Valerie June is Weaving Spells Again

Valerie June’s new album – Owls, Omens, and Oracles (released on April 11 by Concord Records) – begins with a snare and a hi-hat. A simple, straight-forward rhythm. Something to wrest you from your chair and get you moving your body.

After a few bars, her distinct, earnest, energetic vocals enter and it feels as though you’re surrounded by a circle of Valerie Junes singing in delightful unison. Urging you on. It’s just her voice and the drum for thirty-five seconds, then she lands on the word “joy” and the whole song bursts open with a distorted guitar and so many cymbals.

Like the “Joy, Joy” for which the song is titled, sound layers build and build, rippling out further and further until it all fades. By then, you’re well into the room. The colors are swirling. There seems to be joy and love hanging from the chandeliers. If you close your eyes, perhaps you can imagine the colors bursting forth from the guitar when it finally takes a solo.

Indeed, whether or not you experience synesthesia – a condition some musicians report where they associate sound and color – there is something undeniably colorful about the music June puts into the world. This is as true as ever on the new disc, which feels even more focused on joy’s pursuit and on holding joy aloft once it is within one’s grasp.

The celebrated poet and activist adrienne maree brown, who wrote June’s promotional bio for the project, notes: “This album is a radical statement to break with the skepticism, surveillance, and doom scrolling – let yourself celebrate your aliveness. Connect, weep, change, open.”

Indeed, connecting and weeping – through joy and heartache alike – is central to June’s artistic journey. This notion, that her music might be urging its listeners to celebrate aliveness, is particularly resonant on Owls. After all, June, who divides her time between Tennessee and New York, is a certified yoga teacher and mindfulness meditation instructor. One might extrapolate, then, that music, for Valerie June, is equal parts connective tissue and spiritual experience.

“No one who makes music can truly tell you where it comes from,” she said on a recent Zoom call. “We don’t know where we’re getting it from. It’s coming from someplace and I like to think that place is magical.”

Similarly, she adds, “Spirit is something that we don’t really know. We can’t really – exactly – put our finger on where it’s coming from. We just feel it. … I think that it’s a very spiritual thing to make music. It’s not necessarily religious, but it is definitely spiritual. It will connect you to a deeper part of yourself, but it will also connect you to deeper parts of other people – and to nature.”

Across her six albums in nearly twenty years, June has sung about nature plenty. The night sky, the creatures of the forest. From her rendition of a classic, “The Crawdad Song,” (2006’s The Way of the Weeping Willow) to the eagle and rooster in “You Can’t Be Told” (2013’s Pushin’ Against a Stone), to the “still waters” and “dormant seas” of “Stardust Scattering” (2021’s The Moon and the Stars: Prescriptions for Dreamers), June has turned to nature for solace, clarity, and metaphor.

Lately, though, she has been somewhat haunted by owls.

“In Tennessee,” she explains, “we have a pond behind the house and there’s a lot of wildlife. There’s muskrats and frogs and snakes and fish and all kinds [of animals]. We just went and bought like ten carp fish to go in the pond to help keep the algae down and stuff. But one morning, I was walking into the kitchen. I start my day with black tea and there’s mist on the pond in the morning, and so everything’s kind of like foggy. I’m making my tea. It’s like five o’clock in the morning and my eyes are all puffy. … There’s a window where you can see right across the pond and see this mist and everything, and there is an owl on this post of the fence on the far side. It’s just looking in at me, and I’m looking out at it.”

She and this same owl had a few more encounters after that initial one and June started thinking there was something to it. Whether it was a spirit visiting her on purpose, or just a magical coincidence that she and this creature were in the same place at the same time on a planet so full of people and creatures, there was something to this brief, recurring coexistence.

While June admits she never sits down on purpose to write a song – she opens to them and they come – the owl started to worm its way into her periphery while she was writing. She started reading everything she could find about owls, learning about their habits and idiosyncrasies. She felt like she was harnessing some owl energy as she captured the melodies that would make up this album.

