Thu, 09/11/2014 - 7:02 am

On Sunday, October 12, 2014 at 7:30 pm, The Earls of Leicester will perform in concert at the Boulder Theater, 2032 14th Street, Boulder, CO, 80302. Tel (303)786-7030.

Tickets are priced from $20.00 to $27.50, and are available at the box office, or www.bouldertheater.com.  The Earls of Leicester, an homage to the music of Lester Flatt & Earl Scruggs, is the brainchild of musician, songwriter, and producer Jerry Douglas.

"This record is something I've been waiting my whole life to do," veteran Dobro master Jerry Douglas says of the self-titled debut by the new all-star dream team combo that he has assembled, organized and produced.

The six-man band encompasses Douglas plus acclaimed writer, producer, and solo artist Shawn Camp on lead vocals and guitar, renowned Nashville banjoist Charlie Cushman on banjo and guitars, veteran songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and Hot Rize member Tim O'Brien on vocals and mandolin, second-generation fiddle phenom Johnny Warren, and Barry Bales, Douglas' longtime bandmate in Alison Krauss and Union Station, on vocals and bass.

The new group is the product of Douglas's lifelong passion for the music of bluegrass pioneers Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs and their band the Foggy Mountain Boys, whose seminal work in the '50s and '60s created the template for what we know as contemporary bluegrass, and transcended traditional genre barriers to popularize the music with an unprecedented mass audience.

"Flatt and Scruggs were the major influence on me when I was growing up," recalls Douglas, who was first inspired to pick up his instrument by Flatt and Scruggs' legendary Dobroist Josh Graves.  "I was around seven years old when I first saw them, and there were two or three more times after that.  It had a huge impact on me.  I remember the warmth of the auditorium, I remember the smell of the popcorn, I remember the outfits they were wearing.  It's still all very vivid to me, and it's still influencing me 50 years later.

Douglas had long dreamed of rounding up a band to perform Flatt and Scruggs material, but held off until he could gather musicians of sufficient caliber to do justice to the material.  His plans finally began to take shape when he played on a session with fiddler Johnny Warren—the son of Fiddlin' Paul Warren, a longtime mainstay of Flatt and Scruggs' band—and Johnny's longtime banjo-playing partner Charlie Cushman.

"The banjo, the fiddle and the Dobro came together in a way that sounded exactly what I'd heard so many years ago, the first time I saw Flatt and Scruggs," Douglas recalls.  "Right then, it dawned on me that this was my chance to complete that dream, and I didn't want to let it go by.  So I called Tim O'Brien and Barry Bales.  The hardest part for me was finding the right lead singer, but then my wife suggested Shawn Camp.  We got everyone together one night and had a rehearsal, and I realized that we had to do this."

The Earls’ repertoire will focus upon Flatt & Scruggs’ most successful and innovative years, roughly from 1954 to 1965.

"It's kind of an introduction to Flatt and Scruggs, the way I hear them," Douglas notes, adding, "much of my motivation was selfish, because I just wanted to hear this sound again.  It took me a long time to find the right people who could pull it off and make it sound authentic and not corny, and make you feel like you're listening to Flatt and Scruggs during those years."

The same abiding musical passion that drove Douglas to create The Earls of Leicester has been a constant throughout a career that spans four decades and encompasses more than 2000 recordings.  In addition to his renown as an instrumentalist, the 13-time Grammy winner and three-time Country Music Association Musician of the Year—who's been described as "my favorite musician" by John Fogerty and "the Muhammad Ali of the Dobro" by James Taylor—has established a reputation as a ceaselessly inventive artist who's adept at incorporating elements of bluegrass, country, rock, jazz, blues and Celtic into his distinctive musical vision.

As a band member, collaborator, session musician and genre-bending solo artist, Douglas' inventive, eloquent playing graces over 2000 albums, including 13 under his own name, along with releases by artists as varied as Garth Brooks, Ray Charles, Elvis Costello, John Fogerty, Bill Frisell, Charlie Haden, Emmylou Harris, George Jones, Dolly Parton, Phish, the Chieftains and his early hero Earl Scruggs, as well as the eight-million-plus selling soundtrack to O Brother, Where Art Thou? and its spinoff live disc Down from the Mountain.

