8 Acts We Can’t Wait to See at Bonnaroo

Summer is here and Bonnaroo is right around the corner … less than a week away, to be exact! In case you missed it, we'll be down at the Farm hosting the best party the Roo's ever seen. Come by the BGS stage on Sunday to catch John Moreland, Sara Watkins, the Wood Brothers, Steep Canyon Rangers, Sam Bush Band, and the BGS Superjam with Ed Helms. 

We'd be remiss if we didn't make the most of the festival and catch as many acts as possible, though, so we're working hard on our schedule. Below are eight acts that we can't wait to see.

Jason Isbell

It's no secret that we're huge Isbell fans here at the BGS, catching his shows whenever we get the chance. For his Bonnaroo set, let's hope he channels his inner Drive-By Trucker and offers up some jam sessions.

Chris Stapleton

While we miss the old days where getting a ticket to see Stapleton wasn't as difficult as getting a ticket to see Hamilton, we're happy for him to finally get his due. If you've never experienced Stapleton's godlike voice in person, now's your chance.

Father John Misty

Who better to watch while surrounded by sweaty hipsters than our greatest satirist of hipster culture? We can only hope FJM serves up some festival-themed commentary along with his thoughtful folk-rock tunes.

Natalie Prass

If Natalie Prass stays true to the arrangements on her excellent 2015 self-titled debut, you should expect one hell of a horn section at her set. As the saying goes, "I need more horns." Or something like that.

Rayland Baxter

Rayland Baxter has long been a fixture of the Nashville music scene, and his 2015 release, Imaginary Man, saw his star rise to higher, more national heights. Catch him while he's on the rise.

Andrew Combs

Nashville singer/songwriter Andrew Combs has earned heaps of acclaim for his thoughtful, throwback country tunes. We look forward to hearing those songs translated to the festival stage.

Dylan LeBlanc

There's no dearth of singer/songwriters performing at Bonnaroo, but you'd be hard-pressed to find one writing better tunes than Dylan LeBlanc. Fresh off some gigs opening for the Alabama Shakes, LeBlanc should be a crowd-pleaser with songs from his latest album, Cautionary Tale.

Aubrie Sellers

Aubrie Sellers is one of our favorite new voices in country music, and we can't wait to see her give tunes from her stellar debut album, New City Blues, the Bonnaroo treatment. And who knows, maybe her mom and fellow BGS fave — Lee Ann Womack — will join her for a song or two before hopping into the BGS Superjam!

Kurt Vile with J Mascis, ‘Box of Rain’

It wasn't always cool to like the Grateful Dead. There was a period there, in the '90s especially, where Deadheads were often regarded as deadbeats, clueless hippies who were clinging to some sort of departed ghost — all while the rest of the world grunged out or glammed up, basically turning anything associated with "jam bands" into a pejorative. Hemp? Patchwork pants? Thanks, but no thanks — or, shall we say, all apologies.

But the Grateful Dead always had way more to offer than just a culture, and their music — from those spiraling, dreamy licks smeared across the War on Drugs or the noodle jams picked up by Rayland Baxter — has been far more influential sonically than just the dancing bear-shaped imprint they left on aged Deadheads' bumper stickers. A new collection, Day of the Dead, curated by Aaron and Bryce Dessner — both members of the New Yorker-reading, Brooklyn-residing polar opposite of a jam band, the National — gives the group its proper due with a 59-song tribute featuring the likes of Courtney Barnett, Real Estate, and Fucked Up. In other words, people who make both perfect and imperfect sense — because beneath the flannel and the distortion pedals, everyone's a not-so-secret Deadhead.

One of the best songs on the tribute — and one that really showcases that not-so-fine line between the lo-fi, slow RPM weed-rock of today like Mac Demarco and the psychedelic days of the Dead — is Kurt Vile's version of "Box of Rain," accompanied by J Mascis of Dinosaur Jr. The duo keeps those signature Telecaster riffs intact, along with vocals that touch softly on Phil Lesh's original mournful coo, and warps it into something that easily could have rolled off of Vile's recent catalogue, with its gaze half at its shoes, half toward the concrete skyline: Proving in one slick track that it's not just cool again to like the Grateful Dead, it's actually pretty essential.

Recap: The BGS Late Night Windup at AmericanaFest 2015

The Americana Music Festival & Conference is, as its name would imply, a festival, but it's also something of a family reunion. For music industry folks, journalists, and especially, artists, the annual Nashville festival can serve as one of the only times of year the gang is all together, and as such is one of the year's biggest parties.