“You can listen to the old blues songs,” she explains, “and you will hear about the black snake, or about the mojo, or different things like that. There’s magic in the music, if you ask me. I … enjoy being a root worker and understanding that music can shift moods. It has that power. It can start movements. It can energize people or make them feel so tender that they’re able to cry when they need to.

“I definitely feel like I work with those energies. I don’t just sing, you know. Because, I mean, there’s a lot of singers who have more beautiful-sounding voices than me. I’m weaving spells.”

Indeed, June’s spells weave their way through Owls.

One moment, she’s turning off the news to remember we’re all indelibly connected “like branches of an endless tree” (“Endless Tree”). Then, she’s breathing through doubt with “Trust the Path,” a quiet, echoic piano song that sounds like it blew in on a breeze. There’s the spoken word piece, “Superpower,” with its meditative background and dreamlike soundscape built atop her voice and producer M. Ward’s guitar, among other things. Suddenly June is clawhammering a banjo and singing about misguided love (“My Life Is a Country Song”). And finally, there’s the folky earworm song “Love and Let Go,” with its horns and piano and layered unison vocals.

The album starts with joy and ends with acceptance – which is part of joy. Though it weaves through different styles and soundscapes, there is this throughline of keeping to the path, trusting the light, sourcing the joy.

Most of this is due to June’s songwriting and performance, of course. But at least some of it can be credited to her producer Ward – the chameleon-like guitarist and singer-songwriter who has produced for and collaborated with a who’s who of indie artists. As for her experience with this particular collaboration, June doesn’t hold back when lavishing Ward with praise.

“It was kind of the most amazing experience I’ve had in making records,” she says.

“He can play anything. He’s on the vibraphones. He’s on the keys. He’s on the guitar. I mean. … [For him,] whatever genre a song wants to be is what a song is and at the end of the day I enjoy rocking out. I like turning up my electric guitar and my amp and just going crazy with this kind of like a dirty blues-rock sound. And him – he got the best tones and sounds in his guitar playing.”

The pair first decided to make a record together when they crossed paths at Newport Folk Festival. June noticed that they were on the schedule for the same day, so she texted Ward and he invited her up to sing with him.

“When I got offstage, after watching him play that blues-rock like just a genius, [my] jaw [was] on the floor. Like, that was amazing. It was just him solo, too, with like three or four different guitars up there. So I said, ‘Well, when are we gonna make this record we’ve been talking about making?’”

Two months later, they crossed paths again, this time at San Francisco’s Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival. “We were on the same day again, so auspicious,” she remembers. “And so we worked together there. He said, ‘Okay, we have to make this happen now. We’ve seen each other two times in one year.’”

Before another year passed, they were in the studio, running with the genre-defiant sounds that were pouring out of June’s magic mind.

The phrase June used to employ for describing her music was “organic moonshine roots” – a description she’s stopped using since her friend who coined it passed away. Meanwhile, her life has taken on its own metamorphoses. She has found and lost love, has branched out in new directions, has pulled in guitar, ukulele, and banjo. She has made music with artists as variant as the Avett Brothers and Blind Boys of Alabama (the latter appear in the background on Owls). When not on the road, she hosts meditation retreats and teaches mindfulness at places like the Kripalu Center for Yoga and Health in the Berkshires. She writes poetry and has published a picture book for children.

Naturally, all of this has fed her appetite for melody and it’s all added to the tapestry of sound that defines her music. There is country in there, for sure. Also some semblance of jazz, R&B, pop, and just plain individualistic, raw grit. This time around, on Owls, Omens, and Oracles, genre seems like a silly thing to even try to pin down.

During a SXSW interview in 2023, writer Wajahat Ali asked June about the ineffability of her style and she didn’t hesitate. “It’s Valerie June music,” she told him. “I’m a singer-songwriter and whatever comes out, comes out. Sometimes it is honey, sometimes it’s vinegar.”

Sometimes it’s black tea and mist on a pond, crickets chirping and muskrats scattering, an owl standing still on a post, blinking its eyes as you stand there blinking yours. It’s a reminder of what truly matters.

