A Minute In the Catskills with Simone Felice

Welcome to “A Minute In …” — a BGS feature that turns our favorite artists into hometown reporters. In our latest column, Simone Felice teaches us about the history of the Catskills and Hudson Valley.

Kaaterskill Falls: As fate would have it, I was born just a few ledges below the falls, on the same creek, which the early Dutch settlers named the Kaaterskill, or Cat’s River, after the wild mountain lions and lynx that roamed both forest and glen. In the 19th century Enlightenment Period, many prominent landscape painters and naturalist writers and poets — including Hudson River School founder Thomas Cole and his close friend William Cullen Bryant — made pilgrimages to these remote cataracts with easel and pen, and passed the hours in conversation, study, and communion with nature. Today, the falls, which are the highest in New York state, attract folks from far and wide in all seasons. It’s crazy on the weekends, so I climb up often weekdays at dawn. Maybe I’ll see you on the trail.

Olana: If you follow the Kaaterskill, as it snakes stubbornly eastward, you’ll come, by and by, to the mighty Hudson. Cross the river and take the old winding road up to, what is in my opinion, Fredrick Church’s most important masterpiece: Olana. With breathtaking views of the Catskill Mountain range and Hudson River, it’s no wonder that, upon discovering the location, Church wrote to a friend that he’d found “the center of the world.” You can tour his home and painting studio or simply wander the grounds, which he called “living landscapes.” I had many noonday picnics in the garden as a young kid with my mom, hoping for a glimpse of Peter Rabbit. And, after 40 years, it’s not lost a bit of that magic and wonder.

West Indies Grocery: The old city of Hudson was a sketchy place, when we were kids. It had been a prominent whaling town in the 19th century, earning a mention in Melville’s Moby Dick, but by the 1990s, many of the shops on its main (Warren) street were boarded up. Over the past 25 years, it’s gone through a near miracle of revitalization, block upon block of enviable period architecture has been spared the wrecking ball, and Hudsontown is again a center of arts and food culture. There are many posh hipster eateries I could mention, but my favorite is still this little grocery shop where the family matriarch, Paulette, cooks up homemade Jamaican “yard” food for her sons and neighbors, and if you’re lucky, there will a plate of curry goat or ox tails left for you. Cash only.

Circle W Market: “The W” is the beating heart of the Katterskill Clove. In the summer of 1908, Circle W opened its doors as a traditional country general store to serve the needs of a growing population of vacationers, quarrymen, landscape painters, and mill workers. Palenville, New York, (a small Catskill hamlet) had become famed for the many waterfalls in its vicinity (including Kaaterskill Falls and Fawn’s Leap), mountain views, artists’ retreats, and the setting for the mythical home of Washington Irving’s Rip Van Winkle.

For close to a century, upon entering the store, one could find anything from a gallon of paint to a gallon of milk, a pair of work pants, a kite, homemade lunches, a fishing pole, hardware, ice cream, and much more. After falling into disrepair for many years, my family bought and restored the original store and, a few years back, our mom retired and my wife Jessie and I bought it, and a couple buddies and myself turned the old horse barn in back into a music space complete with a balcony and chandelier. Come on out for one of our wild barn nights — there’s always a fire, and you never know what sort of freaks will show up.

Big Pink: We grew up riding our bicycles past the dirt driveway that leads to this modest, unassuming house off a backroad just outside of Woodstock. It wasn’t until years later that I began to understand the eternal significance of the place in the hallowed annals of American song … after Rick Danko — bassist in Bob Dylan’s touring band in the mid ’60s — rented the house and he, Dylan, and the rest of the gang (Levon Helm, Robbie Robertson, Richard Manuel, and Garth Hudson) set up a make-shift studio in the basement and stayed up all hours recording, drinking, smoking, waxing philosophical, and digging deep into the essence and origins of the songs and sound that they grew up on and would continue to pioneer for years to come.

3×3: Mike + Ruthy on Lukas Graham’s Hit, Tom Waits’ Car, and the Existence of Mighty Mouse Vinyl

Artist: The Mike + Ruthy Band
Hometown: West Hurley, NY — we say Woodstock, NY. Our “actual” downtown was evacuated 100 years ago when the City of New York built the Ashokan Reservoir. So, even though we live in West Hurley, Woodstock is the closet town town. Kingston is also about 15 minutes away and we end up there a lot, too. There’s actually a sign up on one of the reservoir bridges that says “Former site of West Hurley.” Occasionally, when someone drives by, they wonder if we’re okay!
Latest Album: Bright As You Can
Personal Nicknames (or Rejected Band Names): The Mammals auditioned a couple silly band names: The G-String Pickers. The Co-ed Naked Stringband. As a duo, we almost went with Flora Fauna. We actually opened for the Avett Brothers as Flora Fauna back before they blew up, and I remember Seth Avett, at the end of the night, in his North Carolina accent saying, “We’d like to thank Flora Fauna … “ At one point we were gonna go with the Mountain Beds as a tip of the hat to the great Woody Guthrie tune, "Remember the Mountain Bed." But somehow we always come back to Mike + Ruthy. As a personal nickname, Ruthy sometimes calls me Beagle Bill. And I generally call her Rudy. (Her mom was in a band called Rude Girls, and I was a in a ska band in the '90s where everyone was called Rudy.)

