done, but in her heart she knows he’s done something.” — Willy Vlautin, The Delines

BGS 5+5: Erisy Watt

Artist: Erisy Watt
Hometown: Portland, Oregon
Album: Eyes Like the Ocean

What’s your favorite memory from being on stage?

Ok, there is this one time that stands out, back in 2013, to make a long story short, I wound up on stage with two of my best friends, two members of Blues Traveler, belly equal parts full of butterflies and burritos, at BottleRock Music Festival where we were meant to be volunteering, but things panned out differently.

It was my sophomore year in college. I had just formed my first band, and we had just played our first show ever “headlining” the open mic (can you headline an open mic?) at this nightclub in Santa Barbara. A couple of weeks later we’re at BottleRock volunteering at an artist afterparty at this fancy theatre downtown. Several wine tastings and trips to the burrito bar later, and pretty soon my friend Scott is telling us that we’re going to go on stage in a few minutes and play a couple of songs with some friends he’s just made. It comes to light soon that they’re members of Blues Traveler. If you know my friend Scott, then this is perfectly in character for him. He once was hitchhiking with his guitar in Australia and was picked up by Christopher Hemsworth in a helicopter.

So sure enough, we end up on stage, still in our volunteer shirts. The bright lights, the monitors, the sound guy, the band – it was a Cinderella moment for sure, and enough to solidify the already planted seed that doing the music thing would be like the best job ever. Yes, there are other more serious moments on stage that are meaningful to me, but this one always upwells. It perfectly exemplifies the wacky shit the universe throws at you when you sign up to be a traveling musician. This was one of my first tastes of that, and it definitely lit a fire.

What other art forms — literature, film, dance, painting, etc. — inform your music?

Creativity, for me, does not exist in a vacuum. I 100% rely on the absorption of and engagement in other art forms to inform my music. Reading is a huge part of my songwriting process. It’s one of my antidotes to narrow-mindedness, a way to break any tendencies towards cyclical thinking. Reading replenishes the word box, among other things. Everything from poetry to scientific papers, in some way or another, sparks little ideas here and there. Typically, if I’m not writing enough, it’s because I’m not reading enough. As for other art forms I engage in, I grew up dancing and drawing and toggled between those two worlds for many years. My closet was cluttered with colored pencil shavings and dance costumes, and it wasn’t until a series of injuries and desire to explore something new, along with some teenage trauma, that I found the guitar and a journal.

Which elements of nature do you spend the most time with and how do those impact your work?

I make a real effort to divide my time between the elements, and it’s that combination of mountain, forest, river, coast, and ocean that informs my songwriting and my sound. The interplay between it all, that’s the source. I am lucky (and sometimes unlucky) that my other job besides music has me interacting with the elements in an intimate way. For part of my year, my job is to help lead ecological field courses for university students in the various wilder places of the planet. I have pitched my tent in the swamps of Florida on the heels of a hurricane and rice paddy terraces in the Himalayas. It’s in these moments, in this more stripped-down context away from the grind of home life, that many of my songs first introduce themselves.

What’s the toughest time you ever had writing a song?

One of the songs on my new album titled “Nowhere Fast” gave me a particularly hard time. It began on a napkin at a trailhead in the foothills of the Santa Ynez Mountains in 2017, but when I tried to pick it back up when I got home, it just didn’t go anywhere. It went through many phases — different chords, new melodies, choruses became verses, bridges became choruses. It was a puzzle of a song I kept trying to piece together until I decided to set it down for a few years. Then two things happened — open D tuning and vocal surgery. Both introduced me to new colors and breathed life into my songwriting. Come to think of it, so many of the songs on the record were born from the discovery of new sounds after my surgery and new tunings on the guitar.

Since food and music go so well together, what is your dream pairing of a meal and a musician?

Love this question. It reminds me of, this is kind of off-topic, but that short series Pretend It’s a City on Netflix with Fran
Lebowitz. I was folding laundry watching it not too long ago when something she said stuck with me. She says, “I really think that musicians, probably musicians and cooks, are responsible for the most pleasure in human life.” I heard that, looked up from my pile of socks, and thought, hell yes, that is very on point. When I think back on some of my fondest experiences, so many have involved one or the other, and often, both.

Anyhow, there was this one time in Nepal where I met this teenage Tibetan Buddhist monk that had dreams of becoming a rapper. It was a really cold day and I wound up with an invite inside his house and he and his friends made us boiled potatoes with the best spicy dipping sauce I’ve ever had in my life and then he rapped for us. I don’t know if it was the altitude or what, but that’s one of the more memorable music and meal pairings I can recall. So, if I were to have to dream up something, I would like it to be something very unexpected, because a lot of times the cards fall in a way more interesting form than you may have thought to deal them in the first place.


