LISTEN: The Get Ahead, “Faint Outline”

Artist: The Get Ahead
Hometown: Portland, Oregon
Song: “Faint Outline”
Album: Deepest Light
Release Date: April 26, 2019
Label: Jullian Records

In Their Words: “‘Faint Outline’ is straight from what I think of as some of my most vivid sensory childhood memories. Approaching the Rocky Mountains across Western Kansas in an old panel van, alley light coming through the bedroom window playing shadows on the ceiling above the top bunk. We think we have our memories, distinct and concrete, but how malleable and practiced do they become? The Echoplex guitar was inspired by the Hannah Montana Karaoke machine I was playing my Tele through while writing the song.” — Nathan Earle, The Get Ahead


Photo Credit: Courtesy of Hearth PR

LISTEN: Ky Burt, “Small Town Dream”

Artist: Ky Burt
Hometown: Portland, Oregon
Song: “Small Town Dream”
Album: The Sky in Between
Release Date: April 5, 2019
Label: Woodstove Records

In Their Words: “I wrote ‘Small Town Dream’ in honor of the small towns I’ve lived in and traveled through across America. This song is my observation of the oldest towns that are still barely hanging on, where the roots run deep but the pockets lay thin. It is a testament of the enduring spirit and struggles of a country that is modernizing quicker than its antiquated towns can keep up with. And for myself and others, the enduring small town represents a slower way of life, a struggle to preserve community, and a place where old stories still live on the front porch steps.” — Ky Burt


Photo credit: Chelsea Donoho

Shook Twins Pay Tribute to Honorable Men on ‘Some Good Lives’

Shook Twins — the duo composed of sisters Laurie and Katelyn Shook — have abided by the label “quirky” ever since they released their first album, You Can Have the Rest, in 2008. Their process of integrating unexpected sounds, looping, and multiple instruments (including a golden egg typically used for percussive flares) may seem unconventional, but those touches serve as thoughtful embellishments to elevate their honeyed voices.

On their new album, Some Good Lives, the Portland, Oregon-based musicians put those voices to use in praise of good men. At a time when women’s narratives have increasingly come to the fore, Shook Twins instead focus on the positive influence certain men have had on their lives. The choice suggests there’s room to strike a balance, rather than cast one gender aside to uplift another.

Following in the footsteps of their archivist grandmother, Some Good Lives is an amalgamation five years in the making — a blend of original songs and “found sound,” of a sort. Katelyn spoke to the Bluegrass Situation about the band’s new project.

BGS: Your grandfather played piano — you even include a clip of it on the album. So it seems like you have music in your blood.

Katelyn Shook: Yeah, that was our first musical experience. We’d go over to their house and lie under his grand piano. He was totally untrained, just [flying by] the seat of his pants. That’s why I had to put those snippets on there, because it’s so Grandpa. We started singing really young and fell in love with it. We chose to be in choir but we didn’t pick up instruments until we were 17.

“Grandpa Piano” and “Moonlight Sonata” aren’t really “found sound” pieces, but they provide an interesting texture to the tracks that you wrote. What was the thinking behind including those?

I wanted to sprinkle those in because it goes with the theme of Some Good Lives. I realized that a lot of the songs were about somebody or dedicated to somebody, and all of them happened to be men, which blew my mind. I was resistant to it at first, like, “Now is not the age of man!” I just wanted to honor women. But then I had to realize and keep in check that there’s a balance, and we need to remember and honor the good men in everybody’s lives.

We’d grown up with such good men, and that’s what made my life so balanced. Most of them have passed away, except for two, so I sprinkled in “Grandpa Piano” because there was not really a song dedicated to my grandpa, but he was such a big musical influence on us.

Considering that so many people want to make room for new stories, how have you made the case that now is a time to also share stories about men, even if they’re positive?

I don’t know. I don’t know that I’ve made that case. We’ve always lived by example, and talking with all the women around me, I honestly feel like Laurie and I are very rare in our generation to have such positive male impacts in our lives. It’s funny when a theme pops up. It’s not like we went into this record like, “We want to honor the good men.” It just came out.

On “Dog Beach,” which was originally written by your grandfather Ted, you added your harmonies to an old recording. How did you retain that original, almost old-timey sound quality?

That song is a trip! It’s a long story, but I’ll try to keep it short. My grandma was an archivist, and she had this tape recorder always going. Anytime we had a campfire with our family, we made [Ted] play that song, and he was always resistant to it because he never thought it was a great song. But it was the only one he ever wrote. Ted passed away in 2015 from this massive, traumatic heart attack out of the blue. It was terrifying, horrible. After he passed away, my dad was listening through those tapes, and we heard “Dog Beach” on there. We didn’t even know it’d been recorded — Laurie and I were 5 at the time.