To June, what matters is everything.

“Are you ready to see a world where we can all be free?” she asks. “I’m ready to see a world where we can learn to disagree with each other and still live together peacefully.”

“We’re ready to see this world be a place of togetherness,” she adds later. Learning to cooperate, she says, is “not just important for humans. It’s important for all of nature. … Nature will be okay, of course, without us. But it would be nice if we could figure out ways to move toward a more cooperative existence with all [things] in nature.”


Photo Credit: Travys Owen

BGS Top 50 Moments: SXSW Brooklyn Country Cantina

It was a collaboration that quickly became one of our favorite events of the year (and definitely the best part of every marathon SXSW week): The Brooklyn Country Cantina was held for five years at Licha’s Cantina in East Austin in partnership with BGS. Featuring an ever-evolving rotation of talent, it was a launch pad for so many artists in the BGS fam, and a special laid-back underplay for those buzzworthy artists wrapping up a crazy week.

Instead of being another schmoozy networking event at SXSW, the BCC was always a reprieve away from the chaotic cacophony of downtown Austin or Congress Street — an all-ages affair where artists and fans alike got to see their friends, take a breather, and eat some really good tacos.

Below, rediscover some of our favorite moments from the Brooklyn Country Cantina, as captured by BGS photographers:

 

BGS, Yamaha Partner on SXSW Official Showcase

BGS is thrilled to partner once again with our friends at Yamaha to bring you the Yamaha Guitars x BGS SXSW Official Showcase. While this year’s music festival may look a little different than the standard event, the essence is still the same: bringing together an international community of artists and music professionals for a unique celebration, discussion, and exploration of music.

Hosted by actress and Harmonics podcast host Beth Behrs, this hour-long virtual performance features mini-sets from four artists we can’t wait to hear more from in 2021, including:

• Jade Jackson & Aubrie Sellers
• Aaron Lee Tasjan
• Katie Cole

The Yamaha Guitars x BGS showcase premieres for all SXSW virtual attendees on Saturday, March 20 at 4p PT / 6p CT and will be available to re-watch for one week.

Clips from each artist’s performance will be released via the BGS website at a later date!

To register for SXSW, visit SXSW.com

Discover more about YamahaGuitars at YamahaGuitars.com


 

Luck Reunion 2019 in Photographs

By all accounts, Luck Reunion may be the single best day of SXSW and this year they outdid themselves once again. BGS photographer Daniel Jackson was on hand through the seas of western wear and clouds of pot smoke, in the pit and behind the scenes, shooting stage photos and portraits, capturing the one-of-a-kind vibe and stellar lineup of Luck.


All photos by Daniel Jackson

Brooklyn Country Cantina 2019 in Photographs

The crowds turned out all day and all night for last Saturday’s Brooklyn Country Cantina at SXSW in Austin, Texas. Amazing music, delicious food, relaxing hangs, beautiful belts, and adorable puppies all came together to make the day a smashing success. Relive BGS’ third year co-presenting the Country Cantina with these FOMO-preventing photographs.


Lede photo by Jaki Levi

ANNOUNCING: The Eastside Doublewide at SXSW

Join BGS at the EASTSIDE DOUBLEWIDE at SXSW! 
 
The BROOKLYN COUNTRY CANTINA celebrates its 10th year at SXSW by hitching up with HANK & ED MANAGEMENT to feature over 25 americana, bluegrass, and good old fashion rock n’ roll bands on 3 alternating stages in two adjacent venues. 

BGS is proud to be the media partner at Licha’s Cantina with another jam-packed lineup anchored by a bevy of badass female artists including Caroline Rose, Lauren Ruth Ward, Sarah Shook & The Disarmers, Dead Horses, Ruby Boots, and many more.

Billy Strings closes out the very first MOSTLY STRINGS day party right next door at Latchkey, commandeering the venue with a live barber shop and carefully groomed lineup featuring Billy Strings, JP Biondo (of Cabinet), Austin bluegrass statesmen Wood & Wire, Carper Family spin-off trio The Frauleins, and the country soul of Brother Roy.

