Jessica Mitchell: Just One Song That Closed a Chapter

Editor’s Note: Jessica Mitchell will take part in the Bluegrass Situation Takeover at The Long Road festival, to be held September 6-8 in Stanford Hall, Leicestershire, England.

I was on my first writing trip to Los Angeles to try and write the last couple of songs for my first record. It was an array of different songs written over the course of five years so it was all over the place emotionally and storywise, but I liked that about it.

I got into a session on one of my last few days with an amazing writer named Matthew Puckett. He did everything from Broadway to film and TV writing and was definitely a new and exciting kind of writing partner for me. We talked about a lot of things, but mostly talked about a very tough and difficult relationship that had just ended, and that I had made a decision to stop putting myself in situations that weren’t healthy or that didn’t benefit my overall well-being as a woman.

“Rain for the River” was born, and very quickly. It flowed out of us. A beautiful piano backdrop with some of my favorite lyrics I’ve ever written with anyone.

We recorded a demo in the moment that turned out so raw and had this crack in my voice trying not to cry the entire time.

I remember listening back to it and thinking, This is it, this is the last song on the record. Not only just for the record, it felt complete and true for that chapter of my life.

I’ll never forget that.

Rose Cousins: Just One Song Before the Relationship Ends

Editor’s Note: Rose Cousins will take part in the Bluegrass Situation Takeover at The Long Road festival, to be held September 6-8 in Stanford Hall, Leicestershire, England.

“One of the most vulnerable songs I’ve written is “Chosen.” I had the steady, rhythmic guitar feel for this for a couple years before I wrote it. I was in the Iqaluit, Nunavut, the Canadian Arctic, in November of 2013. I remember feeling exhausted and being comforted by the meditative pulse of the one string of the guitar as I stood out at the sunny, freezing tundra. I knew that it would turn into something.

“At the beginning of 2015 I was writing in LA and deep into questioning if I had what it took to follow through with a certain relationship and it was such a vulnerable place to be. I wanted so much to be brave enough and I also wanted to run. I wanted to live up to the person I was perceived to be and I didn’t know if I could. Vulnerability is painful and I find it very tough. I suppose I was afraid of failure and disappointment. I remember crying from my gut while writing the song as the truth of the matter came out through the question that kept coming up; wondering if I had what it took to be someone’s person. The steady rhythm of the guitar was the comforting backdrop to these tender thoughts.

“I find this song connects with people in different ways depending on where they are in their lives and it’s also one that I have everyone sing along with at the end. The writing of this song was sort of like a new permission to and for myself to go a bit deeper and more vulnerable in my writing. I’m thankful for it.” — Rose Cousins


Photo credit:Shervin Lainez

Matt the Electrician: Just One Song Motivated by a Healthy Sense of Competition

Editor’s Note: Matt the Electrician will take part in the Bluegrass Situation Takeover at The Long Road festival, to be held September 6-8 in Stanford Hall, Leicestershire, England.

In 2007 I was asked to travel to Japan and play a tour of a dozen shows or so. It was my first time there, and actually only my second time out of the US — the first being a short drive into Vancouver, BC a few years earlier. In the subsequent years between, I have toured Japan nearly every year, with a total of 11 trips to date. But at the time, I was a newbie to international traveling, and filled with equal parts wonder and terror. My tour manager/booker/promoter was a man named Shuichi Iwami. I had met Shu a few years before in Austin, at SXSW, and he told me then that he would bring me to Japan someday. He kept his promise.

Shuichi lives in the city of Kure, which is very close to Hiroshima. A few days into the tour, we took a train to Osaka for a gig. When we exited the train station, it was raining, we were carrying guitars and suitcases, and I followed as Shuichi led the way, Mapquest in hand. We walked for what felt like a long time. And in what felt like circles. Eventually, as we started to really get wet, Shu turned to me and said, “I think I am lost. I do not know Osaka very well.” He then directed me to take a seat on the front stoop of a brownstone with the luggage, and said, “Wait here, I will go find the hotel, and then come back and get you.”

