The Show on the Road – Mipso

This week, we feature one of the leading roots-pop bands working today: Mipso. An affable and endlessly-creative quartet formed in Chapel Hill, NC, they are made up of fiddle player Libby Rodenbough, mandolinist Jacob Sharp, guitarist Joseph Terrell, and bassist Wood Robinson.


LISTEN: APPLE PODCASTSSPOTIFY • STITCHERMP3

Despite the anxious mood of their swing-state home base, it’s quite an exciting time for Mipso. Host Z. Lupetin was able to catch up with Libby and Jacob (via Zoom of course) to discuss their lushly orchestrated, self-titled record which just dropped last week; and if you walk down 8th Avenue in Nashville this week, you might catch a billboard with their sheepish grins large in the sky.

How did they get here? It’s hard to find a group where every member can effortlessly sing lead and write genre-bending songs that fit seamlessly on six acclaimed albums — and counting — in under ten years. Earlier standout records like the breakout Dark Holler Pop, produced by fellow North Carolinian Andrew Marlin of Mandolin Orange, and Edges Run, which features a veritable online hit in the broken-voiced, emotional “People Change,” show how Mipso appeals not only to folk fest-loving moms and dads, but also their edgier kids, who appreciate their subversive turns of phrase and playful gender-ambiguous, neon-tinted wardrobe.

As Z. found out during his conversation with Libby and Jacob, the band nearly broke up after a series of grueling 150-shows-a-year runs, a scary car wreck, and the pressure of putting out Edges Run for their rapidly growing fanbase. The forced slower pace of this last year and a half has been a gift in several ways — allowing the group to catch their breath and hole up to write more collaboratively than ever. The shimmering sonic backdrop that gifted producer and musician Sandro Perri was able to bring to the Mipso sessions at Echo Mountain studio in Asheville really makes the songs feel like they could exist in any era.

You wouldn’t be alone if you heard the connection between the honey-hooked newest record with the timeless, mellow-with-a-hint-of-menace hits of the 1970s (looking at you James Taylor and Carly Simon). Songs like “Never Knew You Were Gone” show off Terrell’s gift for gently asking the deepest questions, like where he might go when he transitions to the other side in a “silvery fire,” or the sardonically nostalgic “Let A Little Light In,” which wonders if the soft-focused images we have of the peaceful, boomtime 1990s (when Mipso was growing up) could use some real scrutiny. Rodenbough’s silky fiddle work stars throughout –and her courageous, vulnerable lead vocal on “Your Body” may be the most memorable moment on the new work.

Stick around to the end of the episode to hear mandolinist Jacob Sharp introduce his favorite contribution, “Just Want To Be Loved.”


Photo credit: D.L. Anderson

The Show On The Road – The Lone Bellow

This week, Z. Lupetin speaks to the founding trio of one the most respected and sought after folk-rock bands in the country, The Lone Bellow.

LISTEN: APPLE PODCASTS • MP3

Their hedonistically heavenly harmonies have lifted them from playing tiny bars around their founding home base of Brooklyn, New York to adoring audiences at venerable venues like Red Rocks Amphitheatre, the Apollo, and The Ryman Auditorium, in their new home of Nashville, Tennessee. The Lone Bellow have a rapport that is intimate, hilarious, and — when it calls for it — deadly serious. The band is full of so much heart and genuine insight that you can’t help but lean in and listen.

The Show On The Road – The Slocan Ramblers

This week, Z. speaks with The Slocan Ramblers. This fearless, fleet-fingered string band is adventurously advancing the high lonesome sound of bluegrass to great acclaim, and not from the states where it’s known best, but in a lakeside folk hotbed that has become a cosmopolitan music mecca of Canada — Toronto.

LISTEN: APPLE PODCASTS • MP3

Their newest string odyssey, Queen City Jubilee — featuring a lovable zombie on its painted cover — was recently nominated for a Juno Award for traditional roots album. Make sure you stick around to hear the band doing a musical experiment where Z. asks them to each musically respond to a slightly offensive Cards Against Humanity prompt.

