Archives for category: Country Music
Rory Lee Feek, Tin Pan South 2013, Station Inn, photo - Brad Hardisty

Rory Lee Feek, Tin Pan South 2013, Station Inn, photo – Brad Hardisty

“I slept my way to the top!” – Rory Lee Feek

Chris Caminiti, Tin Pan South 2013, Station Inn, photo - Brad Hardisty

Chris Caminiti, Tin Pan South 2013, Station Inn, photo – Brad Hardisty

The Historic Station Inn still survives in the rapid developing Gulch area just south of downtown and Tin Pan South kicked off with the late set  on April 2nd featuring Joey + Rory aka Joey Martin Feek and Rory Lee Feek (“Cheater, Cheater”), Tonya Lynette Stout (“What The Devil Wants”), Erin Enderlin ( “Last Call”) and up and coming Chris Caminiti (“Better Than Me”) performing in the round while across town at 3rd & Lindsley the writers from the hit TV show Nashville were creating a lot of buzz.

Nashville has been through a long lonely winter and tonight was no exception with temps already dropping into the 40’s as everybody got their popcorn and a cold one and settled down at the long tables that The Station Inn is known for.

The crowd seemed to be from every corner of the globe from Canada to England and beyond. It seems like fans outside the United States value song craft and the creators more than those that live within the 48 contiguous states do.

Tonya Lynette Stout, Tin Pan South 2013, photo - Brad Hardisty

Tonya Lynette Stout, Tin Pan South 2013, photo – Brad Hardisty

Every round needs a leader and Tonya seemed to be the de facto go-to among giants. Joey + Rory were bookended by Chris and Erin which made for quite an interesting spread of influences ranging from Billy Joel to Bobbie Gentry.

Chris kicked it off on acoustic playing off the fact that he was from the northeast and he wasn’t quite Country but was definitely his own thing. Chris moved between guitar and keyboards like it was nothing.

Joey + Rory, Tin Pan South 2013, Station Inn, photo - Brad Hardisty

Joey + Rory, Tin Pan South 2013, Station Inn, photo – Brad Hardisty

Tonya brought things into focus and it seemed that the theme for the night began to build on cheatin’ and drinkin’ songs other than the song Chris said fit with his life raising a stepson and he definitely told a great story on that one. Chris wasn’t sure if the song would find a life since everybody in Nashville is trying to be 22 right now.

Paul on Rory's Axe, Tin Pan South 2013, photo _ Brad Hardisty

Paul on Rory’s Axe, Tin Pan South 2013, photo _ Brad Hardisty

Tonya showed classic songwriting style well-developed with a strong voice calling up one of her co-writers, Paul and Rory gladly handed over his six string for Paul to sit in on the fun.

Joey + Rory, Tin Pan South 2013, Station Inn, photo - Brad Hardisty

Joey + Rory, Tin Pan South 2013, Station Inn, photo – Brad Hardisty

Rory was articulate on the guitar and comfortable in the catbird seat with his Harlan Howard pedigree. Writing music for Harlan Howard would be the equivalent of getting one of Chet Atkin’s CGP certificates or being Chuck Leavell in The Rolling Stones for all these years. The latter would be truer because in reality maybe The Stones were the lucky ones to get Chuck on keyboards. They know his pedigree better than 99.9% of Stones fans.

Joey + Rory have had some great success over the last couple of years and being out on the road with The Zac Brown Band doesn’t hurt either. They have their own “Honky Tonk Women” with “Cheater, Cheater” that was released on Sugarhill no less. I don’t think Sugarhill is used to having a Top 40 hit.

Erin Enderlin tuning up "Jimmy Dickens", Tin Pan South 2013, Station Inn, photo - Brad Hardisty

Erin Enderlin tuning up “Jimmy Dickens”, Tin Pan South 2013, Station Inn, photo – Brad Hardisty

Between swapping stories about being on the road with Zac Brown that ended in a co-write there were stories of how songwriting sessions go in their household with Joey baking chocolate chip cookies and other delights. It sounds like the food starts in the kitchen when songwriting begins in their household.