Photo Credit: Hannah Garrett

LISTEN: Eddie Berman, “The Wheel”

Artist: Eddie Berman
Hometown: Portland, Oregon
Song: “The Wheel”
Album: Broken English
Release Date: January 21, 2022
Label: Nettwerk Records

In Their Words: “Even though this album Broken English was written at the end of 2019, before rumblings of Covid hit any headlines, it’s mainly about isolation and disconnection in an increasingly atomized world. But this song, ‘The Wheel,’ explores a different kind of separation — a separateness from feeling like a real human being in the real, natural world. The digital hallucinatory experience of everyday life is so filled with distractions that make you anxious, and anxieties that push you to distraction. It’s hard to remember that I’m an actual living person sometimes.

“But there are also so many fleeting moments of real presence which I feel, too — the damp smell of the Pacific Northwest woods, the eternal sound of waves breaking on the shore, looking in the eyes of my wife, laughing with my kids. … And so this song is about recognizing that elusive aliveness in yourself and others, and knowing that even though it can become buried underneath miles of algorithmic dread and nightmares of oceans filled with garbage, that aliveness, presence and belonging is always there, and always will be.” — Eddie Berman


Photo credit: Joanna Berman

LISTEN: Jake Soffer, “From Sea to Sky”

Artist: Jake Soffer
Hometown: Portland, Oregon
Song: “From Sea to Sky”
Album: The Tree That Remained Standing EP
Release Date: Spring 2022

In Their Words: “A few months ago I started experimenting with a short-cut partial capo on my guitar, which gives you this cool open tuning that a normal capo wouldn’t. I saw it as a creative challenge to write a song in a tuning or configuration that was new to me, and I started making up some simple chord patterns to help get my footing. Those patterns ended up being the foundation for ‘From Sea to Sky.’ I actually thought this song would end up being played as a solo guitar piece at a much slower tempo, but it sounded too melancholy and somehow a bit contrived that way.

“I thought to myself, ‘You’ve already written plenty of sad boy music during this pandemic, why not make this song a happy one? What could you do to make it sound more optimistic?’ So I recorded mandolin, bass, and drums. The final ingredient to the recording was courtesy of my friend Grace Honeywell, violin player of the Eugene-based bluegrass quintet The Muddy Souls. Recording her violin parts in my home studio was a fun and organic process, and I’m proud to have a song that has the blessings of a real bluegrass fiddle player.

“Like the other songs on this record, ‘From Sea to Sky’ involves the theme of nature. The past few years have been full of big personal changes for me — the pandemic, a breakup, some growing pains as an artist — and spending time alone in the woods tends to help me process them. Musically, I felt that drawing a connection between certain specific feelings in my little life and larger themes of my surroundings had a humbling effect. To me, ‘From Sea to Sky’ represents the beauty of possibility. When I wrote this song, I tried to capture the feeling of self-doubt and anxiety you get when having to confront personal challenges, but also the pleasure and freedom you feel in finding an escape from things, be it temporary or permanent. ‘From Sea to Sky’ is an homage to those escapes.” — Jake Soffer


Photo Credit: Zach Finch

LISTEN: Mike Coykendall, “Winds On the Ocean”

Artist: Mike Coykendall
Hometown: Portland, Oregon
Song: “Winds On the Ocean”
Album: The Dirt and the Dust
Release Date: November 11, 2021
Label: Banpa Records

In Their Words: “This song goes back to the mid-2000s. Though I didn’t finish it until a couple years ago. Originally I played it in a lower key, but with the vocal pitched up an octave. Kind of like a Skip James country blues, or that guy from Canned Heat with the freaky cool voice. Anyway, singing in that falsetto became too hard as the years passed and the song sat half-finished. So, now I sing it in a lower register, which comes off more like late ’90s Dylan. The lyrics stem from frequenting neighborhood places where I’m one of, if not the, oldest person there. It just kind of eventually worked out that way. Snuck up on me. Being there was like looking across a smoky sea into yesteryear. I was welcome and more or less invisible.” — Mike Coykendall

https://soundcloud.com/user-57543927/03-winds-on-the-ocean/s-swj8t5gv8Rh?si=084ab6c37eb04fdb82685740ccd57ba8


Photo Credit: Joshua James Huff

WATCH: TK & The Holy Know-Nothings, “Serenity Prayer”

Artist: TK & The Holy Know-Nothings
Hometown: Portland, Oregon
Song: “Serenity Prayer”
Album: The Incredible Heat Machine
Release Date: October 15, 2021
Label: Mama Bird Recording Co.