Spirits were high at The Basement, a music venue beneath famed record shop Grimey's, for The BGS's Late Night Windup, one of the festival's first official events, where attendees could pick up their badges before going inside to enjoy a stacked night of music.


[The BGS's Amy Reitnouer with the house band]

Della Mae and the Wood Brothers kicked off the event with their own solo sets, before taking their spots in the crowd to await the jam. Both played to a packed room, treating the audience to tunes new and old.

Our own Amy Reitnouer introduced Punch Brothers' banjo extraordinaire Noam "Pickles" Pikelny as the evening's master of ceremonies. Pikelny was joined by a house band consisting of fiddle player Christian Sedelmyer, Casey Campbell, Mike Bub and fellow Punch Brother (and newly bearded) Chris "Critter" Eldridge. Together, they provided a backdrop for a long list of special guest and surprise artists over the course of the next couple hours.

 

A photo posted by zeitajones (@zeitajones) on

The first guest was Sedelmyer's own project 10 String Symphony, a duo with fellow Nashville musician Rachel Baiman. It ended up being a mostly covers affair, with Eddie Berman following with a cover of Paul Simon's "You Can Call Me Al," trailed by Caitlin Canty paying homage to Dolly with her own take on "Wildflowers."

One of the highlights of the night was what Pikelny dubbed "Mandolin Armageddon," in which all of the musicians on stage packed up their instruments, hopped on a space ship and saved us all from an asteroid. Just kidding — it was cooler. Sierra Hull, Casey Campbell and Della Mae's Jenni Lyn Gardner joined forces for an incendiary performance of Bill Monroe's "Big Mon," and we think that, had an asteroid been headed our way, it would have stopped in its tracks so those talented kids could finish their tune.

 

A photo posted by Josie Hoggard (@josiehoggard) on

After Mando-geddon came shuitar time, when The Wood Brothers returned to the stage to cover Bob Marley's "Stop That Train." Kelsey Waldon then schooled the audience on lesser-known country singers when she performed a Vern Gosdin tune. Rayland Baxter, a self-described "super stoner" who only rememebers the lyrics to his own songs, required a little audience help for his take on Graham Nash's "I Used to Be King," and the audience happily obliged.

As the night wore on, guest after guest, including Leigh Nash, Shakey Graves, and Della Mae, joined the house band for jam after jam, each one rowdier than the last. We couldn't think of a better way to kick off one of our favorite events of the year. If you joined us for last week's jam, we hope you enjoyed it as much as we did. Sorry about that hangover.


Photos courtesy of Kim Jameson

The Artist’s Way: An Interview with Rayland Baxter

If Wendell Berry and Paul Simon were to somehow have an offspring, odds are he would be a lot like Rayland Baxter. An easy-going and contemplative musical poet, Baxter brings a light touch to his life and his art. He grew up in and around music — his father being multi-instrumentalist Bucky Baxter, who has played with Bob Dylan, Ryan Adams, and others. Still, the younger Baxter avoided following in the elder's footsteps until 2010, when he released Feathers & Fishhooks on ATO Records. The Ashkelon EP followed in 2013 and Imaginary Man dropped last month marking the next notable step in his artistic evolution.

Right at the top, I have to say that your team missed a big ol' opportunity by not marketing “The Woman for Me” as a lesbian theme song, because it's the story of my life, man. And I thank you for it.

WOW! Wow. That's incredible. The song still exists. We can hit that up. Just let me know.

Maybe we can get Melissa Etheridge or Chely Wright to cover it.

I'm down. You know those cats?

I don't know them, but we have people in common. I can bring it up at the next club meeting.

If you would like to do that, if we can work that, let's get that song to the lesbian community.

[Laughs] It would be a service to the ladies.

Yeah, that's what the song's for … it's for the people.

In an interview right before that first record came out, you talked about growing up poor and said, at that very moment, you had a single dollar to your name. Hopefully things have improved a bit since then.

Yeah, yeah. Money comes and goes.

Sure. Talk to me about the reality of the rock 'n' roll life. It's not all private jets and groupies, like people think it is.