Erin Enderlin said that when Joey was making BLT’s it kind of made you wanted to hurry up and finish writing so you could eat. It sounded like Erin was a regular at their house.

Erin Enderlin, Tin Pan South 2013, Station Inn, photo - Brad Hardisty

Erin Enderlin, Tin Pan South 2013, Station Inn, photo – Brad Hardisty

Erin was the last in line but really was more like the fourth at bat with the San Francisco Giants ready to clean up the plates hitting a home run every time. Luckily, she had her 2011 self-titled CD available to take home so I could put “Baby Sister” on cranked up on my way back home.

In a way this was really a contrast between the set at The Station Inn and what was going on over at 3rd & Lindsley where T-Bone Burnett had been putting his stamp on some very interesting up and coming writers. The set at The Station Inn basically showed that the spirit of traditional country still had a thread and importance and for many outside Nashville a definite relevance just as the TV show Nashville premiers Country with a twist of lime.

Joey Martin Feek, Tin Pan South 2013, Station Inn, photo - Brad Hardisty

Joey Martin Feek, Tin Pan South 2013, Station Inn, photo – Brad Hardisty

All four were great songwriters and were comfortable onstage as well. If I had to take something home, it would be that Rory Lee Feek is a deft guitarist with clean articulate lines and has a great long time duet team going on with Joey. While I was listening to the stories about food in the Feek household while guitars were strumming and words were being penned to paper it made me want to be in on one of those songwriting sessions with Erin and The Feeks or at least stop by the all-night diner down by the Cumberland for some late night breakfast.

Erin, Joey and Rory, Tin Pan South 2013, Station Inn, photo - Brad Hardisty

Erin, Joey and Rory, Tin Pan South 2013, Station Inn, photo – Brad Hardisty

The other takeaway was Erin; literally, I got the CD so I could rock out to “Baby Sister” on the way home.  Erin has enough blues in her music and her voice to make it interesting for me. I also appreciate the fact that she brought along her own utility player laying down some great dobro slide.

If I had to make a pick, I was glad I was at The Station Inn last night.

–          Brad Hardisty, Nashville, TN     thenashvillebridge@hotmail.com

 

lulu roman at lastLuLu Roman dropped a new album this month, At Last that showcases her rich voice reminiscent of Roberta Flack performing torch songs she has never recorded before.

courtesy - luluroman.net

courtesy – luluroman.net

LuLu  has enjoyed many successes in her life, known for her side splitting humor and gregarious personality, many people know LuLu as the most requested female cast member from the long running hit Television Show “ Hee Haw”, It is in reruns now on RFD making it 42 years old, gaining a whole new audience.

LuLu is an accomplished song writer and performs all over the world.

For more than a decade, LuLu has been involved in Christian Gospel winning the “Dove Award” in 1985 for “Album of The Year by a Secular Artist.” In 1998 she was inducted into “The Country Gospel Music Hall of Fame”.

In 2002 Lulus’ 16th album, LuLu Inspired was nominated for the Dove Award. Other awards have included induction into the “Christian Music Hall of Fame” in 2007 as well as the “J.D. Sumner Living Legend Award” in 2008.

In 2007, she was awarded, with the Hee Haw cast, “The Entertainers Award” from TV Land.

The Nashville Bridge sat down with Lulu to talk about At Last, Hee Haw and next weeks’ knee surgery that will keep her grounded for a bit before doing shows later this year.

Brad Hardisty / The Nashville Bridge: It sounds like it is going to be a few months before we get to hear the new songs live, I guess.

courtesy -luluroman.net

courtesy -luluroman.net

LuLu Roman: Yeah, I am having knee replacement surgery on Monday. I am going to take a little time off before touring for the record. I’m hopin’ I can get up and get at it!

TNB: The record is droppin’ on January 15th right?

LR: Yes.

TNB: You have a duet with Dolly. Tell me about that. You’ve obviously known her for a while.