As a producer, Douglas has helmed albums by such notable acts as the Del McCoury Band, Maura O'Connell, Jesse Winchester and the Nashville Bluegrass Band.  He's been part of such distinguished groups as the Whites, J.D. Crowe and the New South, the Country Gentlemen and Strength in Numbers.  Since 1998, he's been a key member of Rounder labelmate Alison Krauss's much-loved band Union Station, touring extensively and playing on a series of platinum albums.

Douglas is distinctly excited about the future of The Earls of Leicester.  "I built this with the idea that it would be an event band, not a band that's gonna go out and hit the road for three years," he says.  "I want to feel six years old every time I play this music, and it wouldn't feel that way if we had to do it every night.  I want us to enjoy every time we do it, and I want us to remember why we enjoy it.

"I believe this band has the potential to have its own evolution, beyond just doing Flatt and Scruggs tunes, but this record is very, very exciting for me," he continues.  "I'm hoping people will hear it and ask 'What's that?', then do some investigating and discover where this stuff came from.  We have a younger audience for this kind of music now, and  it is important to me that the listeners understand  the origins of what they are hearing."

Wed, 02/24/2016 - 2:25 pm

Rounder Records is pleased to announce the signing of Nashville based singer-songwriter Sean McConnell, whose Rounder debut is slated for a summer release.

Although his self-titled new album will serve as his introduction to many listeners, the personable young artist is actually a seasoned, distinctive songwriter and an experienced performer with several D.I.Y. indie releases to his credit. Having built a substantial grass-roots fan base through tireless touring, old-fashioned hard work, and paying his dues, McConnell is now eager to launch the next chapter of his career.

"I kind of feel like I've been in a really long boot camp," he reflects. "I'm really grateful for that, because I feel like I've gained enough experience to know the deal and be prepared for anything.  I'm excited to see where the next part of the journey takes me."

Tracy Gershon, Vice President of A&R at Rounder says, “I have been a fan of Sean's songwriting for a long time. I was so excited when he played me this new body of work, and I'm even more excited that Rounder can be a part of his artistic journey.“

In advance of his summer release McConnell has launched a set of tour dates with Drew Holcomb and Kris Allen. He will tour the better part of the U.S. this spring, which will also include solo dates in Nashville, Atlanta and several stops throughout Texas. A full list of dates is included below. McConnell is represented by 333 Entertainment and Brave World Artist Agency.

Upcoming Tour Dates:

2/24/2016         Troubadour (w/ Drew Holcomb)                West Hollywood, CA
2/25/2016         The Chapel (w/ Drew Holcomb)                San Francisco, CA
2/26/2016         Alladin Theatre (w/ Drew Holcomb)           Portland, OR
2/27/2016         The Crocodile (w/ Drew Holcomb)            Seattle, WA
2/28/2016         Knitting Factory (w/ Drew Holcomb)          Boise, ID
3/4/2016           Eddie's Attic                                               Decatur, GA
3/5/2016           3rd & Lindsley                                            Nashville, TN
3/16/2016         Dosey Doe Music Cafe                              Conroe, TX
3/17/2016         Dosey Doe Big Barn                                  The Woodlands, TX
3/18/2016         Common Grounds                                     Waco, TX
3/19/2016         River Road Ice House                                New Braunfels, TX
3/20/2016         The Live Oak Music Hall                            Fort Worth, TX
3/31/2016         WorkPlay Theatre (w/ Kris Allen)               Birmingham, AL
4/9/2016           Cafe 939 (w/ Kris Allen)                             Boston, MA
4/10/2016         Tupelo Music Hall (w/ Kris Allen)               Manchester, NH
4/12/2016         The Lovin Cup (w/ Kris Allen)                    Rochester, NY
4/14/2016         The Ark (w/ Kris Allen)                               Ann Arbor, MI
4/15/2016         Seven Steps Up (w/ Kris Allen)                  Spring Lake, MI
4/29/2016         City Winery (w/ Kris Allen)                          Nashville, TN
5/31/2016         Old Rock House (w/ Kris Allen)                  St. Louis, MO
6/1/2016           CSPS (w/ Kris Allen)                                  Cedar Rapids, IA
6/2/2016           Cedar Cultural Center (w/ Kris Allen)         Minneapolis, MN
6/3/2016           Shank Hall (w/ Kris Allen)                           Milwaukee, WI
6/4/2016           City Winery (w/ Kris Allen)                          Chicago, IL
6/7/2016           World Cafe Live (w/ Kris Allen)                   Philadelphia, PA
6/8/2016           The Hamilton (w/ Kris Allen)                       Washington, D.C.
6/10/2016         Cat's Cradle (w/ Kris Allen)                         Carborro, NC
6/11/2016         Neighborhood Theater (w/ Kris Allen)         Charlotte, NC