The Show On The Road – Freddy & Francine

This week, host Z Lupetin’s conversation is with Freddy & Francine (aka Lee Ferris and Bianca Caruso), a deeply soulful duo who have been lifting up audiences around the world with their gather-round-one-mic harmonies and been-through-hell-and-back love songs.

LISTEN: APPLE PODCASTS • MP3

Z. talks about Lee singing on Broadway and snaking through the gauntlet of substance abuse and Bianca finding her voice after too many years of dead-end jobs and giving herself the permission to let her voice lead her as an artist.

TEN QUESTIONS FOR… The Dustbowl Revival

The Dustbowl Revival (Caitlin and Zach, second and third from left) at SM Farmers Market

In Woody Allen’s most recent film foray, Midnight in Paris (2011), Owen Wilson’s character, Gil, is transported from the modern streets of Montmartre to jazz age Paris, submerged into the sights and sounds and magic of the era.  My first experience seeing The Dustbowl Revival was not unlike this:  from the moment I stepped into the speakeasy atmosphere of Downtown LA’s Villains Tavern, surrounded by the sweet, nostalgic sound of bandleader Zach Lupetin’s cacophony, I was transported to another time and place entirely.  They played well into the wee hours, but their bluegrass-gypsy-blues-swing mix was stuck in my head long after I left the vicinity.  I recently met with Zach and lead singer Caitlin Doyle over dinner and quizzed them with ten questions…

HOW DID YOU GET STARTED IN THIS STYLE OF MUSIC?

Zach:  I grew up in Chicago, and most of the stuff I was inspired by came through my dad, starting with the blues– Muddy Waters, Paul Butterfield, and later Benny Goodman, The Allman Brothers, etc.  For me, everything starts with the blues, including bluegrass, western swing– they’re all different flowers from the same seed.  And that stuff that bridges the gap–the Dead, Dylan, Joe Cocker, even the Beatles and the Stones–they all started with a blues and Americana core–always with that knowledge of the original.  I got turned on to bluegrass in college at the University of Michigan.  Once I moved to LA I put up an ad on Craigslist saying this is the music I want to do and this is how I want to do it.  By luck I had some really good people get in touch.  That was three years ago.

Caitlin:  I grew up with a family who played the Grateful Dead and Tom Petty in the van on these epic road trips.  They didn’t really get jazz, but I loved it.  I was always singing and I studied jazz in college.  On one hand, I find jazz completely creative, on another it’s completely stifling–everyone thinks they’re a singer, you know?  I was always searching for something different.  So when I moved back to LA after college, I saw the Craigslist ad, and I’ve been with them ever since.

WHAT BROUGHT YOU TO LA?

Zach:  I moved out here with a degree in film.  I had already lived in New York, but I needed to be near the ocean.  The music thing has just taken on a life of its own.  You know, in this town, you say you have a screenplay and people are skeptical.  But if you’ve got a horn section and a good song, chances are people are going to think it’s awesome.

Caitlin:  I moved out here because of Will Smith.  I remember being here when I was younger, and seeing this massive ad on the side of a building off Sunset for Wild Wild West, and just knew I had to live here.  This place can be larger than life.

WHAT ARE YOUR INFLUENCES AS A BAND?

Zach:  From a songwriting perspective– Dylan, Count Basie, Muddy Waters, Mahalia Jackson and gospel music. 

Caitlin:  Performance wise, Ella Fitzgerald, Lena Horne.  It’s not always a particular person.  It’s more about letting go of fear and just singing.

HOW WOULD YOU DEFINE YOUR SOUND?

Zach:  I’d say we’re a mixture of bluegrass, New Orleans swing, and Chicago blues.  Not unlike what Preservation Hall Jazz Band or Del McCoury band are doing now–where you have some genres that you might not think fit but end up working together beautifully. 

WHAT ARE YOUR FAVORITE MUSIC STORES IN THE CITY?

