LISTEN: The Roseline, “Hot Dice”

Artist: The Roseline
Hometown: Lawrence, Kansas
Song: “Hot Dice”
Release Date: November 4, 2022

In Their Words: “‘Hot Dice’ is a self-deprecating exploration of my tendency to ruin otherwise joyful moments with polarizing political conversation pieces or fatalistic and rambling soliloquies. By the end of the song, I learn to be slightly less of a vibe killer and just tell ‘a gross joke instead.’ Musically, it’s jangly heartland folk-rock that’s been elevated with super chorus-y guitar, great multiple harmony bgvs, and an altered arrangement toward the end of the song that really makes it shine. That drum fill is pretty sick, too. Obviously I’m biased.” — Colin Halliburton, The Roseline

The Roseline · Hot Dice by The Roseline

Photo Credit: Fally Afani

Basic Folk – Ondara

When Ondara was a little boy growing up in Nairobi, Kenya, music was both everywhere and just out of reach. He walked around the market listening to vendors playing music from stereos, stopping to listen when he heard something that caught his attention. His family couldn’t afford musical instruments, and the household radio was constantly in demand so he would wait until everyone was asleep so that he could listen to music by himself. He began writing poems, and eventually a cappella songs. He figured that if Bob Dylan could create a legacy setting insightful poems to music, so could he.

 

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In 2013, Ondara won the green card lottery and moved to Minneapolis, because a) he had a family member there, and b) his hero Bob Dylan came from there. Ondara quickly discovered that Minnesota was a little different than he had dreamed. He was working temp jobs to buy his first guitar, writing dozens of songs that would eventually become his debut album, Tales of America, and getting his foot in the door in the Minneapolis open mic scene. But he found that it was difficult to put a band together, that the life of a songwriter was lonely, and that, in America, the color of his skin came with a whole set of expectations about how he should behave (and even about what kind of music he should create).

Ondara has worked to understand these expectations without bowing to them. He shared during our conversation that being Black in America means joining a tradition of art and resistance, and that helping The Cause matters to him. And his ability to contribute to the cause has grown exponentially, since Ondara hit the road in support of his hit debut album, and opening for artists like Neil Young, Lindsey Buckingham, and the Lumineers.

Since then, Ondara has looked outward for subject matter, releasing a pandemic-inspired album in 2020 based on his friends’ stories of quarantine dating and struggling to pay the rent. He has also undertaken a significant spiritual journey as he struggles to reconcile fame and the demands of capitalism with his desire to become a grounded, useful, wise, grown-up adult. His solution, for now, comes in the form of the Spanish Villager, the hyper-performative character at the center of his new album.


Editor’s Note: Basic Folk is currently running their annual fall fundraiser! Visit basicfolk.com/donate for a message from hosts Cindy Howes and Lizzie No, and to support this listener-funded podcast.

Photo Credit: Nate Ryan

LISTEN: Carolyn Kendrick, “Break of Day”

Artist: Carolyn Kendrick
Hometown: Nashville, Tennessee
Song: “Break of Day”
Release Date: November 4, 2022

In Their Words: “During the time of a cross-country move, I started waking up uncharacteristically early, feeling a lot of apprehension about what my future would look like. I wrote ‘Break of Day’ very literally at the break of day, early in the morning on one of those anxious mornings. Writing this song was one of those magical meditative moments where everything that has been simmering in the subconscious comes to the forefront and flows out all at once. It’s vulnerable to admit your fears, hopes, joys and frustrations held in life, especially to yourself. This song is near and dear to me, in that writing it unlocked my ability to be honest with myself. Recording ‘Break of Day’ was a joyous occasion, with some of my oldest friends and musical colleagues in a gorgeous studio in rural Maine. I think the intimacy and solitude of the recording process lent itself to the song beautifully.” — Carolyn Kendrick


Photo Credit: RedLineRoots

LISTEN: Glen Phillips, “Brand New Blue”

Artist: Glen Phillips
Hometown: Santa Barbara, California
Song: “Brand New Blue”
Album: There Is So Much Here
Release Date: November 4, 2022
Label: Compass Records

In Their Words: “‘Brand New Blue’ was written as an assignment from Matt The Electrician’s songwriting game, as were many of the songs on this album, There Is So Much Here. I’d missed a week, and incorporated two weeks’ worth of prompts — Brand New Blue and The Next Room — into this song. What came out was something about the Groundhog Day aspect of lockdown, the particular doldrums of being in the same environment every day for months on end. The song ‘Sound of Drinking’ is about the silver linings of that time. This song is more about the boredom and depression of it all. Just because there was the one doesn’t mean there wasn’t also the other.” — Glen Phillips


Photo Credit: Chris Orwig

LISTEN: Luke LeBlanc, “Now”

Artist: Luke LeBlanc
Hometown: Minneapolis, Minnesota
Song: “Now”
Album: Fugue State
Release Date: October 28, 2022

In Their Words: “Lyrically, ‘Now’ revolves around the child-parent relationship, from the kid’s perspective. No matter who you are or how old you get, it’s always one of those complicated, ever-evolving things. Now that I’m in my mid-twenties, while I don’t know everything, I’m beginning to learn that even adults are still children at heart, trying their best to figure things out. Musically, I tuned my guitar to a drop-D tuning, the first time I’ve done so on a recording. In the background, Eric Heywood’s pedal steel oscillates between soothing notes to experimental, almost chaotic, low-end tones that reflect the spectrum of emotions the lyrics try to capture.” — Luke LeBlanc

Luke LeBlanc · Now

Photo Credit: Sarah Bel Kloetzke

LISTEN: Tommy Alexander, “Something Light”

