WATCH: The Suffers, “How Do We Heal”

Artist: The Suffers
Hometown: Houston, Texas
Song: “How Do We Heal”
Release Date: February 16, 2022
Label: Missing Piece Records

In Their Words: “‘How Do We Heal’ started as a therapy exercise for me. During The Suffers’ first years of hard touring, I found myself immersed in the new trend of black people being murdered by the police on livestreams. One moment, I’d be scrolling through memes and cute puppy videos; next, I’d see the murders of Philando Castile and Eric Garner back to back. No warning. No mercy. Just another black life stolen in front of us in 4K. The impact of watching this was enough to make me sick for days, and I honestly felt unsafe most days on the road. I found myself constantly checking to see if justice for any of these victims would ever be delivered, and in many cases it never was.

“I went back to therapy to try and make sense of the emotions I was feeling, but the trauma I was trying to heal from was exacerbated by the deaths of Korryn Gaines, Atatiana Jefferson, Breonna Taylor and so many more. ‘How Do We Heal’ isn’t just a song, it’s a question. How are we supposed to heal when the real causes of the pain and abuse are never really addressed? How do we heal when we aren’t being listened to? How do we heal when those that can end the oppression do nothing to stop it? I don’t know, but it hasn’t stopped me from trying to heal anyway.

“This song was written in 2019, on a sunny fall afternoon in New Orleans with my friend John Michael Rouchell. He played a bunch of different beats for me, but as soon as I heard the demo, the words poured out of me. We recorded the entire song part by part in summer 2020, during the COVID-19 lockdowns, and it took almost seven months to finish. I knocked out all the choral parts in my bedroom studio that fall, and it was topped off by the final vocal additions of Son Little and a spoken word piece by Bryce The Third. I can honestly say that recording this song was one of the most emotionally intense processes I’ve ever been a part of, and I’ll always be grateful for it. This song is for anyone that has felt helpless after witnessing the loss of so much life. May it comfort you, and encourage you to do more for yourself and others.” — Kam Franklin, The Suffers


Photo Credit: Agave Bloom Photography

Stay On Your Ass: BGS Picks to Ease Your Boredom (We Hope)

Remember when we used to actually try to get our readers to go out and support live music? LOL. It’s not “Get Off Your Ass,” anymore, it’s, “Y’all stay put if you know what’s good for you!” At least, for the time being.

Each week, we round up a few of our favorite tunes, events, livestreams, and content from the BGS archives that will hopefully help make your isolation pass faster and with a little bit more joy.

Did we miss something? (We probably did.) Let us know in the comments or on social media!

The Whiskey Sour Happy Hour

Did you hear!? We’ve teamed up with our pal Ed Helms, the Americana Music Association, TX Whiskey, Allbirds, and a pantheon of incredible musicians, friends, and buddies for four weeks of online variety shows! Proceeds from the Whiskey Sour Happy Hour will benefit MusiCares’ COVID-19 relief fund and PPE supplies through Direct Relief. Lee Ann Womack, Billy Strings, Madison Cunningham, Aubrie Sellers, and some surprise guests, too. Our debut show goes up at 5pm PDT / 8pm EDT on April 22 right here on BGS, on our Facebook page, and our YouTube channel. We hope you’ll join us and donate! More information here.


The Lumineers, Together at Home

Wesley Schultz represented The Lumineers at the end of March on #TogetherAtHome, a livestream campaign that has seen performances from so many artists, including Coldplay, Jack Johnson, and Hozier. Originally performed for fans on Instagram Live, Schultz sang a selection of songs from the Lumineers discography, adding covers of Springsteen and the Felice Brothers. This showing is part of the #TogetherAtHome daily concert series, but the campaign is building up to its fruition on April 18th. Global Citizen has organized an international broadcast and digital special with the express intent of supporting healthcare workers and the World Health Organization. The centerpiece event will be called One World: Together At Home and will be hosted by television’s best, Jimmy Kimmel, Jimmy Fallon, and Stephen Colbert. For more info on the broadcast event, visit globalcitizen.org, and until then, enjoy this installment of the daily concert series given by The Lumineers.