Both events are 21+ and free to the public. No SXSW wristbands or badges required.

 

THE BROOKLYN COUNTRY CANTINA

Saturday March 17, 2018
@ Licha’s Cantina
1306 E 6th St.
Austin TX
11am-Midnight

Caroline Rose | Sarah Shook & The Disarmers | Billy Strings | Lauren Ruth Ward | The Hooten Hallers | Dead Horses | The Brother Brothers | Ruby Boots | Skyway Man | The Deer | Cassandra Jenkins | Blank Range | Will Sexton & Amy LaVere | Patrick Sweany | The Sea, The Sea | Jenny Parrott | The National Reserve | Trongone Band | Amanda Avery | Brother Roy | Elijah Ocean | Greg Jamie (of O’Death) | Andrea Colburn and Mud Moseley | The Lonesome Heroes | DJ set by Vinyl Ranch | & more!


RSVP at BrooklynCountryCantina.com presented by BGS & RECORDING KING
 
(Early arrival is strongly encouraged to guarantee admittance)

#BkCantina | Tito’s Bloody Mary Breakfast starts at 11am!  

Brought to you by SIXPOINT BREWERY | LR BAGGS | RECORDING KING | TITO’S VODKA | CROSSOVER TOURING | TOPO CHICO | CUVÉE COFFEE

 


MOSTLY STRINGS
Presented by BGS and Hank & Ed
Saturday March 17, 2018
@ Latchkey
1308 E 6th St.
Austin TX
1pm-8pm

Featuring Billy Strings | Wood & Wire | JP Biondo (of Cabinet) | Brother Roy | The Frauleins | & maybe one more!

Live Barber Shop! Happy Hour at 1pm.

Brought to you by CROSSOVER TOURING | REDD’S BARBER SHOP | D’ADDARIO | TITO’S VODKA | CODIGO TEQUILA | SMOKIN’ ROSE TACO JOINT |NINE BANDED WHISKEY

RECAP: The Brooklyn Country Cantina at SXSW 2017

“This is one of the coolest, kindest, coziest, and vibey-ist things here at SXSW,” Langhorne Slim announced with a grin, as he kicked off this year’s Brooklyn Country Cantina, energizing the packed crowd that had come to enjoy the annual day-long party. The Cantina has been described by fans and musicians, alike, as a pilgrimage, a homecoming, and a reunion. In the madness of SXSW’s increasingly commercialized showcases fraught with exclusivity, the event is a welcome respite — a place to see your favorite Austin country band, discover a great new artist, and two-step under the stars. It’s a party to come to for the breakfast tacos and stay at ’til last call, all the while enjoying a full day of some of the best American roots music this country has to offer. 

Popular east side watering hole Licha’s Cantina hosts the event in a tiny, old, converted house with a canopy of trees and a porch out front perfect for margaritas, tacos, and foot-stomping music. Guests walk through the prep kitchen out back with corn tortillas cooking on an open flame and into the atmosphere of a house party with old friends.

In addition to Langhorne Slim, this year featured the Secret Sisters, Andrew Combs, the Deer, Lilly Hiatt, Valley Queen, Twain, and about two dozen more acts playing simultaneously on two stages. “It’s a little oasis in the craziness of the festival,” Michaela Anne shared after her set — the fourth year she’s played the event. “There are so many great acts back to back, you can just hang out here all day. It’s a real family-like vibe. And I get to see all my friends.”


Founded by Brooklyn country band the Defibulators and Austin musician/producer Daniel Roark, the Cantina began nine years ago as a backyard party at Rourke’s house on Austin’s south side where friends’ bands were invited to come play. It was a local stage of their own making during a festival they couldn’t officially get into, and that grassroots spirit has carried the Cantina into it’s ninth year. The party is still small (just 250 fit into Licha’s) and still free, which is important to the spirit of the day. Their aim has never been to make money, but rather to “create a party that our friends and favorite musicians would look forward to playing and hanging out at. And to help keep a foothold for progressive country music at a fest that’s typically dominated by rock and other genres.” It has evolved into a tradition that brings both locals and festival-goers back year after year. For some local folks, this is the only SXSW event they come to. They bring their kids and stay all day.