[Laughs] Yeah. I'm in a 15-passenger van right now with five other dudes. Everybody seems pretty cozy, though. Everyone's got the right lens on, if you know what I mean. We all see the situation for what it is. I enjoy this. I love touring. I love being in the van and the conversations you have within the band while you're traveling and seeing the earth move by you through the window. This is it for me. I'm totally content. I'm pretty much content with everything that's happened since I tiptoed into the musicians' lifestyle. I have a pretty good outlook on everything involving that. In terms of the glamour, this is it. Someone gave me a free t-shirt yesterday — a $30, no-collar shirt.

You were stoked about that, weren't you? I've said for years that I feel like nobody should be allowed in the music business, to any degree, until they travel with five dudes in a van for six weeks.

Right. You gotta sweat. Sweat equity, you know? You gotta stink, you gotta hurt. Your back's gotta be twisted up a little bit. Poverty is the mother of creativity.

It certainly can be. Seems like you have the classic split personality of nomad versus romantic. One moment, the dream is to settle down and plant roots. In the next, it's hitting the road and exploring all options.

I can expand on that.

Yeah. Go.

The nomad versus the romantic … okay. I like this conversation. You know how in life, you have those things that get you off?

Yep.

Maybe you like fly-fishing or snowboarding or hanging and drinking beers or porn … whatever. One of mine is traveling. What better way to travel than touring and playing music. And I know that it's important for where I want to go with my career to play shows and hone my craft every night and experience a whole bunch of people … getting yourself in a whole bunch of situations like meeting a stranger and sleeping in their house. I'm sure lots of people reading this interview are like, “Oh, yeah. I've done that a bunch, too.” They all know that it's very exciting, for the most part, and kind of hairy sometimes, too. Like, “This is super-sketchy and these kids are kind of crazy and I don't know what that is in that pipe there that they're smoking … okay, sure. Yeah. I'll hit it.”

But I'm also in love with love. I love the feeling. I like being in love. I like seeing people in love. I like loving everybody. In terms of starting a family and all that stuff, that's a little bit difficult to do in my shoes, for now. But I'm content. Soy contenta.

Bueno. Are you a big daydreamer?

Big time. All the time. Yeah. I like to live in that world. You?

Yeah. Totally. It's so much better.

Yeah.

Even regular, sleeping dreams. I hate waking up in the morning.

Man … I'm with ya. It's like, “How do I fall asleep and get back to that place?”

Are you a lucid dreamer, by any chance?

No, I'm not. I have weird dreams. Weird. But I like them. They just make the world seem like a weird place when I wake up. Like, “Oh my gosh. I thought about that? That happened in my dreams? So strange.” But, then, some of them …

Yeah. Yeah. Okay, so this new record … “Rugged Lovers” is my obsession song.

Okay!

It almost feels like the continuation of the story that began in “The Woman for Me” … like you found her — your ideal woman — even just for a moment or so. Might that be the case?

Yeah, yeah, yeah. That's it. Yeah. [Pauses] Let me see how I can put my words to this. What I think about with that song … I never actually put the connection to “The Woman for Me” and “Rugged Lovers,” but I love it. That's the cool thing about a song: You hear those two songs together and you see the connection, and I don't even see the connection, but obviously I do now.

“Rugged Lovers” is kind of where it ends up. You meet somebody, maybe, and then you gotta go. It's pretty tough to grow with somebody when you're not around them. It's like shooting air balls. Or you "let the feather fall into the hook, cast it out," and there's nobody to bite on it. It's a hopelessly heartbreaking song. But it had to be that way.

Yeah. It has to reflect the reality of it all.

Or the made up of it all.

I was going to say, yeah, or the false reality of it all. Whatever it is.

Yeah.

On the whole, you expanded the sonic palette for Imaginary Man. Things are a bit denser, but it's still pretty light on its feet. Part of that's your voice. But another part of it must be how you shape your melodies. Am I getting that right?

Yeah, you're nailing it. Melodies are super-important. In terms of the music, we all had a bit more idea of what we were doing this go around. We being myself, the producers — Eric Masse and Adam Landry … they're just more experienced and better at their craft. All the musicians that played on the album, like Mr. Jimmy Matt Rowland … who played all the keys on the album. He's really come a long way in the last five years. [Laughs] He's sitting behind me right now. … Everybody in the circle of friends is just hardcore into becoming a better musician or musical mind, so the music came out really solid.

My songwriting, I'm on the same level as growing as a musician. I've evolved in terms of the lyrical content that I'm writing about. I've now had 31 years to think about melodies, not just the last seven. You get more and more the longer you sit around and hum to yourself or listen to music.


Photo Credit: Eric Ryan Anderson