Martin Guitar Presents Jam in Place

Everybody loves playing Martin Guitars, so of course nearly everybody who’s ever picked one up is playing Martin’s livestream series, Jam in Place. In the past couple of weeks they’ve featured performances from Kelsey Waldon, Charlie Worsham, John Oates, Tenille Townes, and many more. On the docket for the rest of this week: Son Little and Amythyst Kiah. Martin’s website explains that the series’ lineup is full for the “foreseeable future,” so stay tuned for many more jams!

You can watch Jam in Place on Martin’s Facebook page.


Is It Time for a Bluegrass Cocktail? Yes. It. Is. 

A while back we had a mouth-watering series of Bluegrass Cocktails, fancy libations for at-home mixology that referenced and drew inspiration from classic bluegrass songs. We scoured the archives for as simple and quarantine-friendly a recipe as possible to give you: the Molly & Tenbrooks. Whiskey (it calls for Irish, but we trust your judgement and your liquor reserves), honey simple, lime, bitters, and mint — done. Cherry for garnish, if you have one, you fancy lil bartender you. We highly recommend this horse race-in-a-glass. Perfect to pair with your Stay On Your Ass activity of choice. Get the full recipe.


Justin Hiltner and Jonny Therrien contributed to this article.

BGS Celebrates Black History Month

February is Black History Month and, in celebration, we’ve been going through our archives and re-reading some of our favorite pieces about Black artists working in the roots community. Here are 10 of those stories:

Counsel of Elders: Taj Mahal on Understanding the World — The legendary bluesman shares his knowledge of African music and emotional intelligence in this 2016 interview. Read on to find out why, “If you don’t like my peaches, dont bother me,” are words to live by.

Music Maker Relief Foundation: Keeping the Blues Alive — North Carolina organization Music Maker is one of the most important resources for regional blues musicians hoping to get their music recognized. This interview with founder Timothy Duffy gives an overview of just how they do it. BONUS: Check out Music Maker’s new Black History Month podcast here.

Counsel of Elders: Bobby Rush on Staying Sexy — The title says it all: funky bluesman Bobby Rush offers a crash course in staying sexy, and discusses his newest album, Porcupine Meat.

Squared Roots: Rhiannon Giddens Studies the Songs of Dolly Parton — We learn a bit about how Giddens developed her phenomenal musical craft in this interview. Giddens discusses Parton’s songwriting, feminism and razor-sharp brain.

A Conversation with Jamaal B. Sheats, Director of Fisk University’s Art Galleries — Nashville HBCU Fisk University is home to one of the South’s most impressive collections of visual arts, drawing largely from the personal collection of Georgia O’Keeffe herself. The gallery’s curator speaks about working with the collection, as well as the role of visual art in protest.

Sitch Sessions: Dom Flemons, “Going Down the Road Feeling Bad” — This session with Dom Flemons will forever be one of our favorites, with the former Carolina Chocolate Drop member reimagining one of our most beloved folk songs on a beautiful Portland day.

Lightning Bolt Writing: A Conversation with Yola Carter — Yola Carter is one of the most exciting young acts in roots music. In this interview, she discusses her quick rise to notoriety, a forthcoming debut album and institutional racism.

Son Little and the Truth of Absolutes — The Philadelphia blues artist discusses his musical breakthrough, working with Mavis Staples and the evolution of contemporary R&B in this 2015 interview. 

Aaron Neville: Sharing Edifying Messages in a Dark Time — If musical styles were counted as lifetimes, then Aaron Neville has lived several. Known for his almost instantly recognizable falsetto, Neville has sung in all sorts of flavors throughout his 50-year career: doo wop, pop, gospel, country, soul, funk. You name it, he’s likely sung it.

On Histories, Stories, and Identities: A Conversation with Leyla McCalla — Both literally and figuratively, Leyla McCalla’s music exhibits a web of spatial exchange, particular histories bumping up against one another in ways that reveal their convergences.