I heard that, and I got the idea to sing this with him one last time. We were in Portland, and we had a whole bunch of friends over— including his ex-wife and his daughter, who’s our best friend — and I had the tape with me and a shitty tape player. I put it in to play it, and we’d sing along and record it. I hit play and it ate the tape. I was like, “No!” But I knew it wasn’t the only copy — we had another one at home — so I called my boyfriend, woke him up (because he was staying with my parents), and I made him go inside with my dad and look for this extra tape. They found the other tape, they found a tape player, put it in there, and it ate the tape.

It sounds like at this point Ted didn’t want you to share it.

Exactly, but I knew he was just fucking with us because he was always resistant to playing it at campfires. So they took the tape out and they put it together — it didn’t break, it just unwound. Then my boyfriend went to sit in the car, which was the only other tape player we had at the house. If you go back and listen to his recording, you can hear his puffy coat rustling. He’s in the car just voice memoing it on his iPhone, and then he emails me the voice memo, and we play the voice memo in the living room. This all took an hour. It’s emailed through time and space. I don’t know, it’s the way it worked out. It was such a crazy night.

What was the recording process like? I know it took a few years to get to that place after your last album, but it seems like it was worth that wait.

This process was a lot different. We normally block 20 days, and we go to the studio and knock it all out. But this time we took our sweet-ass time. We did it in several chunks. We’d been playing these songs live, and we might choose not to do that with our next album, but I really like to because it lets the song marinate. We recorded three songs first and then we’d listen back to them, and since we’d been playing them live, we added more stuff to it. It was a cool way to do it but it took forever.

I think “Vessels” might be one of my favorites on the new album, both for the message and for the vocals.

That one is really special to us, too. It’s dedicated to one of the men who’s still alive, but he has a brain tumor. We wrote it right after we found out he had it.

Is he around your age?

He’s four years older, but he’s super healthy and super young. It’s super nuts. When we wrote it, we were still in that phase where he could die at any moment. It’s a really gnarly brain tumor. Nobody survives this. It’s a total miracle that he’s come this far — it’s been like five years now. But we were in this state of shock and terror, we had our moments of coming to grips with it. That song was us accepting that we’re just vessels, and we have to say goodbye sometimes, and we have to be thankful that we got you at all. It’s narrow, singing to him, but it’s a broad statement to everybody about accepting your death, your friend’s death, and finding a way to be ok with it.

Vocally, we really like what Laurie did. That’s another song that Gregory Alan Isakov helped out on. She took four songs to him. She repeats lines, talking; I really like that effect because it made it this ghostly statement. Isakov helped make it sound more vibey; we call it adding “God noise,” where he adds all this weird ass-shit, and he tweaks it in Pro Tools, but the stuff he comes up with, he’s a total genius. His essence, his God noise, made that song extra special for sure.

Familial harmonies have their own kind of magic, but as twins you have similar vocal cords, which seems like it could pose a challenge at times. What kind of thought process have you put into your arrangements?

We use that vocal identicalness to our advantage. We’ve started to experiment with more unison singing. It’s trippy because people try to achieve that in the studio, where they double themselves, and you can’t really tell there’s two tracks, but there’s an essence. That’s what it sounds like. Harmony-wise, it’s mostly Laurie; it just comes out of her. When we analyze it, sometimes we’ll totally overlap and all of a sudden one voice will naturally go lower and one will go higher. We don’t do the typical harmony. We intertwine. It’s very trippy.

As twins, how have you managed to forge a sense of individuality in the duo?

It sounds weird, but it’s never been an issue to express ourselves individually. We’ve always been Shook Twins. We actually strive to be more of a duo. Sometimes we play solo and it doesn’t feel right; we don’t enjoy it as much. I think we’re definitely strongest together. We’ve never had a competition issue. We always say, “We’re the twin-iest twins we know.” Most times we meet other twins and they all have their own lives. It’s kind of weird to us. We’ve always had the exact mindset about everything. It’s crazy.

LISTEN: Clara Baker, “Moving On”

Artist: Clara Baker
Hometown: Portland, Oregon
Song: “Moving On”
Album: Things to Burn
Release Date: March 8, 2019

In Their Words: “This song is bittersweet reflection on how hard but important it is to notice that it’s time to move on. It could be about love, but this is a song I wrote on my second retreat at the Shotpouch Cabin in the Burnt Woods. I had been living in Corvallis for 4 years and loved living there so much, but I was at a crossroads in my career and I realized that I needed to be in a bigger city in order to seriously pursue my career goals. When we recorded this song, at the very end, I looked up from the microphone and over at Zach Hickman (on bass) who gave me a knowing nod, that kind of said ‘Hell yeah. Good work.’ I immediately burst into tears. Recording all together in the same room, no headphones, and no separation, we all felt in the moment and it just felt so special to be able to be playing music together, and capturing one specific moment in time, rather than cutting and pasting it all together digitally.” — Clara Baker


Photo credit: Amanda Long

LISTEN: Silver Lake 66, “Ragged Heart”

Artist: Silver Lake 66
Hometown: Portland, Oregon
Song: “Ragged Heart”
Album: Ragged Heart
Release Date: April 5, 2019