Artist: Tommy Alexander
Hometown: Nashville, Tennessee
Song: “Something Light”
Album: Feelings
Release Date: October 28, 2022
Label: Fluff and Gravy Records

In Their Words: “I needed one more song for the record and I wanted it to be an easy going country number. The concepts I was working on were all about light and laid back moods but I couldn’t pin down anything specific that kept me interested. Then, thinking out loud, it came out: ‘Something light to lift the mood. Something soft, we’ll get there soon.’ Then we were off to the races. Ironically the song ended up being a narrative about the overall mood of a song I was trying to write. I wanted a song that was about the lighter side of life. I don’t have to tell you twice things can get pretty heavy. So… Here’s a song dedicated to keeping things light (whenever possible). Cheers.” — Tommy Alexander


Photo Credit: C. Bruce

WATCH: Katie Cole, “One More Time”

Artist: Katie Cole
Hometown: Living in Nashville; born in Melbourne, Australia
Song: “One More Time”
Release Date: October 21, 2022

In Their Words: “I have written my fair share of love songs and painful songs of heartache and loss. ‘One More Time’ is really a softer nod to breakups. Sometimes the passion you share isn’t enough to keep the fire going. Sometimes you are just walking different paths and can’t meet in the middle. It’s really about being brave enough to admit that no matter how much you love someone, if you know it won’t last then you should say goodbye. That way, you are cushioning the fall of what is inevitable. But it still doesn’t make it easy.” — Katie Cole

LISTEN: Racyne Parker, “Here in the Middle”

Artist: Racyne Parker
Hometown: Denver, Colorado
Song: “Here in the Middle”
Release Date: September 30, 2022

In Their Words: “Before I play ‘Here in the Middle’ at a show, I always ask folks in the room how they’re doing. Usually, they call out with a ‘whooo!’ or a ‘great!’ And I laugh with them and say, ‘yeah, me too!’ But then, I tell them, I know that it can be easy to be doing well in a room like this one on a night like tonight, when you’re surrounded by good company. But in the case that they find themselves alone and not feeling so great tomorrow or any other day, I hope that they can find something in this song to take home with them, to know that they’re not alone in wanting more, wanting answers, wanting to feel unstuck, wanting to move forward. Then I play ‘Here in the Middle.’

“So anytime someone hears this song, through their headphones or otherwise, I hope that they feel seen. This song was meant to be listened to while in the trenches of overthinking, overanalyzing, or just feeling stuck. I’m proud of how this song turned out, from the lyrics to the production, it’s my best yet — I can’t wait for all that is to come!” — Racyne Parker


Photo Credit: Stephanie Mikuls

LISTEN: Kenny Foster, “Said to Somebody”

Artist: Kenny Foster
Hometown: Joplin, Missouri
Song: “Said to Somebody”
Album: Somewhere in Middle America
Release Date: October 21, 2022

In Their Words: “The first time I played this tune at The Listening Room, someone came up afterwards and said: ‘That song ‘Said to Somebody’… hope you’re ready to sing that one every night for the rest of your life.’ As a songwriter, that was about the highest compliment I’d ever received. I’m a huge fan of stark, unabashed honesty, and find that at the core of most of our human turmoil is someone not saying what they really mean. Falsity, or even silence, is a poor foundation to build relationships, communities, and ideas on, and I kinda just wanted to encourage people (myself included) to say the thing, do the thing and be the type of person who takes a chance at being kind or vulnerable for the betterment of themselves and others. This song encapsulates a lot of those human moments where we knew what we wanted to say or what we should have said, and chose something else instead. We gotta stop this shit. Life’s too short. Say what you mean. And if you change your mind later, or find out you were wrong, you better say that, too. It’s okay to learn and change, and grow. We need to find a way to normalize repentance. It’s human. It’s important.” — Kenny Foster

Kenny Foster | Somewhere in Middle America · Said to Somebody

Photo Credit: RORSHAK

BGS 5+5: Alex Williams

Artist: Alex Williams
Hometown: Pendleton, Indiana
New Album: Waging Peace (October 21, 2022)

Which artist has influenced you the most … and how?

It’s hard to pin one artist down that has influenced me more than another, but I would say Todd Snider was the first songwriter I was exposed to as a kid. My parents used to play his Step Right Up in the car constantly. I’ve been a huge fan of all of his records since and he inspires me to this day.

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

The moment I wanted to become a musician was after my dad persuaded me to take the first song I had written to my high school winter talent show and play it. I knew I was destined to write songs and play them for people on the road after that night, so I immediately dove headfirst into playing anywhere I could get a gig.

What’s your favorite memory from being on stage?

My favorite memory from being on stage is probably when I got to play the mighty Ryman Auditorium with my friend/musician Whitey Morgan a few years ago. Lot of magic in that place, and the sound is just absolutely incredible.

What has been the best advice you’ve received in your career so far?

I’ve received a lot of advice from friends in this business and fellow friends/musicians, but the one thing that’s remained consistent and stuck with me is to always be unapologetic, to be as honest as you can be, and to understand that life as a musician is a lifelong journey in every regard and there are no guarantees. That within itself over the years has made me appreciate every moment a hell of a lot more as I get older, whether it’s writing songs or playing out on the road.

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

I’d probably say a Buffalo chicken sandwich with Jim Croce if he was still with us. I would love to pick his brain about his writing process and how he came up with all of those great chord changes and melodies. He’s a huge inspiration for me and was gone way too soon. The sheer body of work that he left behind in such a short amount of time is amazing and a prime example of why he is one of the greatest songwriters that has ever lived.


Photo Courtesy of Lightning Rod Records