October Album Reviews: Son Little, the Wood Brothers, Bottle Rockets, & More

What were the best records to come out this past month? Look no further than our new Record Roundup, a monthly compilation of our five favorite slabs of wax from the past 30 days (complete with a nice little playlist sampler). Behold new albums from the Wood Brothers, Son Little, Edward David Anderson, the Bottle Rockets, and Promised Land Sound.

Edward David Anderson
Lower Alabama: The Loxley Sessions
(Royal Potato Family)

Illinois-born singer/songwriter Edward David Anderson was quite surprised when he decamped to Lower Alabama and found that producer, instrumental everyman, and Neil Young sidekick Anthony Crawford lives just up the holler. It seemed only natural, then, that Anderson would literally walk up the road to Crawford’s Admiral Bean Studio to record this set of nine new cuts of country comfort. With Will Kimbrough adding electric guitar, Crawford’s wife (Savanna Lee) creating gorgeous harmonies, and Crawford, himself, playing almost everything else, these songs slip on as easily as pair of your favorite jeans. There’s a little bit of everything here — from robbery (“Jimmy & Bob & Jack”) to romance (“Firefly”) — and they’re all easy on the ears … and good for the heart.

Son Little
Son Little
(Anti-)

Son Little sounds less like a guy and more like a gang, a host of soul-savvy kids banging from record shop to record shop, crate-digging sounds from down the street and across the big blue ocean. The first cut, “I’m Gone,” with its gargling vocals, street-smart lyrics, and sparse arrangement opens the record with the flick of an ear … and things just keep getting more interesting with every subsequent song. “Nice Dreams” echoes with ideas of Prince pushed through a '50s-era Wall of Sound. “Toes” stomps across the soundstage with the boldness of an '80s anthem. “Carbon” grinds black soul against a rolling stone. “Lay Down” gathers gospel in its arms and lays it at the feet of love and romance. Every cut here pricks up the ears and pushes the limits of what it means to make American soul music.

Promised Land Sound 
For Use and Delight
(Paradise of Bachelors)

Let’s acknowledge the white elephant in the corner of the room right from the git’ go: Singer/bassist Joey Scala couldn’t sound more like Tom Petty if he tried, and PLS’s debt to Petty’s influences — flying burritos and free fallin’ byrds — couldn’t be more obvious. Songs like the jingle-jangly “Push and Pull (All the Time)” and the feverish “Through the Seasons” fit snuggly in the Heartbreakers’ mold of “Running Down a Dream (Parts I and II)." Elsewhere, though, Scala and his brother Evan and their pals take licks at a lysergic lollipop (“She Takes Me There”) and meld a bit of Laurel Canyon with Laura Nyro (“Canfield Drive”). They also whip up a pretty sweet high mountain love song, as on “Through the Seasons.” Mixed in with their musical predecessors or not, this is a charming record filled with '70s psychedelic sunshine.

The Bottle Rockets
South Broadway Athletic Club
(Bloodshot)

And now for something completely different. Missouri’s men of musical mayhem don’t make a lot of records — just a dozen over the course of twice as many years — but when they do, we’re always quick to rip the wrap and fire up the CD player. This one delivers exactly what we’ve come to expect from Brian Henneman and company: whip smart lyrics (“Monday (Every Time I Turn Around)”), entertaining stories (“Big Lotsa Love”), big ass guitar riffs (“I Don’t Wanna Know”), and plenty of humor (“Big Fat Nuthin’”). There’s nuthin’ fancy here, just good, old-fashioned American rock 'n' roll … with extra attitude.

The Wood Brothers
Paradise
(Honey Jar)

There may be some bands out in the barn who are better known to the masses than the Wood Brothers, but none have stayed truer to their edgy ethic than Chris and Oliver Wood and their compatriot, Jano Rix. This record, which is already burning up three different Billboard charts, rocks hard (“Snake Eyes”), rocks harder (“Singin’ to Strangers”), then rocks gently (“Two Places”). The lyrics are stellar (“In the Army, he was Major … disappointment …") and the playing, as always, matches tempo against temperament to near perfection. A record we can’t get enough of.