In Their Words: “‘Ragged Heart,’ the title track on our new album, was inspired by a documentary we watched about the tragic life of the late, deeply talented Townes Van Zandt. What resonated for me were the consequences brought on by the road taken in the pursuit of the dream. The narrator in ‘Ragged Heart’ yearns to reconnect with an estranged love, even though she realizes that the sacrifices made for the pursuit of a dream demand a heavy price. She’s been through hell and back with her partner, and her heart is worn and ‘ragged,’ although there is still a hint of hope in her words. Musically, the arrangements and instrumentation are stripped down and straight ahead to highlight the vocals. I think of this tune as having a modern California country vibe with a dash of the Bakersfield sound of the ‘60s thrown in for good measure.” — Maria Francis


Photo credit: Jason Quigley

LISTEN: Cascade Crescendo, “Fly in the Window”

Artist: Cascade Crescendo
Hometown: Portland, Oregon
Song: “Fly in the Window”
Album: Chasing the Sun
Release Date: February 15, 2019

In Their Words: “‘Fly in the Window’ paints a picture of what it feels like to slow down your thoughts and tune into your surroundings. Although the song was written with kite-flying in mind, at its core it is about meditation of any kind. The lyrics were meant for open interpretation by the listener but do hold true to anyone with a kite in hand. The feeling throughout the song changes from high-energy, thoughtful instrumentation to a place where the listener can feel a state of weightlessness, flying above life’s everyday stresses. This song gives a glimpse into the many different feelings a listener can expect when listening to the whole album, Chasing the Sun. “Fly in the Window” is one of several tracks on the album that feature Allie Kral (Yonder Mountain String Band) on fiddle. –Aden Beck, Cascade Crescendo


Photo credit: Jonny Brandt

LISTEN: Five Letter Word, “Silent Message”

Artist: Five Letter Word
Hometown: Portland, Oregon
Song: “Silent Message”
Album: Siren
Release Date: January 11, 2019

In Their Words: “This song is from the point of view of someone who can tell her partner is losing interest in the relationship. She sees them pulling away through their actions, giving her a ‘silent message’ that she would rather hear in words. It is a situation we’ve all been in before, and it’s never fun, but this song takes a playful, upbeat tone, as a nod to the inevitability of change within love.” — Five Letter Word


Photo credit: R.Zimmerman/Light Monkeys

LISTEN: Ashleigh Flynn & The Riveters, “The Sound of Bells’

Artist: Ashleigh Flynn & The Riveters
Hometown: Portland, Oregon
Song: “The Sound Of Bells”
Album: Ashleigh Flynn & The Riveters
Release Date: September 21, 2018
Label: Home Perm Records

In Their Words: “‘You’ll hear me in the sound of bells that ring…’ My dear friend was murdered nearly a decade ago. It caused great turmoil, and is still a painful mystery to behold. I dream of her often. In one dream I am driving a 1960 Yellow VW Van up to Gold Hill, Colorado, at the Continental Divide, and catch a glimpse of the Front Range. All those lights from ranches and little cities seemed to blend into the starry night sky. And then I sort of came to and was somewhat lucid and felt the presence of my friend hovering over me. I wanted to reach out to her. As she dissipated, I heard her say, ‘You’ll hear me in the sound of bells that ring.’ I could rest assured that we were still connected thought she is gone from our physical world.” — Ashleigh Flynn


Photo credit: Kat Nyberg

WATCH: Jacob Miller, “Old, New”

Artist: Jacob Miller
Hometown: Eden, Wisconsin (based in Portland, Oregon)
Song: “Old, New”

In Their Words: “I wrote this song late one night in a NE Portland home after returning from a disco dance party. Very far from any realm that entertains the ideas of disco music–this soft, breezy tune is about love as an idea that can be both old and new. Whether you’ve been with someone for a week or as long as ten years, there is a beautiful comfort and nostalgia that is carried with the time spent together. I recorded this video in the backyard of the mentioned Portland home with Jonny Himsel, of ‘A Song Catcher’ video sessions. It was hot outside.”


Photo credit: Katie Summer

STREAM: Chuck Westmoreland, ‘Long Winter Rodeo’

Artist: Chuck Westmoreland
Hometown: Portland, OR
Album: Long Winter Rodeo
Release Date: June 1, 2018
Label: Black and Gold Records

In Their Words: “A lot of the songs on the record are about someone being stuck in a place they don’t want to be or having to leave a place they love. There are a lot of moments on the record where someone is either one step away from total disaster or they’ve just crossed the line into that disaster, but can still see back over to the other side.

These are the first songs I’ve written since having a child, so there’s a lot more on the line for the characters in these stories. They have a lot more to lose now, but there’s also more joy. The backdrop for the record is the Tygh Ridge Rodeo Grounds that I drive by a lot, when I’m fishing. In the morning, it’s all covered up in fog and looks like the most desolate, lonely place imaginable, but when the fog burns off, it looks beautiful and you can see every mountain in Oregon.” — Chuck Westmoreland