A Minute in Harrisonburg with the Steel Wheels

Welcome to “A Minute In …” — a BGS feature that turns our favorite artists into hometown reporters. In our latest column, Trent Wagler from the Steel Wheels takes us on a tour of Harrisonburg, Virginia.

Little Grill Collective: This was one of the first venues we ever played — it’s also the stage where Jay and I first played together before we were a band. That stage boasts legendary stories of early shows by Old Crow Medicine Show, Hackensaw Boys, and Larry Keel, and Little Grill’s heart for the local community inspired Our Community Place, a community center across the street. We recommend Lambert’s Platter or the Blue Monkey pancakes. Good luck getting a table on Sunday morning!

Shenandoah Bicycle Company: Harrisonburg is a biking town. There are great mountain biking trails, road cycling opportunities, and a bike coalition that’s working to build commuting infrastructure into the city planning for everyone. Shenandoah Bicycle Company has been a hub for the cycling community for years. The Steel Wheels are a bike-friendly band, and you can find many of us pedaling around on and off tour.

Wonder Records: When I need help with my record player — or need to sift through new or used albums — I go to Wonder. Started as a skate shop, the charm of this store continues to be the owner’s eye for the obscure and weird musical artifacts at auction. He’s constantly getting in vintage amps, instruments, and electronics that he’ll tinker with until he gets it ready to sell. It’s hip enough to make you feel cool when you enter, but authentic to its core. This isn’t a part of the vinyl fad; this is an exploration of all the mediums. That reminds me, I need to get ahold of a tape deck.

Friendly City Food Co-op: Every community needs a food cooperative. It may be a little pricey to get all your groceries there, but it’s good to know you can go to a store where they make it a priority to know where the food comes from and to source it as locally and healthily as they can. On an early bicycle tour, we helped spread the word about Friendly City and, when they opened their doors, we played the party. Getting groceries doesn’t have to be a pain, and it feels good to go to this place. Crystalized ginger, yum.

Natural Chimneys Regional Park: Although the friendly city is a fine place to unwind, to really understand our area, you need to get outside the city limits. No place is better than the beautiful Natural Chimneys Park in Augusta County. It’s a year-round campground with ties to a local jousting club (look it up), but more notably for us, it is where we hold the Red Wing Roots Music Festival each July. This has become one of the highlights of our year as we host a three-day music festival with a wide range of Americana/roots artists in a gorgeous Virginia setting.

Blue Mountain Brewery: Up Afton Mountain, you’ll find another one of the band’s earliest friends in the area, Blue Mountain Brewery. Years ago, when we were first starting out and the brewery was young, we’d play Sunday afternoon gigs on their deck. The brewery grew and built onto the deck, and we don’t get up there to play much anymore, but they still serve great food and beer within miles of the Blue Ridge Parkway. Taylor and Mandi bring smart, quality products to the table: The Full Nelson IPA or the Dark Hollow are really good, but our favorite is the Steel Wheels ESB with our faces on the bottle.

Klines’s Dairy Bar: They offer three flavors: vanilla, chocolate, and the flavor of the week. It’s a local staple in the Shenandoah Valley. When we first started playing music, we busked in front of the long lines waiting for their ice cream on summer nights. We honed our skills a little more each time and, usually, we’d get a free ice cream cone at the end of the night.

Jack Brown’s Beer and Burger Joint/Laughing Dog Productions: Sitting side by side on Main Street, you’ll find Jack Brown’s and Laughing Dog. We like to stay local as much as possible, so Laughing Dog Productions has always been the screen printer we’ve used for our t-shirts. They’re family-owned and operated and fine artists/craftspeople. If you’re waiting for your shirts and it’s time to eat, you can try to find a spot at Jack Brown’s. This simple and small beer-burgery is known for a small eclectic menu large on beer taps. It’s a comfort-food master class. If burgers aren’t your thing, they do wings at Billy Jack’s next door.

Court Square: In the center of downtown Harrisonburg is Court Square — home to a theater of the same name where we’ve had local release shows in the past. The square is the place where local activists made a ruckus when the travel ban was enacted. Harrisonburg is a proudly diverse community representing many cultures. During the summer, in front of the courthouse, there are free Friday night concerts or films (Fridays on the Square, we’ve played a few) that are fun for the whole family.

Honorable Mention — Foam Henge: In the category of “beguiling roadside attractions,” no other oddity has captured our band more fully than the life-size styrofoam replica of Stonehenge near Natural Bridge, Virginia. According to our sources, Foamhenge is now closed, but it had a beautiful combination of creative/artistic endeavor and mysterious quirk that you had to see to believe. Some of the finer touches included creepy signs from the artist describing how he “hides and watches” visitors to deter vandalism.