Thu, 03/31/2016 - 10:29 am

Acclaimed Boston-based bluegrass quintet The Lonely Heartstring Band is set to release their debut album Deep Waters June 3 on Rounder Records.

The Lonely Heartstring Band unites traditional bluegrass with contemporary songwriting, and has already earned accolades from respected members of the bluegrass community. Banjo legend Tony Trischka says, "These Heartstring Boys have carved out a fresh niche in modern bluegrass. They adhere to the traditional format but take everything two steps forward. Their roots are clear and so is their path to the future. They're in a class by themselves."

The band’s debut, Deep Waters, was co-produced by The Lonely Heartstring Band and David Travers-Smith, with co-production by GRAMMY–winner Gary Paczosa (Alison Krauss, Sarah Jarosz) on the tracks “Graceland” and “The Road’s Salvation.” 

Despite their varied influences, from classical to folk to traditional bluegrass, and because of them, too, the Lonely Heartstring Band never sounds like a clash of competing musical elements, but rather has a rich and fully-formed sound that respects and incorporates the full range of what each individual musician brings to the group.The Lonely Heartstring Band, with their shared musical vocabulary, are forging a style that is simultaneously both stimulating and listenable, new and fresh.

Deep Waters offers listeners an array of musical stylings from which to choose, featuring modern bluegrass on the title track and in the song “The Road’s Salvation,” unique arrangements of songs by Paul Simon (“Graceland”), Bob Dylan (“Rambling, Gambling Willie”), and Pete Seeger (“If I Had A hammer”). A playful instrumental, “Big Bruce,” and “Songbird” which offers the sound of the Monroe Brothers for the 21st century.

Rounder Records Founder Ken Irwin says, "It's rare these days to hear a new bluegrass band that has a sound all their own, but the Lonely Heartstring Band's got that, and more, with intricate instrumentation, beautiful voices, and songs which are emotionally resonant and very relatable. We are extremely excited to be working with the LHB and to be able to share their music."

The songs on Deep Waters are all road-tested fan favorites from folk festivals, clubs, and concert halls, but include a couple of surprise tunes as well. Fortunately, there are many more miles to travel for the Lonely Heartstring Band: they plan to travel the east coast this spring, and have several stops in the mid-west. More dates to be announced soon.

Deep Waters is available June 3.

Fri, 06/03/2016 - 1:42 pm

GRAMMY award-winning multi-instrumentalist Sam Bush returns with his seventh Sugar Hill release, Storyman, on June 24th.

Sam Bush’s new album Storyman is a freewheeling collection that gleefully picks and chooses from jazz, folk, blues, reggae, country swing, and bluegrass to create a jubilant noise only classifiable as the “Sam Bush sound." Many of the songs are stories––several of them true––and the legendary mandolin player co-wrote every one of them with friends, including the late Guy Clark, Emmylou Harris, Jon Randall Stewart, Jeff Black, bandmate Stephen Mougin, and others. Storyman continues Bush’s tradition of creating something completely new and fresh for each recording, this time focusing on stories from some of the most popular songsmiths of our time.

For Bush, a lifetime of channeling his energy into his art has led to stylistic innovations that have changed the course of bluegrass and roots music alike. Bush has taken home three GRAMMY awards, received a Lifetime Achievement for Instrumentalist Award from the Americana Music Association, hosted the International Bluegrass Music Association Awards, and has been honored as Mandolin Player of the Year four times. In March 2010, Legislation passed in Kentucky, Bush’s home state, that officially named Bowling Green the "Birthplace of Newgrass," and Sam Bush the "Father of Newgrass."