8 Artists We’re Stoked to See at Winnipeg Folk Festival

Summer has just officially begun, but we're already well into festival season. One gathering we're especially excited about is the Winnipeg Folk Festival, which takes place just a few weeks from now, July 7 – 10. We'll be on site with "Bluegrass Situation North," which includes performances from the Foggy Hogtown Boys, the Infamous Stringdusters, the Wild Reeds, and Noam Pikelny.

We'll cap off our event on July 8 with an Album Hour All-Star Jam, which will see our fair artists performing the classic Eagles album Hotel California. There's so much more great music taking place during the festival, though, that we'd be remiss if we didn't share more with you. 

Basia Bulat

Winnipeg has some stellar Canadian musicians lined up this year, and Basia Bulat is one of them. The talented Toronto-born songwriter is known for her thoughtful folk tunes and for knowing her way around an autoharp.

Wild Child

It's always a pleasure to catch Wild Child, an Austin act known for raucous live shows that live up to their name. Look for tunes from their 2015 album, Fools, during their Winnipeg set.

Eagle Rock Gospel Singers

Eagle Rock isn't exactly a gospel Mecca, but the Eagle Rock Gospel Singers are a welcome, if surprising, addition to the genre, offering a fresh take on old-time religion.

Son Little

If you haven't seen Son Little live yet, do yourself a favor and add him to the top of your must-see list — his soulful blend of blues, rock, and R&B is not to be missed.

Ryan Adams

Do we really have to explain this one?

Lisa LeBlanc

Canadian singer/songwriter Lisa LeBlanc is, as she describes, a "folk trash" artist, meaning she serves up her folk with a heaping helping of punk rock. Come for the fun genre name; stay for LeBlanc's biting lyrics and mad banjo skills.

Hubby Jenkins

Known for his work with the Carolina Chocolate Drops, Hubby Jenkins is also a stellar solo performer, playing several instruments and breathing new life into old-time music.

Rayland Baxter

Rayland Baxter's 2015 album, Imaginary Man, is still on heavy rotation here at the BGS and, thanks to his beautiful vocals and infectious energy, he also remains one of our favorite artists to catch live.

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Get Off Your Ass: June Is Busting Out All Over

Paul Simon // Hollywood Bowl // June 1

Junior Brown // McCabe's Guitar Shop // June 3

Elizabeth Cook // Hotel Café // June 7

The Wild Reeds // Bootleg Theatre // June 10

Robbie Fulks // The Mint // June 11

Bob Dylan & Mavis Staples // Shrine Auditorium // June 16

Sarah Jarosz // The Troubadour // June 16

Mike + Ruthy // Hotel Café // June 18

Moses Sumney // Getty Center // June 18

case/lang/veirs // Greek Theatre // June 23

The Weepies // City Winery // June 8

Brandy Clark // CMA Fest // June 10

Ray Wylie Hubbard // 3rd & Lindsley // June 10

Aubrie Sellers & Dylan LeBlanc // 3rd & Lindsley // June 12

Hurray for the Riff Raff // Centennial Park // June 18

The Cactus Blossoms // 3rd & Lindsley // June 19

Eagle Rock Gospel Singers // High Watt // June 21

Vince Gill // Ryman Auditorium // June 23

Bob Dylan & Mavis Staples // Carl Black Chevy Woods Amphitheater // June 26

Ani DiFranco // City Winery // June 29-30

Bryan Sutton Band // Rockwood Music Hall // June 1

Steep Canyon Rangers // City Winery // June 2

Gary Clark, Jr. // Randall's Island // June 5

Son Little // Bowery Ballroom // June 9

Colvin & Earle // City Winery // June 10

Billy Joe Shaver // City Winery // June 12

Eli Paperboy Reed // Union Pool // June 16

The Stray Birds // Jalopy Theatre // June 21

Robert Ellis // Bowery Ballroom // June 22

Lonely Heartstring Band // Hill Country Barbecue // June 23-24

Get Off Your Ass: March

From now until the end of time, we'll be asking you to Get Off Your Ass with monthly concert picks. We're taking a look at the top shows we want to see in L.A., Nashville, and New York.