Only as he was nearly a block away, did it occur to me, that perhaps this was it. Maybe I now lived in Japan. Bear in mind that while this was not pre-cell phone era, it was pre-smartphone, so while in Japan my little flip phone (it didn’t take pictures either) was mostly useless. I sat on that stoop wondering what my new life in Japan would bring. I watched girls riding by on bicycles while holding umbrellas.

After a while, Shu returned and we walked to the hotel. While he was checking us in, I decided to check my MySpace page on the computer in the lobby. There was a message from my songwriter/bass playing friend Tom Freund. He asked what I was doing, I responded, “I’m in Osaka in the rain.” He wrote me back immediately. “If you don’t write that song right now, then I will.” So I went immediately up to my room and wrote my song, “Osaka in the Rain”

Most importantly, I wrote the song before Tom could write it. I beat him. And if history has taught us anything, it’s that songwriting is a competition, and the scoring is based on speed.


Photo credit: Allison Narro

ANNOUNCING: BGS Takeover at the Long Road Fest

BGS is thrilled to announce this year’s lineup for the Bluegrass Situation Takeover at the Long Road Festival, to be held September 6-8 in Stanford Hall, Leicestershire, England.

Performers will include Rose Cousins, Matt the Electrician, Jessica Mitchell, and Beth Rowley. In addition, the festival will feature a Nashville-style “In the Round” set at the BGS Songwriters Parlour.

The three-day festival will also offer performances from Rhiannon Giddens, Asleep at the Wheel, Suzy Bogguss, Sam Outlaw, John Paul White, Charley Crockett, and many others.

Get more information and purchase tickets here.

The Bluegrass Situation Returns to The Long Road

The Bluegrass Situation and BGS-UK return for a second year to The Long Road with the creation of the BGS Songwriters Cafe on Sunday, September 8. The three-day festival, set for September 6-8 in Leicestershire, England, takes place at Stratford Hall. (Ticket information available here.)

Continuing the long tradition of great listening room venues such as The Bluebird Cafe in Nashville, The Troubadour in Los Angeles, and The Gaslight in New York, BGS will bring together some of today’s best roots songwriters from the US, Canada, and the UK, culminating in a one-of-a-kind in-the-round session, swapping stories and songs. Artist lineup and more details will available soon on the BGS-UK Facebook page.

The Long Road Festival will feature performances by Rhiannon Giddens, Asleep at the Wheel (making their first full-band appearance in the UK in more than 10 years), The Cactus Blossoms, Charley Crockett, Sam Outlaw, The Steel Woods, and John Paul White, as well as some of the leading UK country, Americana and roots artists including The Hanging Stars, CoCo and The Butterfields, Jake Morrell and Peter Bruntnell. A number of mainstream country artists will also appear.

The Long Road’s Creative Director, Baylen Leonard stated, “I couldn’t be more excited to share what we have in store for year two of The Long Road. After such a warm embrace by Country and Americana fans in year one, we got straight to work on the line-up and experience for this year and it promises to be even better. Top notch artists, hands on experiences, and great food, all in a world created just for music fans really is something special. I can’t wait for the gates to open.”

In addition to BGS-UK, the following organizations are returning with festival partnerships: The Birthplace of Country Music, which showcases the role that Bristol, Tennessee and Bristol, Virginia played in the birth and development of country music; The Americana Music Association UK; and independent UK label Loose Records. These organizations will bring artists to the festival to showcase the broad array of talent across the global country, Americana and roots music scene.

Learn more about the festival at www.thelongroad.com.

The Long Road Ahead: A Visit With Danni Nicholls

Take heed, all Americana fans in the UK. Danni Nicholls will be taking the stage on the final day of the Long Road Festival at Stanford Hall in Leicestershire. Leading up to her appearance, the talented singer-songwriter fielded a few questions from The Bluegrass Situation.

As a performer, what do you enjoy most about festivals?