Lede photo credit: Sandlin Gaither

Root 66: Eli Paperboy Reed’s Roadside Favorites

Touring artists spend so much of their time on the road that they, inevitably, find all the best places to eat, drink, shop, and relax. Want to know where to find the best burger, beer, boots, or bunks? Ask a musician. Better yet, let us ask them for you.

Artist: Eli Paperboy Reed
Hometown: Brooklyn, NY
Latest Project: My Way Home

 

Hello, Dallas

A photo posted by Eli "Paperboy" Reed (@elipaperboyreed) on

Tacos: Fuel City – Dallas, Texas. This is literally inside a gas station, but it may have the best tacos in the country. The barbacoa is so flavorful and the tortillas are all made fresh. It is definitely worth going out of your way for. Plus each taco is only $1.66! Perfect for post-show eats because they’re open 24 hours.

Record Store: The Attic – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. If you’re a 45 guy like me, the Attic is the place to go. Shelves upon shelves full to the brim with singles and more on the counters. If you happen to be after something they don’t have in the store, they might be able to get it across the street in their warehouse that has an additional 100,000 records in it. Seriously. There are lots of great record stores, though, and honorable mentions go to In Your Ear in Boston, Charlemagne Records in Birmingham, Friends of Sound in Austin, and Logan Hardware in Chicago.

Barbecue: Oklahoma Joe’s (aka Joe’s of Kansas City) – KC, Missouri / Cozy Corner – Memphis, Tennessee. We’ve had a lot of barbecue over the course of many tours, and honestly it’s hard to pick just one, but for overall variety, I have to go with Joe’s. Incredible ribs, burnt ends, and brisket — and the sides aren’t just an afterthought like they are at so many places. Tied with Joe’s, though, is Cozy Corner in Memphis. Probably the best ribs in the world and, amazingly, they have smoked Cornish Game Hen! A Memphis institution that got ravaged by fire last year, they are currently housed across the street, but are moving back to their original space later this Spring.

 

This is Robert, the pitmaster at Cozy Corner BBQ. He's been here since 4 am to bring us the best BBQ around.

A photo posted by Eli "Paperboy" Reed (@elipaperboyreed) on

Healthy/Refined Food: The Cheese Shop – Des Moines, Iowa. While not exactly healthy food, the Cheese Shop is definitely a diamond in the rough when it comes to food on the road. Situated literally 30 seconds from I-235 in Des Moines, the Cheese Shop has an incredible selection of charcuterie, pickles, and, of course, cheese. When you’ve had your fill of burgers and tacos, it’s definitely a nice surprise in the vast cornfields of Iowa.

TIki Bar: The Saturn Room – Tulsa, Oklahoma. The proliferation of tiki bars around the country continues unabated and the Saturn Room is one of the best. My piano player, the venerable J.B. Flatt, has become quite the connoisseur and we patronized many tiki bars on this most recent American tour. Saturn Room was probably at the top of the list for service and quality, but runners up include Hidden Harbor in Pittsburgh and Archipelago in DC.

Truck Stop: Tebay Services – M6, Orton, UK. My favorite American truck stop has already been mentioned (see Fuel City, above), but my favorite in the world is Tebay services. It’s off the M6 in Northern England and has a farm-to-table restaurant — you can literally see the farm! — inside of it. Incredible, home-cooked food when you’re expecting another bag of Tyrell’s Potato Chips is a beautiful thing.

 

Fingers crossed…

A photo posted by Eli "Paperboy" Reed (@elipaperboyreed) on

Day Off Activity: Gotta Groove Record Plant – Cleveland, Ohio. It just so happens that a friend of mine works there, but if you’re a touring musician, you can reach out to the fine folks at Gotta Groove and they will give you a tour of their record pressing plant! Go ahead and nerd out when you watch how little plastic pellets become your favorite album and annoy the workers while they try to work around your pursuit of the perfect instagram post.

Fried Chicken: Harold’s Chicken – Chicagoland. If you couldn’t already tell what our tour priorities are, you probably know by now. Harold’s Chicken has a soft spot in my heart from the time I lived in Chicago, but it is seriously good. Get yourself a half-dark dinner with hot AND mild sauce and you won’t be sorry. Also, go to a location on the South Side, the ones that are north of the loop don’t cook it the same way.

Tour Hobby: Homemade postcards. Incredibly, the U.S. Postal Service will mail just about anything you put a stamp on, as long as it’s the right size. Get a piece of cardboard from a discarded merch box and draw something on it. Anything. Then stick it in the mail with a stamp and send it to your friends. It definitely passes the time in the van, and you come up with some weird stuff …

Coffee Shop: Groundwork – Hollywood, California. Whenever you tour all the way across the U.S., you inevitably end up in L.A. for a couple days before turning around and heading back east. Most of that time, at least for me, is spent at Groundwork. Bright and sunny, great coffee, good food, nice people … and it’s across the street from Amoeba Records. You get your breakfast, your coffee, and then you go record shopping and you start to feel like a person again.