A mix of well-known acts and up-and-coming artists are invited to play, creating a place for touring musicians to play a killer gig in front of an engaged crowd and for local bands to be at the center of the action. “We always wanted to have Austin bands play,” said Jennings. “The local heroes playing the White Horse Saloon all year-round, we want to give them another platform to play for the out-of-towners, not have them feel like, when SX comes around, they’re ignored or not valued. Leo Rondeau, Croy & the Boys, Palomino Shakedown — they’ve all played multiple years, and they’re staples here. It’s really important to have the Austin country scene involved.”

When the night reached it’s a tequila-filled climax with closers the National Reserve, frontman Sean Walsh summed the party up: “The crowd here was really great, there was lots of dancing. Man, tonight was hot and fun. I love breaking a sweat.” 


Photo credit: Laura E. Partain

7 Acts to Catch at SXSW

When we think of SXSW, we’re reminded of that old saying, “It’s a marathon, not a sprint.” Because if ever there were a festival akin to running a marathon, it’s the massive, 10-day festival/conference/gigantic party that descends upon Austin, Texas, like a badge-wearing plague every March. (This year, it’s March 10 – 19, to be exact.) Although we’d head South to see Vice President Joe Biden alone, this year’s massive music lineup is quite the draw, too. 

With pages and pages of showcasing artists to sift through, choosing just who you want to see may be more exhausting than four back-to-back day parties. We’ve done some of the legwork for you and found a few BGS favorites who are slated to perform.

Nicole Atkins

Nicole Atkins is one of the newest signees to Single Lock Records — the Florence, Alabama-based label run by John Paul White and the Alabama Shakes’ Ben Tanner. Her forthcoming album, Goodnight Rhonda Lee, marries ’50s girl group vibes and vintage soul with modern production a a little bit of twang.

Sammy Brue

Sammy Brue is only 15 years old, but the Ogden, Utah, songwriter has already earned a lot more live experience than a good chunk of his older contemporaries. Now signed to New West Records, the precocious folk singer/songwriter and Justin Townes Earle protégé is prepping a new album for release this summer.

The Kernal

Another Single Lock-er, the Kernal cut his teeth as a sideman for left-of-center country arists like Andrew Combs and Jonny Fritz. His recently released album, Light Country, considers his family legacy — his father played the Grand Ole Opry — as well as how it shaped his identity as a musician.

Andrew Combs

We’re always excited to catch Andrew Combs live, but we’re especially stoked on the heels of his announcement of Canyons of Mind, a new album coming out April 7. Combs’s poetic lyrics and haunting vocals make him one of our favorite songwriters around today.

Max Gomez

Taos, New Mexico, songwiter Max Gomez first got attention when he released his debut album, Rule the World, to critical acclaim in 2013. Now, fresh off a run of dates with the inimitiable Chuck Prophet, he’s preparing to release Me & Joe, a new collection that builds on the Western-tinged storytelling of his first.

Sunny Sweeney

Sunny Sweeney is one of our finest working songwriters, country or otherwise. Her new album, Trophy, is her best work yet, a stunning collection of deeply human songs that reminds us just affecting good music can be. She’s an Austinite, too, so don’t miss this chance to catch her on her home turf.

Valerie June

If psych-soul rocker Valerie June’s singular voice isn’t enough of a draw (and it should be), her nine-piece band ought to get your attention. When June hits SX, she’ll be fresh off the release of her new album, The Order of Time, so keep an ear out for new tunes.


Lede photo by Danny Clinch

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ANNOUNCING: The 2017 Brooklyn Country Cantina at SXSW

Yes, it’s true: The Brooklyn Country Cantina is returning to Austin on Saturday, March 18, at Licha’s Cantina (1306 E. 6th Street). This year, the Cantina will host 24 established and emerging Americana, roots, and progressive country artists, on two stages from noon to midnight providing a house-party style oasis amid the mayhem of SXSW.