I think the collective good energy that you usually find at festivals is my favourite thing. Everyone has come together to have a good time and that can be infectious. I’ll usually get to bump into friends/fellow artists too which is always lovely. I love to go off and try to discover great new music too.

The life of a touring musician is certainly unpredictable. How do you like to pass the time when you have a couple of free hours on the road?

Ha, sure is! I like to try to see a bit of the place I’m playing in – not just the inside of the venue. I’ll usually go for a wander if there’s some time to kill, and try not to get too lost! I’ve stumbled across some beautiful, memorable places that way.

Do you consider yourself a collector of guitars? And do you have a favorite one that you like to use when you write songs?

I wouldn’t consider myself a collector as such but I do have quite a few that I’ve acquired over the years! My prized possession is my first ever guitar which I inherited from my uncle Heathcliffe when I was 16. It’s a stunning Burns London 1964 shortscale jazz guitar. A real beaut. But my main touring guitar is an acoustic parlour, a Tanglewood TW73 E called Meryl. She’s feisty but sweet and mellow when you get to know her. She’s my favourite for writing on as well as playing live.

How did your grandmother’s record collection influence the kind of music you’re writing and recording now?

Massively! The music that filled her house and so many family parties was mostly American roots – lots of country, soul and rock n roll. It’s deep rooted in my soul and my music. Feels like home.

How would you describe your first visit to Nashville?

Unforgettable. Really – it was like a dream, I remember walking down a side street and turning onto Broadway where so many of my heroes have walked and known so well and feeling this rush of energy and joy. Seeing the Ryman, Tootsies where the likes of Patsy Cline would have hung out before crossing over to Ernest Tubb’s place. My first night in the city I ended up on stage in two of the bars singing old country songs being backed by these incredible musical strangers and I felt so welcome and included. I was hooked and have explored and fallen in love with many more parts of the city since then and I’m so grateful to have had that opportunity.

What are you working on now?

I just returned from Nashville where I have recorded my third studio album with the wonderful, talented Jordan Brooke Hamlin (Indigo Girls, Lucy Wainwright-Roche) at the new and wondrous studio MOXE, out in the woods just north of the city. I’m very excited to be getting it into shape to send off out into the world in early 2019.

When you finish a song that you’re proud of, who is the first person that gets to hear it?

My cat, Winnie. Yes I think of her as a person. I should maybe address that.

For those people who come to see you at the Long Road Festival, what do you hope they take away from that experience?

I hope they can find some connection, some resonance perhaps. By going out singing my truth I hope to contribute to raising positive vibrations, so I hope they walk away with a little lift, a smile, or at least a bit of one of the songs stuck in their heads.


Photo courtesy of the artist

BGS Preview: The Long Road Festival in the UK

As this is being written, we’re on our way to the UK to prepare for our FIRST EVER international stage takeover, taking place next weekend at The Long Road Festival, in Leicestershire (near Birmingham). It’s a milestone event for BGS, and part of a larger initiative to reach our dedicated audience outside North America and shed light on some incredible talent that is putting their own spin on folk and roots traditions from other parts of the globe.

To prepare for The Long Road, held Sept. 7-9, we’ve summed up the top stuff we can’t wait to see and do while we’re in town. Hope some of you can join us to check out these highlights too:

1) That lineup tho…
With main stage appearances ranging from Carrie Underwood and Lee Ann Womack to Billy Bragg and Joshua Hedley, TLR is representing a variety of talent from commercial [read: Pop] Country to Americana with a capital A. The lines between roots and country music seem a bit more blurred over here, and we can’t wait to see how it all comes together.

2) Birmingham
Less than an hour from the festival lies the city of Birmingham. What was once a hardened industrialist town is now a breeding ground for creatives and start-ups, fostering one of the youngest populations in Europe (nearly 40 percent of the population is under 25). There’s plenty to discover here — from the old Custard Factory market to four (4!) Michelin-starred restaurants — so it’s a great stopover before or after the festival weekend.