LR: Uh huh, I’ve known her for… goodness sakes!  Over 40 years! We were young girls when Hee Haw first started and she was out there you know.

TNB: Do you have a Dolly story?

LuLu Roman and Dolly Parton in the studio.

LuLu Roman and Dolly Parton in the studio.

LR: Yeah, there are so many.  Well, going into the studio this time was a great time. It really was. Dolly is just this, “What you see is what you get!” Dolly is Dolly. She just lights up the room and lights up the attitudes. She’s just absolutely precious. Dolly came out after we were through cutting vocals and I had her lyric sheet and I thought well now…hmmm…she was so cute. She said, “You will have to sign this for me,” and I said, “What?” She said,”You gotta sign this!” I said, “Not unless you sign this!”

TNB: So, she’s a fan.

LR: She is absolutely precious. Golly! There is no one in the world like her, she is just incredible.

TNB: You have done a lot of Gospel over the years. Are you working with the same Producer?

LR: This is totally different because it is mostly standards and classics.  Two young fellows, Larry Ferguson and Chris Barnes were the ones that produced this and they’re new to this. My goodness they are good! We just got some of the best players on the map. I’m really proud of this. I really am.

TNB: Where did you cut the record at?

LR: We recorded at three or four studios, we did.

TNB: Did you record at Sound Kitchen?

LR: We did do something at Sound Kitchen. I think the one we did with Dolly. I believe.

TNB: Was Chris involved in the song choices?

LR: Chris would say, “Which is your favorite?” I would say, “ALL OF EM!!” These are nostalgic songs that I remember listening to when I was a young person, years ago; stuff I would kind of put a check next to. I would think, “I want to sing that one…one day.”  My youngest son is the one that got me. He got married seven and a half years ago and mercy honey, I’ll never forget it, he said, “I want to get you to sing at my wedding. I said, “No, you won’t!” He said, “I want you to sing a song at my wedding. I want you to sing “At Last.”  I said, “You’re kidding.” So, that was the first time I sang that seven or eight years ago.

TNB: So, that was the first time you went after Etta James.

LR: Uh huh. She was one of my heroes and just was a remarkable talent. One of those that you would sit around listenin’ and sayin’ “Oh yeah, I’ll sing like that.”

TNB: You have a really lush, rich voice. You’d be great for more torch songs like that.  Like Etta James and Roberta Flack.

LR: We were gonna call it torch songs and then somebody said, “Well you have this gospel career and so, you know, some people might not want it”, but, they kind of do.

TNB: What is the song you are going to try to get out of there?

LR: It looks like it might be the Dolly song they are going for first with Country radio because we talked about that yesterday and from what I understand they have a lot of people calling the radio station saying that is a good “thing.”  Then, I think they are going to take “At Last” maybe to another market.

TNB: Where is the CD going to be available?

LR:  We are going to put in the stores and go to ITunes and everywhere.

TNB: When you tour, do you have a group of guys you normally play with?

LR: Well, with the gospel stuff and the country stuff, I mostly have gone with my tracks or used other peoples bands so we’re discussing putting a band together so we can do this the way we recorded it.

TNB: So, you are purposely going to go out and do some shows spotlighting the album?

lulu roman hee haw 03LR: Yeah. We’re gonna do it this year. We are going to do one show and see how it goes. I’ll be going with kind of a Hee Haw Roadshow. You get to do what you are doing currently out there. We had the Hee Haw reunion a couple of years ago and we got a big draw from that, you know.  So, I will get to sing a little bit of this and a little gospel singing and see how things work out.

TNB: Who will be going out on the Hee Haw type showcase?

LR: Roy Clark, Marty will be one of the announcers, Gunilla Hutton, Charlie McCoy and The Nashville Edition. It’s going to be a pretty good show. We will be playing big rooms. We will be in Pennsylvania the first time and that is a big ‘ole room.

TNB: It sounds like a really good show.

LR: I have been travellin’ so much. I have done a few shows with them the last couple of years.