RSVP right here, right now!

Lilly Hiatt kicks off in the courtyard at high noon with a “cura-cruda” (hangover cure) breakfast of Tito’s Bloody Marys, Sixpoint Micheladas, Nitro Cold Brew Coffee from Cuvée, and breakfast tacos by Licha’s chef Daniel Brooks. Doors open at 11 am, so come get a comfy spot.

The rest of the 2017 artist line-up: The Secret Sisters, Andrew Combs, Scott H. Biram, Valley Queen, Sammy Brue, Lilly Hiatt, All Our Exes Live in Texas, Christopher Paul Stelling, Michaela Anne, Cat Clyde, the Go Rounds, the Brother Brothers, Cory Branan, Sarah Shook & the Disarmers, Cale Tyson, the Howlin’ Brothers, Croy and the Boys, the Whiskey Gentry, Palomino Shakedown, Leo Rondeau, Elijah Ocean, the National Reserve, and Twain, plus a midnight DJ Set from Vinyl Ranch!

PRESENTED BY: Sixpoint Brewery, Skinny Dennis, L.R. Baggs, Recording King Guitars, Prater Day Entertainment, and Tito’s Vodka

Produced and curated by the Defibulators and Daniel Roark

Beat the Winter Blues with These Kick-Ass Festivals

Ah, Winter. Thanks to cold weather, holiday hangovers, and the looming dread of tax season, Winter often gets a bad rap for being the worst of the four seasons. If you're looking for ways to beat those Winter blues, we at the BGS recommend one cure-all for all your ails: live music. While Spring and Summer are typically considered festival seasons, there are a handful of great festivals to be found in Winter, too. Check out some of our favorites.

WinterWonderGrass Colorado

In addition to a host of amazing beer options (a few of which you can check out here), WinterWonderGrass Colorado boasts a February 19 – 21 lineup with the likes of Greensky Bluegrass, the Wood Brothers, the Travelin' McCourys, and more. And don't miss WinterWonderGrass Tahoe, which happens in April.

Back Porch Festival

There's nothing like a good time out on the back porch, and that's just what this festival seeks to recreate. Head to Northampton, Massachusetts, from Feb 25 – 28 for music from Steep Canyon Rangers, Los Lobos, and more, all at the Parlor Room and the Academy of Music.

Wintergrass Music Festival

This Bellevue, Washington, festival has it all, from performances by Jerry Douglas and the Earls of Leicester, the Seldom Scene, and more, to workshops on the Carters and idiot-proof mandolin lessons. Check it out February 25 – 28.

Folk Alliance International

A conference AND a festival, Folk Alliance International, held February 17 – 21 in Kansas City, Missouri, lets you learn while you listen!

The Outlaw Country Cruise

Lucinda Williams, Steve Earle, and Bobby Bare, Jr. … all on a boat! This cruise sets sail from Miami, Florida, on February 7 and is bound to have you singing "I'm On a Boat" to all your landlocked friends.

SXSW 2016

No need to explain this one: SXSW is one of the biggest festivals around, in one of the coolest cities around. Nothing beats those Winter blues like tacos, beer, and all the live music you can handle. Head to Austin, Texas, March 15 – 20 for SXSW Music.

And keep an eye out for these festivals, which have already happened, when they roll back around next year …

30A Songwriters Festival

A weekend at one of the country's most beautiful beaches AND 150+ established and upcoming songwriters? Sign us up. Unfortunately, the 2016 30A Songwriters Festival has come and gone, but hey, if you go ahead and book a beach house for next year, you're bound to get a damn good price! 

Cayamo Cruise

This journey out to see with Buddy Miller and a handful of his most talented friends is a can't-miss experience. Missed the boat this year? Tide yourself over until the 2017 cruise with the just-released Cayamo Sessions at Sea by Buddy Miller & Friends.


Lede photo by Sandra Dahdah for BGS, all other photos courtesy of the festivals