3) AMA-UK stage takeover
Friday kicks off the fest with our friends at Americana Music-UK curating a stage featuring their freshest crop of British Americana talent. (Stay tuned to the BGS site for an announcement highlighting an upcoming collaboration with that team very soon….)

4) Moonshine + whiskey tastings?!
Say no more. You can find us in the Honky Tonk for more than just the BGS stage…

5) Stanford Hall
This is not your mama’s country festival. TLR is held on the grounds of Stanford Hall, a 400-year-old stately home in the heart of Leicestershire, sitting on over 700 acres of expansive parkland. Not too shabby!

6) Born in Bristol film screening
Produced and presented by the Birthplace of Country Music, retracing the 90 years since the recording of the original Bristol Sessions the resounding impact that music has had on the world, the documentary features the likes of Dolly Parton, Vince Gill, Eric Church, Emmylou Harris, Steve Earle, Marty Stuart, Sheryl Crow, and Doyle Lawson. Special screenings of the film will take place on site at TLR.

7) The Bluegrass Situation Takeover at the Honky Tonk stage on Sunday, September 9 (DUH!)
Featuring a cavalcade of fierce females from three different continents, our BGS-curated stage highlights everything ranging from bluegrass (Cardboard Fox) to country (Ashley Campbell, Angaleena Presley) to folk (Dori Freeman, Worry Dolls) to Americana (Danni Nicholls, Ruby Boots). It’s gonna be great. You can check out the full day’s schedule below:

13:05-13:45: Danni Nicholls
14:10-14:50: Ashley Campbell
15:15-15:55: Worry Dolls
16:20-17:00: Angaleena Presley
17:25-18:05: Cardboard Fox
18:30-19:10: Ruby Boots
19:35-20:15: Dori Freeman

Discover more about The Long Road and stay in the know by liking our BGS-UK Facebook page.

Purchase tickets for The Long Road.

Baylen’s Brit Pick: Elles Bailey

Artist: Elles Bailey
Hometown: Bristol, England
Latest Album: Wildfire

Sounds Like: Mollie Marriott, Jo Harman, Bonnies Tyler and Raitt, with a touch of Amy Winehouse.

Why You Should Listen: I love a husky voice and Elles Bailey has it in spades. Of course a voice that sounds like it’s had more nights out than me and smoked more cigarettes than Maggi Hambling (art school reference for you there) isn’t enough to make a great album, as wonderful as that voice may be.

So it’s good news that Elles combines that voice with sharp-edged lyrics, a soulful bluesy sound, country roots sensibilities, and top notch musicianship. Combine all that with a contemporary edge and you’ve got yourself a great new hope of British music. The smokey voice, by the way, doesn’t come from either cigarettes or art school; it’s the result of a stint in hospital when she was a child. Elles doesn’t dwell on that though and neither should we. It’s just another reminder of how sometimes light comes from darkness; she’s embraced it, turned it to her advantage.

I’d known of Elles for awhile and played her on my radio shows plenty but I only got to catch her live at the opening party for last month’s Nashville Meets London festival, and she blew the roof off the place. She has an easy, engaging stage presence and is the only artist in three years of the festival to start her set at a grand piano. A grand piano always adds a bit of oomph doesn’t it? She’s also a dab hand at a self-deprecating story, which makes you love her all the more.

All that aside, she could just stand stock still centre stage and sing her songs and that would be plenty, they are that good. Her latest album Wildfire was produced by Brad Nowell, tracked in Nashville, and features Grammy Award-winning guitarist Brent Mason and Musicians Hall of Fame keyboard player Bobby Wood, so all the boxes are checked in the Real Deal category. She’s appearing at The Long Road festival in England in September, thank God it’s an outdoor festival, I don’t think the insurance would cover another roof blown off by Elles Bailey.