Darlingside // March 2 // Hotel Cafe // Tickets

Darlingside’s dreamy, one-voice harmonies drive the engine of the group’s self-described “string rock.” Their latest, Not to Disappear, is out now.

Leon Bridges with Son Little // March 19-20 // The Wiltern // Tickets

Bridges is the hottest act around with a vintage flare and Sam Cooke-esque, swoon-worthy vocals while opener Son Little puts an urban edge on to his version of nostalgic soul.

Elephant Revival & Mandolin Orange // March 24 // The Troubadour // Tickets

The diversified music of Elephant Revival incorporates influences from Celtic music to jazz to reggae to create a rounded-out genre of folk. The duo Mandolin Orange continue to maximize their beautifully throaty harmonies and classic bluegrass-folk.

Daughter // March 25 // The Theater at Ace Hotel // Tickets

A glorious blend of folk vocals and soft electronics provide a foundation for the quiet celestial music from Daughter.

Anders Osborne (with Sister Sparrow and the Dirty Birds) // March 31 // The Troubadour // Tickets

Osborne strokes a rockin’ blues guitar that could feel at home in a swamp-side bar near the bayou and Sister Sparrow (and her Dirty Birds) bring sparkling funk and soul to match as a supporting act.

Elizabeth Cook (with special guests) // March Residency (March 2, 9, 16, 23, 30) // The 5 Spot // Tickets

A member of the Grand Ole Opry family for over 15 years, Miss Cook showcases bright, tight country vocals with honest songwriting.

Deer Tick with Mutual Benefit // March 2 // City Winery // Tickets

Deer Tick’s party energy and riff-raff vibes mixed with an introduction by Mutual Benefit’s psychedelic, scenic sounds come together for an enveloping evening at City Winery.

Tedeschi Trucks Band // March 3-5 // Ryman Auditorium // Tickets

Hot on the tail of their latest album release, Let Me Get By, Tedeschi Trucks brings yet another perfectly aged and blended batch of soulfulness, twang, and rock.

John Prine // March 11-12 // Ryman Auditorium // Tickets

The immensely talented John Prine brings his timeless storytelling to the music cathedral of Nashville.

The Life and Songs of Kris Kristofferson feat. Lady Antebellum, Dierks Bentley, Ryan Bingham, Rosanne Cash, Eric Church, Emmylou Harris, Jamey Johnson, Willie Nelson, Darius Rucker, Trisha Yearwood, and more. // March 16 // Bridgestone Arena // Tickets

A killer lineup of legends paying tribute to a master songwriter in Kristofferson … all in one night.

HoneyHoney // March 2 // Knitting Factory // Tickets

Rock 'n' roll with twang coloring, vocalist Suzanne Santo brings a dark rasp layered on heavier guitar, drums, and bass that contrasts the plucking of a banjo beautifully.

Jim Campilongo with Nels Cline, Chris Morrissey, and Josh Dion // March Mondays (March 7, 14, 21, 28) // Rockwood Stage 2 // Free

Campilongo’s tunes are a melt-worthy layer cake of bending blues guitar, jazz improvisation, and country swing.

Judah and the Lion // March 31 // Gramercy Theatre // Tickets

If you’re missing the early sound of Mumford and Sons, Judah and the Lion homes in on the energy of nu-folk pushed by rolling banjo and filled out with warm strings and harmonies.

Jake Bugg // March 21 // Bowery Ballroom // Tickets

You’d most certainly recognize this Brit’s song “Lightning Bolt,” but take a listen to his new single, “On My One,” and feel the depth of '60s/'70s folk and blues echoing throughout.

Béla Fleck and Abigail Washburn // March 1 // 92nd Street Y // Tickets

With another Grammy to add to their collection — for Best Folk Album 2016 — the husband/wife duo combines an epic musicianship of the banjo with an innovative and diverse playfulness that makes each performance from them truly magical. GO and see the sparks fly.