TNB: Have you thought about doing a run in Branson?

LR: Well, that’s a possibility, but, I think I’d like to get out there and get with the people and see peoples reaction, you know, before I kind of notch myself in you know.

TNB: This will bring people in that maybe, the gospel is okay but it’s not their style, but the standards they will get into; the Nelson Riddle Orchestra type stuff.

LR: There is not too many people that don’t like old standards, you know, even young people do. If it’s good than it is good. I’m so excited. I’ve wanted to do these for years and years and years and to finally get it done and get it out there; I’m like a little kid.

TNB: This is strictly standards?

LR: They are all standards. We’ve got, “At Last,” “Summertime,” “If You’ Don’t Know Me,” “Killing Me Softly”…

TNB: He should have sent me “Killing Me Softly” because when I heard your voice, I thought of Roberta Flack because you are right in that tonal range.

LR: Thank you. It’s funny because I have asked people what their favorites are and my daughter in law’s favorite is “Killing Me Softly” and then with Dolly and “Till I Make It On My Own” with Georgette Jones. T. Graham Brown sang on “You Are So Beautiful” and Linda Davis sang on “You Needed Me.”

TNB: You have a pretty loyal fan base.

lulu roman hee haw 01LR: I have got remarkable fans. I will say this, boy and the blessing is that it has been with the Country music and with the Gospel music. When I first started this, I had people come up to me at concerts. They would come up and say, “My Grandpa made me watch you on Hee Haw.” Now, I’ve got these little kids that are seven or eight years old that come up to me and say, “I saw you on Hee Haw,” and the Daddy is standing behind them and the Daddy is the one who is saying, “My Grandpa made me watch you.”

TNB:  What’s next after this?

LR: Well, I had a list of one hundred songs; so, we got some more we could do.

TNB: You could do like Rod Stewart, just keep doing the songbook, he’s been doing it for years.

LR: No kiddin’! Yeah, I love that idea. I do.

TNB: Anything else?

LR: I just would like to say thank you to each and every person that is out there. I hope that this project makes them as happy as it made me to get to do it.

– Brad Hardisty, Nashville TN     thenashvillebridge@hotmail.com

sammy kershaw christmas cdThe Nashville Bridge caught up with Sammy Kershaw just as he was getting ready to do some Holiday gigs up north on the Roots & Boots Tour with Aaron Tippin and Joe Diffie.  Sammy has just released a new Christmas collection, A Sammy Klaus Christmas in time to celebrate the season. The Roots & Boots Tour has been celebrating real country music all year long.

Brad Hardisty / The Nashville Bridge: It looks like you are heading up to some cold country.

Sammy Kershaw: I hit North Dakota first and then South Dakota second and come on back, then I’m back in Louisiana.

TNB: Okay, is the South Dakota show just your band or is it Roots & Boots?

SK: No, this is Roots & Boots this weekend.

TNB: Where are you at this morning?

SK: I’m here in Nashville; got in last night, just gettin’ on the bus.

TNB: Are you living here in Nashville now?

SK: No, I live in Lafayette, Louisiana, but, the band and the bus are here in Nashville. I fly into meet them every week.

TNB: I was listenin’ to A Sammy Klaus Christmas, but, let’s talk about the Roots & Boots tour that has turned into a long time successful thing.

sammy kershaw roots and boots 01SK: Yeah man, It is really starting to catch on now. We started at the Isle of Capri Casino on December 17th, 2011 in Lula, Mississippi and it’s just started to kick in now. Of course Joe, Aaron and I recorded some music and we are sending a single to radio the first part of the year and I’m hoping this thing goes through 2014.

TNB: I read back in June that you were going to record going forward.  So, you have a single coming out. That’s fantastic.

SK: Yes. So we’re going to try to get the video shot in the month of December before we get to busy into the Christmas holidays. We will have the video out the middle of January and of course the single following that.

TNB: Is it too early to announce a song title?

SK: Well, yeah maybe just a little bit.

TNB: Okay, we will hold on that but get people excited. Are you working with Butch Carr?