As a radio and TV host, Baylen Leonard has presented country and Americana shows, specials, and commentary for BBC Radio 2, Chris Country Radio, BBC Radio London, BBC Radio 2 Country, BBC Radio 4, BBC Scotland, Monocle 24, and British Airways, as well as promoting artists through his work with the Americana Music Association UK, the Nashville Meets London Festival, and the Long Road (the UK’s newest outdoor country, Americana, and roots festival). Follow him on Twitter: @HeyBaylen


Photo credit: Alex Berger

Get Back to the Start: A Conversation With The Wandering Hearts

With exceptional harmonies and a talent for tapping into complex emotions, The Wandering Hearts are breaking – in a good way. Earlier this month, the UK band sang at the Grand Ole Opry and Ryman Auditorium in Nashville and at Graceland in Memphis, courtesy of one of their biggest champions, Marty Stuart. And this summer the band will appear at a number of high-profile festivals in the UK, including Black Deer and The Long Road Festival.

All this activity follows the February 2018 release of their dynamic debut album, Wild Silence. On a Friday morning in Nashville, all four members – Tara (Tara Wilcox), Chess (Francesca Whiffin), AJ (Alexander John Dean-Revington) and Tim (Timothy Prottey-Jones) – nestled on a couch to introduce their compelling music to listeners on both sides of the Atlantic. They’re already eager to return to Nashville for an official showcase at Americanafest in September.

I wanted to talk about “Wish I Could” first, because of the line that says, “I know I messed up at the finish / I need to get back to the start.” I think that’s a universal feeling. What were you hoping to capture when you wrote that song?

AJ: I guess it really, any kind of situation that everyone has probably found themselves in where you’ve gone as far as you can possibly go with something. And with hindsight, you can look back and go, “There are a million ways that I could have done this differently. Perhaps if I had done it differently the outcome would have been better for everyone.” But inevitably, whatever mistakes or decisions have been made, it got to a point where you just can’t do anything about it. It’s begun that downward spiral and you can’t get back out of it again.

Tara: When we wrote that, it was one of the first songs we wrote as a band. We didn’t know each other very well. And through songwriting, it’s not only cathartic, but it’s a really great way of getting to know one another. And sadly, breakups are a universal thing and a big learning curve. So really it was something that all of us could go, “Oh, I recognize lying in bed with somebody and having a life with them but feeling like I’m on another side of the world to them.” All that imagery and stuff was universal for the four of us and consequently, probably for everyone else.

You didn’t know each other that well when all this started happening. So suddenly you’re opening up yourself in songwriting pretty quickly. What was that experience like?

Chess: I think it’s quite scary because sometimes the deepest, darkest thoughts that you have about things, or when you experience things, you don’t always talk about. And when it comes to songwriting, that’s the stuff that you want to write about. So you don’t really have an option to keep that and go, “Oh, I’m probably not going to say anything about that,” because actually that could be gold to a song. I think across the board, we always write from a place of truth and it doesn’t feel right when we don’t.

AJ: You’re always going to have, with writing, that slight reservation or fear of judgment in a way, particularly when we didn’t really know each other very well. Because you don’t know how people are going to react, especially when you’re like open and baring all that heart and soul and going, “Hey, this happened to me,” or, “I did this,” or, “I feel this way about something.” You never know if that’s going to be the nail in the coffin. Everyone goes, “Well, you’re an idiot. Your experiences are rubbish!” I think creative people probably always have a little bit of that anxiety or nerves about that anyways.

Tara: It’s nice because everyone in the band is keeping your stuff safe. I feel it’s a bit like when you go to a therapy session, that what you say in the room, stays in the room. And so actually the stuff that we talk about doesn’t come back and become fodder for conversation at a pub or at a bar.

Tim: It just gets put on an album the world to hear. (all laugh)

I watched a lot your videos and the one for “Devil” was especially interesting. Where did you film it?

Tim: We should probably make you guess, because we think it obviously looks quite American in style. But no, it’s in Kent. It was about, I don’t know, an hour south of London maybe? It was a very unusual place. The last thing you kind of expect to see driving through some fields in Kent is basically this Western town that’s been built called Laredo. It had all working features, it had a little bank. It had, like, a saloon, a funeral home, a pharmacy, a dentist, gun shop, library – and no electricity! Which is difficult when you’re filming a video.