Bush took about four years to record the latest installment in his legacy. “It’s still important to me that all of the songs fit together on an album,” he says. “I’m well aware that people buy individual tracks digitally, and that’s good. But I still think of it as an album––a body of work. And I’m really satisfied with these songs. It’s taken a while, but I sure am happy with them.”Produced by Bush and recorded partially at Neptone Recording Studios in Destin, Florida, and Bush’s longtime go-to, Nashville’s Sound Emporium, Storyman is the best of friends swapping tales, and jamming for the sake of jamming.

“If there is a love in it, it’s the love of playing music together,” Bush reflects. “When we play live on stage, if people can feel the joy we’re feeling, then we have succeeded. That’s the goal to me of playing music: Did the audience feel something?”

Bush is currently on the road, and will continue touring throughout the summer in support of Storyman. Stops include Chicago, IL, Atlanta, GA, and Berkeley, CA. Bush will also appear at several festivals this summer including DelFest, Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival, ROMP, Rockygrass and Telluride Bluegrass Festival in Telluride, CO where Bush is known simply as “the King.” Additional dates will be announced soon.

Storyman is available June 24th on Sugar Hill Records.

Fri, 03/19/2021 - 2:00 am

Rounder Records is pleased to announce the signing of John R. Miller, whose first single for the label, “Lookin’ Over My Shoulder,” is released today. Miller, who initially attracted notice for his spare, elegant, vividly imagined songs as the leader of indie band The Engine Lights, is working on his full-length label debut, set for release later this year.

“Lookin’ Over My Shoulder” wryly captures the trepidation of revisiting the site of a failed romance.

photo by David McClister

“This song appears from the perspective of somebody who returns to a small hometown after some time away, attempting to avoid contact with an old flame while revisiting places they used to haunt together,” Miller explains. “Ostensibly it was through the narrator’s own actions that the relationship soured, and he remembers it bittersweetly, if regretfully. Out of sight, out of mind, but it only works for so long, as sometimes we are inevitably drawn back to places that contain painful memories for us.”

Listen to Lookin’ Over My Shoulder HERE

Intimacy and honesty are two hallmarks of the West Virginia native’s writing, which inspired the writer Silas House to observe, “Miller is somehow able to transport us to a shadowy honky-tonk and get existential all at the same time with his tightly written compositions.” Tyler Childers is a longtime friend and fan who calls Miller “a well-traveled wordsmith mapping out the world he’s seen, three chords at a time.”

More news about Miller’s forthcoming album and tour plans will be announced in the coming weeks.

Fri, 03/19/2021 - 2:00 am

Keb’ Mo’ has never shied away from speaking his truth. Today, the five-time GRAMMY winner released “The Medicine Man,” his first new recording since 2019 and his debut collaboration with acclaimed, GRAMMY-winning American roots string band Old Crow Medicine Show.

Listen to “The Medicine Man” HERE.

Keb’ Mo’ and Old Crow Medicine Show keenly understand that even the harshest medicine goes down easier when served up with a heaping spoonful of sugar, and while “The Medicine Man” takes a rather sober view of the chaotic state of our world, it delivers the message via wry observations wrapped in a buoyant, foot-stomping melody that all but begs the listener to sing along. 

You better lock your doors, turn on the news

The whole damn world is singin’ the blues

The President lost, but he don’t wanna go

Mother Earth, she needs a little help you know

Everybody’s doin’ the best that they can

We’re all just waitin’ on the Medicine Man

“I was taking some time out at our house in California with my family,” remembers Keb’. “We were locked in and staying away from people. Doing Zoom writing appointments, watching Dr Fauci on TV doing interviews, and it sparked some ideas. This was one of those songs that just came to me, and quickly. I woke up early one morning and wrote the whole thing in about 15 minutes.”

Keb’ Mo’s activism over the years has been well-documented, and he has long tackled tough subjects in his music. His 2019 album Oklahoma, which won the GRAMMY for Best Americana Album, addressed issues such as immigration, racial tensions, women’s rights, and the environment.

Old Crow Medicine Show

He found a kindred spirit in Old Crow’s Ketch Secor. In the past year alone, the band has responded to current events with a trio of smart, heartfelt singles that have inspired critical praise and furthered the band’s reputation as one of the most authentic and compelling artists to emerge from the roots music community.