 

Our children only wear #summehoot t-shirts. @homeofthehoot 8/26 – 27 this year!

A photo posted by Mike + Ruthy (@mikeandruthy) on

Your house is burning down and you can grab only one thing — what would you save?
MIKE: I think I have to say the kids. After that, whatever expensive microphone I happen to be borrowing at the time.
RUTHY: Yep, the kids. And then probably a Gibson.

If you weren't a musician, what would you be?
MIKE: I’d most likely be some sort of writer. Playwright, novelist, poet, storyteller. Outside of a creative pursuit, I think I would have been pulled toward an environmental advocacy group like 350.org.
RUTHY: I've always secretly wanted to work at JiffyLube.

Who is the most surprising artist in current rotation in your iTunes/Spotify?
MIKE: Lukas Graham. 10+ years ago, the Mammals were touring Denmark with a great agent named Eugene Graham. Lukas was Eugene’s teen-age son at the time. We made fast friends with the whole family — Lukas, Ella, Niamh … they all showed us around Copenhagen and hosted us in their unique bohemian neighborhood called Christiania. Lukas has since completely conquered Denmark as a pop star and is, just this Spring, breaking into the U.S. with the single "7 Years." Lukas reached out to me this April when he was performing in San Francisco and noticed we were on tour there, as well, so I hustled over to catch the end of his set. It was phenomenal to see him owning that sweaty, packed room with not only a great band and that same powerful, confident voice that I remember him belting out Irish ballads with back in the day around a festival bonfire, but with great stories. He related to the crowd like a folky, 'cause that’s where he came from, and it was joy to behold. When I went to his show last week in Brooklyn, he was wearing a Mike + Ruthy t-shirt.
RUTHY: Maybe it's not surprising, per se, but a recent day trip to New York City with my childhood girlfriend brought me back to Deee-Lite's World Clique and Pixies Surfer Rosa. Both are great albums and ridiculously good for singing along while driving.

 

#color #moss #westhurley #catskills #hudsonvalley #ny #upstate #humbleabodemusic #spring

A photo posted by Mike + Ruthy (@mikeandruthy) on

What is the one thing you can’t survive without on tour?
MIKE There are a bunch of ways to answer this one, but I think I’ll narrow it down to my backpack.
RUTHY: Yelp.

If you were a car, what car would you be?
MIKE: Whatever car Tom Waits drives.
RUTHY: Ha! Probably the old 4WD '91 Honda Civic Wagon that I drove when I was in college. Unassuming and a little rusty, but totally reliable in any conditions, pretty rare, and kinda cute.

Who is your favorite superhero?
MIKE: Luke Skywalker
RUTHY: Mighty Mouse

 

@castorocellars yo. Pre-gig chill.

A photo posted by Mike + Ruthy (@mikeandruthy) on

Vinyl or digital?
MIKE: Vinyl.
RUTHY: Vinyl. I actually own some Mighty Mouse vinyl, now that you mention it.

Dolly or Loretta?
MIKE: Dolly. But it’s close.
RUTHY: Unfair question.

Meat lover's or veggie?
MIKE: I’d like to meet in the middle on this one.
RUTHY: Yeah, babe. Me, too.


Photo credit: Eric Gerardinst

3×3: Rachael Yamagata on Woodstock, Sturgill, and Her Fear of Karaoke

Artist: Rachael Yamagata
Hometown: Arlington, VA
Latest Album: Chesapeake
Nicknames: Yams

 

Amsterdam this morning

A photo posted by Rachael Yamagata (@rachaelyamagata) on

What was the first record you ever bought with your own money?
It was a single actually — Aerosmith's "Love in an Elevator."

If money were no object, where would you live and what would you do?
I’d split houses between Woodstock (where I live and love already), the Dominican Republic, and somewhere in Europe — Paris or somewhere in Tuscany, perhaps? I’d set up little studios in each and keep recording, but I’d also love to travel and do something physical while volunteering — e.g. building houses…

If your life were a movie, which songs would be on the soundtrack?
Ha! Who knows? I think it’d be an instrumental soundtrack. Maybe The Prince of Tides meets The Notebook meets anything by Danny Elfman.