I think the video on the whole was a tiny bit tongue-in-cheek for us, just because we’re obviously not American. I think that’s very clear for anyone that’s seen us live or anyone who knows us. They know that we are very much trying to stick to our British roots. But the roots of our music happen to be probably American, to a certain degree. So it was a little bit tongue-in-cheek, having a massive American flag behind us. It stoked a few fires, I think. We enjoyed that.

Do you like stoking the fire, keeping people guessing?

Tara: I think it’s just funny. Not on purpose, but it’s just funny how it happens. Every time we meet somebody, it’s an opportunity and you don’t know what that’s going to be. But the four of us, we met up and we were just writing some songs and drinking some gin – and we’ve done that with other people before. Or we’ve done it once and it wasn’t a good idea. And with the four of us, it just works. It’s that serendipity.

So then when we started doing music, people would say, “What kind of music do you do?” And it’s just kind of what you hear it as. We’ve got four very different personalities, very different musical influences, and that makes up our sound. So when Tim talks about stoking fires, it’s just interesting because some people will go, “Oh my god, you guys are the best country band!” Someone will go, “Oh my god, they are not a country band!” And some will go, “They’re folk” and “They’re not!” We just end up smiling, and it’s like, “We are what you want to call it.” But essentially, we are the sound that we make when the four of us get together. But it is funny because some people are passionate that we are one thing – and equally passionate that we are not! (all laugh)

Tim: But, I would say not here [in the US]. Everyone has just been so gracious and has enjoyed our music because it’s just music.

Here we just say, “That’s Americana!” Another video I watched was “Burning Bridges.” What was it about that concept that appealed to you?”

AJ: Meji (Alabi, the director) had done some cool stuff before that we had seen. And first of all, we thought it would be cool because it was such a break from the “Devil” video, for example. And the concept of the song itself was one that we found quite difficult to actually tell in the UK because we wrote it the day after the Brexit result had been announced. So we tried to basically write a song to capture the frustration and the feeling of isolation. And in a way, a bit of fear of what’s to come, and not really knowing.

So we wanted to try and find a way of getting that somehow into a music video without it being a plain old performance video. So that’s what was really cool about it, not just using that space for the ballroom, but having the great dancers and having this dialogue between them physically, which was so push and pull and uncertain. It really hit the nail on the head for us.

Tara: I also like the idea that we were all filmed separately, because of that idea of isolation. And then at the end we would all meet together. And the dancers seemed to make friends again at the end. So it’s the whole idea at the beginning of an argument and us being isolated from one another, and then this whole journey and this unity at the end. While we wrote it about that, my dad was like, “Oh my god, I so relate to that. That’s a relationship that is broken down.” And that’s not for us to say, “Well, actually that was us feeling confused about the world.”

AJ: We don’t like to project too much because people will take whatever they want from songs. To somebody else, that song might not be about Brexit at all. It might be like a demolition person literally thinking it’s about burning bridges down. And that’s fine, too.

I don’t think you guys hide behind much, because I was listening to “Nothing Happens When You Die” and I thought, “All right, you’re very candid.” But you hadn’t known each other that long when that song was written.

AJ: No, that was actually really early on, actually.

Tell me a little about the trust that it takes in each other to say, “All right, we’re kind of making a statement with this, but we’re all going on camera and sending it out to the world.”

Tara: I think the thing that’s interesting about that title is that AJ did a really lovely introduction to that the other day. Because it sounds like it’s quite a negative title, but actually what I take from that is… AJ had worked on this wonderful idea and brought it to us. And he was like, “It’s one of hope. So if tomorrow isn’t guaranteed, if there isn’t going to be this option to redo everything…” So rather than making it religious or political or anything else, it’s like, “What if today is all we have?” And if today is all we have, let’s just make it the best that we possibly can. So as someone who didn’t contribute a lot lyrically or musically to that song, I just adore it for the sentiment now.