Secor recalls, “I first met Keb’ three years ago backstage at the Grand Ole Opry and sensed immediately that we needed to work together. I'd been listening to his music since the late ‘90s, so this recent collaboration is something of a two-decade-long full circle of intentions.”

Despite their best efforts, their respective commitments and demands on their time kept them from working together until very recently.

“I called [Keb’] up two autumns ago and asked if he'd hold some dates to play some live shows together and he said, ‘Can't now, but soon.’ Well, soon enough came around again this past December when he sent me a brand new song he'd written a few hours before. The song captured the urgency of these stark times like no other I'd heard. It didn't mince words. No sugar coating, no placebo effects, rather it was a ‘give it to me straight, doc’ kind of a tune, which told an objective truth, one undiluted by affiliation, vantage point, persuasion.”

photo by Jeremy Cowart

“The song shook me up and I wrote back to him that night in December, ‘We got to rush this out soon. Real soon.’ Old Crow jumped right into gear, recording Keb's powerful song of the times within days of the ink drying. It was a joy. It felt dutiful, meet and right, urgent, essential. And harmonious.”

Keb’ reflects, “Maybe it was the subliminal use of the word ‘medicine’ that made me think of my friend Ketch from Old Crow Medicine Show, so I called him and said, ‘I’ve got a song for you guys.’” He notes, “In essence, the song is about things that are out of our control, but we should do our best to be good people and citizens and spread love instead of germs.”

Sat, 10/23/2021 - 3:08 pm

Sarah Jarosz has announced a series of live performances of the Blue Heron Suite this December. Jarosz composed the song cycle after becoming the recipient of the FreshGrass Composition Commission in 2017 and premiered the piece later that year at the FreshGrass Festival.

A recording of Blue Heron Suite featuring accompaniment by Jefferson Hamer and Jeff Picker was released in May of this year. The trio, which performed the piece on Mother’s Day for a special livestreamed concert event, will reunite for these shows and will perform the suite in its entirety along with other material from throughout the four-time GRAMMY winner’s career.

Blue Heron Suite was warmly embraced by critics upon its release. Writing in The New Yorker, Jay Ruttenberg called the album “emotional and raw, with guitars ominously circling Jarosz’s voice,” while Paste’s Tom Lanham proclaimed it Jarosz’s “most poignant, reflective work yet, all sung in her signature warm, ember-smoky warble.”

Henry Carrigan of Folk Alley observed, “Blue Heron Suite captures the feelings of transience that lurk around the edges of our lives and that come into the light in times when we face possible loss, but in these songs Jarosz demonstrates that we can be transported, momentarily at least, above our bodies and this earth on wings.”

American Songwriter’s Lee Zimmerman proclaimed Blue Heron Suite “a decidedly mature work that evokes rumination and deliberation in equal measure. Subdued and sublime, it finds hope in spite of happenstance and wisdom in reflection,” while Atwood’s Mariel Fitchuk asserted, “As universal as it is personal, Blue Heron Suite is perhaps her best work yet.”

Jarosz recently wrapped up a mini-tour of the east coast that included shows in Boston, New York City, and Washington, DC. In early November, she will do a short run of dates with Shawn Colvin and Marc Cohn (details are listed below). She is planning an extensive tour of the United States, Europe, and the United Kingdom in 2022 that will focus on 2020’s GRAMMY-winning album World on the Ground as well as Blue Heron Suite.

An Evening with Shawn Colvin, Marc Cohn, and Sarah Jarosz, Together in Concert

Nov 4th - State Theatre - Minneapolis, MN

Nov 5th - Hoyt Sherman Place - Des Moines, IA

Nov 9th - Ryman Auditorium - Nashville, TN

Sarah Jarosz – Blue Heron Suite Tour

Dec 1st - Academy of Music - Northampton, MA

Dec 2nd - Stone Mountain Arts Center - Brownfield, ME

Dec 3rd - The Egg - Albany, NY

Dec 4th - Caramoor - Katonah, NY

Dec 5th - Levon Helm Studios - Woodstock, NY

Dec 7th - Center For The Arts - Homer, NY

Dec 8th - Higher Ground - Burlington, VT

Dec 9th - Narrows Center for the Arts - Fall River, MA

Dec 10th - Shalin Liu - Rockport, MA

Dec 11th - Portland House of Music - Portland, ME