 

Yes

A photo posted by Rachael Yamagata (@rachaelyamagata) on

What brand of jeans do you wear?
No clue. It’s all about the fit.

What's your go-to karaoke tune?
Karaoke scares the shit out of me, actually. I watch.

What's your favorite season?
The Fall

 

you complete me. First show tonight #pittsburgh, then #chicago and #minneapolis #denver

A photo posted by Rachael Yamagata (@rachaelyamagata) on

Kimmel or Fallon?
Both, for different moods.

Jason Isbell or Sturgill Simpson?
I think Jason Isbell is great. I don’t know Sturgill well, so now I’ve got a new artist to check out. Thanks!

Chocolate or vanilla?
Butter pecan


Top photo credit: Laura Crosta

Intentionally Simpler: A Conversation with Tracy Bonham

For music fans of a certain age, hearing the name Tracy Bonham likely conjures up “Mother Mother,” an alt-rock MTV hit from the mid-'90s that found Bonham in a full-throated wail backed by a wall of shredding guitars. But that was then. And this is now. Over the two decades since, the singer/songwriter has chased and tracked her sound through the pop/rock gems of Down Here to the complex twists of Blink the Brightest to the playful dance of Masts of Manhatta, releasing albums, essentially, every five years. Right on time, she's back with Wax & Gold, a wonderfully rootsy collection that reflects where she is in life — geographically and personally — and features the work of local musicians — including Amy Helm and Langhorne Slim. (Bonham's local is Woodstock, NY, after all.)

You've gotten some good love on this new record. Four stars from Rolling Stone, a great write-up on HuffPost

I got some love. It's been nice. It's so funny because it's a different age. You don't know what it turns into. It just feels good to be recognized, but it's not like it's really pertinent to your career except that maybe people will pay attention the next time you put something out … if you don't wait five years. I can't really tell what comes out of it, but it feels nice.

We came of age in the music industry at the same time, so we've seen it totally turned on its ear. But, we're adapting. It took you a while, but you finally got the hang of StageIt.

Yeah. Exactly. Exactly. And it's totally fun. I was kind of surprised — I don't know if you read the Huffington Post thing — but he made it sound like I was so savvy with all that stuff. [Laughs]

[Laughs] Just let 'em think it. The other thing is, most folks probably think of you — like in that article — as an alternative rocker chick from back in the day, but you've always dangled a couple toes in the roots music water. I remember the Wayfaring Strangers when you did that [with Matt Glaser, Tony Trischka, Jennifer Kimball, et al]. Were they your first? Take me back to that era.

Let me see … That was the first recorded … No, actually, I had been kind of interested in gospel music for a long, long time. I was in college, kind of doing everything. I wanted to sing jazz. I thought I wanted to be an R&B singer for a second.

[Laughs] Because a white girl from Oregon … that makes sense.

Uh huh. [Laughs] But I had this big, bellowing voice so I remember I would get the solos in the gospel choir at the University of Oregon. I went there for one term. After I'd done my SoCal thing and my Berklee thing, I went to U of O and was in the gospel choir. I was like [Sings] “Whoa-oa-oa-whooooa!” doing the whole thing and I just loved gospel music. I didn't love some of the cheesy stuff, but … At first it was Aretha Franklin doing her gospel, solo piano stuff. That was probably what got me really interested. And I just took it from there. So I always had that other side of me and it was so totally opposite of what I was doing on Burdens where I wasn't even trying to sing. I was just playing it all down. I was kind of schizophrenic back at that time.

And being the fiddle — or violin – player that you are, it lends a gypsy air to things. That's folksy.

Yeah. My classical foundation gave me a whole world of that kind of stuff. I totally love the Eastern Europeans … Tchaikovsky and all that Russian stuff. It just blended. The boundaries were not very clear.

Then, with your own stuff, In the City + In the Woods was probably your first real exploring of your rootsier side, right? Doing “Crazy in Love” as a gypsy folk bop-along and what not …

Right! [Laughs] Whatever that was.

So how much of that evolution can be attributed to spending a good chunk of your time in Woodstock and not in the city?

Hmmm … It's been almost 10 years that we've been hanging out in Woodstock. It has influenced me hugely. Not even just musically, but mentally. There's more space up there so you can kind of clear the cobwebs. I think it coincided with an era [in which] it didn't matter as much whether or not you had a hit on the radio. So I had this kind of freedom to go up there and create and just be myself. When I was doing my overdubs for Masts, I was in my cute little stone cottage with the fire burning and my ProTools set up — it was the first time I'd ever done my own ProTools thing. I was like, “I can do anything up here!” I recorded the fire, the wood-burning stove, the tea pot burning …

Move over, Alan Lomax!