Meet BGS Photographer Laura Partain

We at the BGS love including beautiful, original artwork with our stories and we couldn't do that without the help of a handful of talented photographers. Meet Laura Partain, one of the photographers who keeps us looking good. Partain, who now lives in Nashville, grew up in east Texas and southern Illinois, and says she was creative from a young age. 

"I've always had a hyperactive imagination and a ton of energy," Partain says. "I used to set up 'photoshoots' with my brother Andrew when we were around 6 and 2 years old. I'd get blankets for the backgrounds, and props would range anywhere from stick ponies to plastic 'pretend' pizza slices."

Those photoshoots led to a photography class in high school, a wedding gig, and a new digital camera … and the rest is history. Partain ended up in SIUC's photography program and has been making pictures ever since. "I learned to shoot film, and mostly quit digital photography all together," she says of her time in college. "I got tough and learned how to work my ass off. I learned how to make good work, focus, compose, create. Photography made me feel brave, and gave me a voice. It still does."

Now, Partain is fortunate enough to make a living doing what she loves.

"Photography is my first love, and I'm committed for life to the craft," she says. "Music, however, is always my close second. So, if you're wondering why I shoot music, my best answer is this — I have to. I get to record in the visual sense, and that's my means of creative participation. Today, I'm a full-time photographer living in Nashville, and shooting just about anywhere. I photograph for album covers, press shots, music festivals, shows … you name it. I photograph for fun, too. All of the time. I dont really stop."

In addition to providing wonderful photos for the BGS, Partain also shoots for outlets like SPIN, NPR Music, and Spotify. Check out more of her work here and browse a handful of our favorite photos below.

Son Little for our November 2015 Artist of the Month feature

JP Harris and Chance McCoy for our August 2015 Artist of the Month feature

 Willie Nelson at Heartbreaker Banquet

Hurray for the Riff Raff's Alynda Segarra, as seen in her Call to Folk Singers op-ed

Old Crow Medicine show during the "Brushy Mountain Conjugal Trailer" video shoot


Lede photo via Instagram

Son Little and the Truth of Absolutes

Son Little (aka Aaron Earl Livingston) is one of those artists who transcend time, place, and genre. That makes his music hard to define, though not hard to appreciate … much like the artist who makes it. Livingston was born in Los Angeles, but grew up on the East Coast — somewhere between New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania – eventually calling Philadelphia home. In Philly, he found artistic camaraderie with RJD2 and the Roots, eventually taking up the Son Little moniker for his own work.

After his breakthrough EP, Things I Forgot, dropped last year, the soul-blues innovator was tapped to produce Mavis Staples' four-song Your Good Fortune EP that came out earlier this year. Now, he's back with a full-length, self-titled effort that continues to muddy the waters that flow between the roots of American music.

Are you a guy who feels like it all goes back to the blues?

It probably goes back beyond the blues, but I think our music here in America informs the whole world. If it's the family tree, the blues is definitely in the roots.

And do you feel like contemporary R&B has strayed from those origins, for the most part?

I think that's true, to a certain extent. I don't know if it's mincing words to start talking about pop music, but that line is maybe blurred a little bit — between R&B and pop. I think sometimes genres have become a sort of wallpaper. The blues is something that indicates rural living, country. And, when you want to portray modernity or you want to convey a metropolitanism, you would avoid the blues. So I think maybe, in that sense, contemporary R&B is affiliated with a feeling of sophistication or urban-ness that you can't signify by using the blues.

Nu-soul, neo-blues, modern blues, “soulful new Americana,” “soul music for the hip-hop generation" … How do YOU describe your music? Or how would you like it described? And have there been tags applied that are uncomfortable?

You can't really control what people call it, so I don't worry about that too much. But there have been some descriptions that I really like. There's a guy here in Philly I was talking to a few weeks ago. He told me that he had listened to the record and it was like Sam Cooke in outer space. [Laughs] I really like that.

We did a show in Woodstock, NY, and this guy came up after and said something like Howlin' Wolf meets Fugazi, or something like that. I like that. I think there are a lot of ways to describe it. There are a lot of ways to describe anything. And they can all be right … or all be equally wrong.