Zach:  Truetone and McCabes in Santa Monica [NOTE: the band plays McCabes on July 30–tickets here],  and Record Surplus, which is where I get a lot of vinyl.  There’s just not a lot of very good vinyl stores anymore.

WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE DRINK?

Zach:  Red wine.  And pickle shots–it’s a New York thing with a shot of Jameson and a shot of pickle juice.

Caitlin:  Whatever we have a drink ticket for or whatever a sailor will buy me.

WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE VENUE TO PLAY IN LA?

Caitlin:  Cinema Bar–it’s our living room–we’ve been playing there ever since the band started.

Zach:  It depends–each one has it’s own charm.  We’ve had some great shows at The Mint.  But it’s really the crowd that makes the venue.  The crowds at Villains have been amazing.  But ultimate venue?  Amnesia in San Francisco–wow.

IF YOU DIDN’T LIVE IN LA, WHERE WOULD YOU BE BASED?

Zach:  Maybe back in New York.  In an ideal world, I’d be based in multiple places.

WHAT WOULD BE YOUR LAST MEAL IN LOS ANGELES?

Zach:  It would involve soft shell steamer clams at the Blue Plate Oysterette and the salted butterscotch pudding at Gjelina in Venice.

Caitlin:  Street dog… with extra jalapenos.

WHAT ARE YOUR CURRENT OBSESSIONS?

Zach:  Bowling. I just joined a bowling league.  I bought a ball and shoes and everything.  Any my new autoharp from McCabes.

Caitlin:  Bell Brigade.  Reruns of Roseanne.  Buying clothes at thrift stores and taking them in–it’s so fun and cheap.

The Dustbowl Revival’s new album, Holy Ghost Station, comes out this month.  You can see them this weekend at Make Music Pasadena, in addition to a slew of other places around and outside of LA.  You can check out the rest of their schedule on Facebook, Twitter, or go directly to their website http://www.dustbowlrevival.com.

SHOW PREVIEW: The Dustbowl Revival’s LA Record Release

2013 is shaping up to be a big year for THE DUSTBOWL REVIVAL. The Venice-based collective of folk musicians kicked things off in early February playing their unique brand of roots music on the Mountain Song at Sea bluegrass cruise – right alongside superstars like Del McCoury, Punch Brothers and David Grisman. Now on Thursday, April 18, they’re releasing their second LP, Carry Me Home, with a free release party at The Edison in downtown LA that’s sure to stretch into the early hours of the morning.

The group is a constantly evolving community of folk musicians – an ever-growing melting pot of bluegrass, jug-band, gospel, swing, blues and just about anything else. “We have a lot of genres and influences floating around in this band – I think this album tries to embrace all of them and give them a bigger, brasher sound then before,” says Dustbowl frontman Zach Lupetin about Carry Me Home. Over 26 musicians recorded for the new album and the resulting collision of different musicians and influences is part of what makes it so riveting. The tunes on the album span from old-time to jazz, but still feel as if they originate from the same musical voice. Take for example, the spirited, fiddle tune-inspired “Soldier’s Joy” and the horn-infused Motown number “Josephine.” Regardless of genre, the band’s playful and adventurous love of musical exploration shines through.

“I’ll admit it isn’t always easy,” says Lupetin about managing the band’s size and identity. ”It’s a risk to continue this collective experiment in this way, but for me it’s about bringing together all the talents and diversity in L.A.’s roots and jazz communities in one place.”

Lupetin expects that ‘this summer is going to be a bit of a proving ground for (the group)” as they embark on their biggest tour yet. The band will be travelling all over the west coast, playing Colorado, Montana, Oregon and Washington, as well as making their first collective trip to the east coast.  “My hope is that our music and energy can spread out far and wide,’ Lupetin states.  And if tonight’s celebration is any example, there will be plenty of music and energy to take them wherever they want to go.

Learn more about The Dustbowl Revival, their April 18 record release party in LA, and their brand new album Carry Me Home at dustbowlrevival.com/