Exactly! Or like Paul McCartney when he did Ram and he holed himself up in a castle somewhere. I was just enjoying being in control.

Tell me about the musical community up there. Levon's gone, but his legacy of pulling folks together lives on.

It's really true. It's so amazing up there. There are still stories of Levon. The local station up there [WDST] has a pretty far reach and they play the Band all the time. I'll be driving [my son] Selman in the backseat with Levon's grandkids because those are his best friends — Amy Helm's kids and Selman are the three musketeers. I'll be driving them to the pizza parlor and, all of a sudden, Levon's voice will be on radio and I'll be like, “Dudes! That's your grandpa!” [Laughs] It's such a weird phenomenon.

Then, we'll be at the pizza place and who'll walk by but John Sebastian, of course, from Lovin Spoonful, and we'll have a conversation. Then it'll be … Rachael Yamagata. It's just this amazing place where you can bump into so many talented people. We've made a lot of friends at a restaurant called the Bear which is part of the whole Bearsville complex that Albert Grossman started. I've made some of my best friends … a writer who wrote about the Beatles … there are just interesting people. It's 100 miles outside of the city — a lot of people are having some interesting conversations.

And this new record wouldn't have happened without some of those folks …

Oh my God, you're right.

and your PledgeMusic donors, of course. That combination of the global and the local coming together is about as community-oriented as you can get.

That's nice. That's awesome. And the global feels local because it's really a small group of people.

How many donors did you end up having?

You know, not that many. I'm going to say only a few hundred people were following that whole thing. But I remember sitting with Kevin [Salem, her producer] at the café one time and he said, “Look. If you could find 1,000 Tracy Bonham fans and they each gave $10 to you, you'd be pretty psyched.” So I got, like, 600.

My whole conundrum has always been “Where did my fans go?” Probably because I spent five years on this new record, that's probably why and because I had a radio hit that fell off the face of the earth half as quick as it rose. The conversation was always, with management or labels, “Where did those people go?” It was back before you could connect with people on the Internet in '96. Then, when I had to wait for four years, I lost a lot of people.

But that's the shift from … I mean, all of my friends who were on major labels and came off of that lost their people because the major labels — at least back in the '90s — email lists weren't a thing. So those people just vanished and you have to call them up again, somehow. Summon their spirits.

Yeah.

The other main artistic driver for the record was the adoption of your little Selman. His presence is felt on this thing in various ways. You have nods to his Ethiopian homeland, but also several tunes that could easily be on a cool kids' record. Was that intentional or just how it came out?

Which songs are you referring to? Because I like that idea. Oh, I know: “From the Tree to the Hand to the Page.”

Sure. Yeah. Of course.

That's one of Selman's favorites.

There are others, though. The repetitive ones: “Lovelovelovelovelove” and “Gonegonegone,” maybe?

Oh, yeah. You're right.

They're a little bit of a stretch, but the kind of kids' record that the parents wouldn't be driven crazy by.

[Laughs] Exactly. That's probably because I am writing more for … I have that whole other [teaching kids] project going on. But I think, also, my writing has changed, at least for now, and it's a lot simpler. It's intentionally simpler. This is going to sound funny, but I just don't have time to … I can't explain it. I've often thought of it like moving through molasses, when you're a mom and you're trying to be creative and you have to stop and deal with life and come back to it a week later. You just want to finish the damn song. [Laughs] Just get it done.

I've been wanting to challenge myself to write more simply, although I love what I've done before and what other artists have done when things take left turns or bring something surprising. I still love that. But, for this particular album, I just wanted … “Under the Ruby Moon” is two chords over and over again, and it's one of my favorites.

I would say, Blink the Brightest will always be one of my across-the-board, all-time favorite records.

Thank you.

But, in your canon, I'll put this one second.

No way! Really?

Yeah. And I know the Burdens people are gonna get mad about that, but whatever. They can go kick some rocks. So Rolling Stone singled out “Grandpa's Guitar” as the heart of this thing …

Yeah, I was surprised by that.

but I gotta go with “Wax & Gold.”

Me, too. Me, too.

That's your pick?

Yeah, totally. I mean, “Grandpa's Guitar,” as much as I love it, I feel like it's a certain audience. But I totally think “Wax & Gold” encapsulates everything.

It has such a great sound and feel to it. And, thematically, what you're pulling from for it …

Totally. Totally.

Take THAT, Rolling Stone. We just outvoted you.

[Laughs] Yeah!


Photos courtesy of the artist