While there's nothing retro about what you're doing, it is still more authentic and informed by the past, but it's completely of the here and now. I feel like Alabama Shakes are doing something comparable. And Fink is in the neighborhood, too, but not as complex in the craftsmanship.

I love the Alabama Shakes record. You can hear the development from the last one. They are becoming more unique, in a way — their voice, collectively. And Brittany, of course individually, is becoming more specific.

I do feel like there's a similar approach. They probably get lumped into being retro but, especially with this record, it's clear that's not what it is. For some people, maybe it is retro for people to write songs with a guitar and go play their shows with guitar and bass and drums. That's maybe a retro idea and maybe we're at a point where, just doing that alone, is seemingly retro. But despite the fact that there's nothing new under the sun, I think everyone's different and we can all find our own way of doing that very thing that's so familiar. Despite everything, a singer is who they are and sounds how they sound. If you're willing to be your own thing, you can find that.

What Leon Bridges is doing, that's retro. Or Nathaniel Rateliff's new record.

People are definitely doing that.

… but this ain't that.

Right. At the same time, it's 2015. It's not 1960 no matter what you do, no matter how hard you try to make something sound like a time that's passed. The time has passed. You're still making something new or unique. With a lot of that stuff — Iike with the Alabama Shakes — I'm interested to see what develops from the point that Leon Bridges is starting at. I'm excited to see what he does next. Where do you go with that?


So that's style. Now let's get into substance. When Ferguson was the topic of the day, there was some criticism that artists weren't doing their part, weren't showing solidarity. You address your experience of that and Eric Garner in “Oh Mother.” Do you feel any sort of imperative to take that stuff on … Black Lives Matter or whatever speaks to you?

No. I don't actually. I understand people's criticism of artists, in that respect, because I think people have come to depend on artists to make statements and speak for us as a whole. But, like anything else, I think it's a little lazy to just expect that someone else is going to do something. For people who make that criticism, if what you want said isn't being said, then say it yourself. If it really means that much … if it's imperative that it be said and it's not being said, then you need to say it.

But, that said, no matter how I feel about an issue, I also have rules about the way I make music and express myself. The main rule is that I don't force myself to do anything. If I'm compelled to speak about something, then I will speak. I'm not going to speak because other people think I should.

You are just Aaron, when it comes down to it.

Yeah, that's the thing … I wrote those things because I felt compelled, as a person, to express myself about them. And it's great if those things resonate with people, but I wouldn't have done it if I didn't feel the need, internally, to do that.

In an interview I read, you talked about being able to see more than one side to things. Absolutes and firm truths don't really exist, do they? It's all subjective perception.

If you're realistic about it, it's pretty hard to come to any other conclusion. [Laughs] If I have an absolute belief in something and there's no proof, so to speak — it's my conviction and faith that I'm holding on to — you may have the exact opposite feeling and who am I to tell you you're wrong? And who are you to tell me I'm wrong? I think, in a lot of cases, that's how we end up killing each other and confusing ourselves and forgetting what's important.

I'm curious about something … As you travel around the country, hitting truck stops and diners on highways in the Heartland, do you feel eyes on you?

Yeah, sometimes, because I don't look like them. I try to be an easy person to talk to and I'm interested in people who are different than me. So I think, sometimes, maybe part of it is people who grow up, say in the Northeast, we're the most neurotic part of the country. [Laughs] We're all in our heads and we care and wonder and try to predict what other people think of us probably too much. So, sometimes, with things like that, I wonder how much is just all in my head. If someone's looking at you, they're curious — maybe more than anything else.

For a long time, I was never south of Virginia, so I had a made up version of what the South is or what the Midwest is. We think of everyone in a sort of monochromatic way: “People in the South are this. People in the Midwest are this.” But we're not allowing people in those places to be all the different things that people in those places are. That's actually been one of my favorite aspects of my career. I've now been to a lot of those places, not just big cities. I've been to Milwaukee. And I've been to Iowa. And I've been to North Carolina and places like that and really got to experience what it's really like there.


All photos by the supremely talented Laura E. Partain. You can find her on Instagram and Tumblr.