In Their Words: “It’s a woozy, merry-go-round day-in-the-life of a local musician making good for about two hours every evening. It’s also somewhat of an ode to the dubious magic of Northwestern Freak Country and the bars that shelter it. The suits requested we put the song to moving picture, so we drove out to a little bar at Our Lady Of Perpetual Heat Recording Studio & Spa to hole up for the night. Having no money, no planning, and one day, it seemed fitting. We would have been there anyway.” — Taylor Kingman


Photo credit: Matthew Kennelly

BGS 5+5: Anna Tivel

Artist: Anna Tivel
Hometown: Portland, Oregon
Latest Album: Blue World

What other art forms — literature, film, dance, painting, etc. — inform your music?

Literature and poetry really get in my bloodstream and make me want to write, all those vivid words and ways of telling a thing. I get the itch to write the most from reading things that unravel like a song but are in much longer form. Right now I’m digging deep through the novels and short stories of Annie Proulx and finding so much inspiration. The way she spins a story, unadorned and brutally human, feels honest in this way I’m forever working toward with songs. Andre Dubus sparks a similar feeling, this gut-punch of everyday struggle told in a way that feels just like reality, but more stunningly laid out in bite-sized, brilliantly observed and relatable moments. I dream of writing songs that make people feel that way.

What was the first moment that you knew you wanted to be a musician?

Music has always been the place I felt most at home in my mind, where I could just be, work things out and communicate in a slower, more intentional way. I first found that freedom playing violin as a kid, backing people up later, learning that kind of conversation without speaking that feels so powerful. I started writing songs when I was about 23 and it was a completely magnetic force of expression that I must have been really hurting for because it took hold of me immediately and forcefully. I don’t remember consciously thinking, “This is what I want to do with my life,” just couldn’t seem to think about anything else. I’m forever grateful to be able to move through the world this way. It constantly pushes me out of my box, allows me to bump up against the world, try to see it more clearly and with more curiosity all the time, try to reflect something true.

Which elements of nature do you spend the most time with and how do those impact your work?

Seems like touring is always shaping the way nature plays out in my writing. You’re on these long expansive drives through empty country, red canyon cliffs, vultures, sun bleached sagebrush, and heat waves on the blacktop that stretch out farther than you can see. And then two days later you’re in a dense forest, lush and wet and forty shades of green darkness. And then you’re suddenly in a giant metropolis. Watching it all change for hours and hours out the window feels like a recipe of sorts, like gathering all the images that hold an emotion to draw on later when a song is forming. I love to set a scene for the emotion of a story to play out in, and this constant observing of the natural (and man-made) world through car and plane windows seems to help tie human struggle and beauty to place and landscape in a way that feels necessary.

What rituals do you have, either in the studio or before a show?

I want so badly to have pre-show and studio rituals, like vocal warmups or a three-piece show suit or something, anything. Mostly I let shows eat me alive in good and bad ways and I’m trying to work on being more intentional about that stuff. When I have time and space, I like to read something beautiful or listen to something that moves me before a show, sit somewhere all alone and take in some words and music that make me feel free and vast and inspired. It feels really good to get up on stage and get the chance to play my heart out after that. I’m going to do it more, just decided. OK I have a ritual starting now.

If you had to write a mission statement for your career, what would it be?

Write and write. And play songs for people. And try to be 90 years old someday and still loving these two things with wild abandon.


Photo credit: Matt Kennelly

LISTEN: Margo Cilker, “Tehachapi”

Artist: Margo Cilker
Hometown: Enterprise, Oregon
Song: “Tehachapi”
Album: Pohorylle (produced by Sera Cahoone)
Release Date: November 5, 2021
Label: Fluff and Gravy Records / Loose Music

In Their Words: “‘Tehachapi’ wasn’t born an exuberant song, but it certainly became one. In my live shows it’s the ace up my sleeve — the song I’m careful not to play too early in the set, lest the audience wait all night expecting another like it. At some point during recording Sera called me, laughing into her phone, saying she put a wild sound on ‘Tehachapi’ and that I was gonna love it. She was right on both counts. Tracking accordion as the foundation of the song just made it too easy to go full Crescent City. One of the most vivid memories I have of making Pohorylle is the memory of watching Sera overdub floor toms to make that instrumental of ‘Tehachapi’ really pop. I can genuinely say it seemed like she was having fun, and as a singer-songwriter, that’s all you can ask for. When I cover a song it’s because for a moment in time, that song is the most sacred thing in my life. ‘Willin” was that to me, so I guess it lives in my soul and came out to play on this number.” — Margo Cilker


Photo credit: Matthew W. Kennelly