SK: Oh, yeah man. I love Butch. Butch is doing the mixing for me.

TNB: Great!  Are you producing the single?

SK: Yes.

TNB: Looking at the tour, it’s kind of like the country “Rat Pack” it’s growing in popularity.

SK: I tell you what I think. People are really liking it; because, I think a lot of people are missing country music nowadays. I’m not being ugly when I say that. I’m just being honest. I think a lot of people are missing country music and then you have three guys, you got me and Diffie and Aaron Tippin we are all on the stage at the same time and it’s an unplugged show. I think between us you have 85 hit records so we get to each pick six or seven of the biggest hits that we’ve had in our career to do. Aaron sings one then Joe sings one then I’ll sing one then it goes back to Aaron. We do that all night long. What started out to be, was supposed to be a 75-80 minute show is now turned into a two to two and a half hour show. We get to tell stories behind the songs. We pick on each other all night so the chemistry is really good. The folks are really liking the stripped down music. Like I said, I think they are really missing country music. We are having big crowds at these shows man. I’m talking about young folk too, the younger folks in their early twenties, and singing every song.

TNB: I agree with that situation with Country Music. You have what you would call traditional or classic country artists out of Texas and stuff like that, but, then you  got a big influence, people call it the “Fleetwood Mac” influence or “AC/DC” or whatever but it’s kind of changing what you are hearing on the radio. How do you feel about that? Do you think classic or traditional country will come back?

sammy kershaw 01SK: I think so. I have been saying it for a long time and it hasn’t happened yet, but, I’m kind of starting to think that it is fixin’ to happen soon. You know, I used to blame radio, but, I can’t blame radio, radio only plays what the record label will send ‘em. You know, look, I have said this for a long time; Country Music is the only genre that hates itself. It wants to be everything else but Country music.  I don’t understand that. I just don’t get it. We only have a handful of artists anymore that sell platinum albums. They are selling platinum singles or gold singles… selling 500,000 singles or a million single downloads, but, you know what? There’s only a handful of people now who are actually selling a platinum album; 500,000 or a million albums. Not just a single. So, now the record labels make a million selling single out to be this great thing. Well, let’s go back to the eighties and nineties when people were selling a million albums. That’s a great thing, when a guy was able to step up and able to sell a million albums. But, you know, a lot of us are forgotten about now, man. I think we put out some good music and I hate when I hear a few people say,” Well, you all had your time man.” I don’t agree with that; that we had our time. I think the time has changed on us. I think the labels have you know, they (the fans) ask, “Why did you leave country music?” That’s a question that’s asked of me all the time, “Why did you get out of country music?” Well, I didn’t get out of Country music. You know, I didn’t leave Country Music, country music left me. We’re still singing good old country songs and still recording good old country songs, me and Diffie and John Michael Montgomery and Tracy Lawrence and Aaron Tippin. I could go on and on. We’re still recording great country music. It’s just not getting heard anymore. Everything now sounds the same to me.

TNB: I was going to say it seems like a lot of times outside of the United States, they expect to hear a lot of the artists that you are talking about. They don’t expect to hear what’s we are actually listening to here. They don’t consider it country.

SK: That’s right! Hey look man, when we go to Canada, we have some of the biggest crowds when we go to Canada because people love country music up there. People love country music here but that’s just not the way the record labels have drifted on radio. Like I said for a long time, I blame radio. Radio won’t play us anymore, and you know what man, I’ll apologize to radio right now, because, I finally realized that radio can only play what the record label send ‘em. I have a little old record label and I can guarantee you; I record country music. It takes a lot of money these days to get a hit record and that’s a fact. That’s one thing bad about me, I tell it like it is and there’s a lot of people that don’t like it but there is a lot of people that do like it. I’m not the only one who feels that way and knows what’s going on. It’s just, I’m just kind of an outspoken guy and I tell it like it is, but, the truth is the truth and the truth hurts sometimes. You know what? It’s still the truth. I don’t care how in the hell you say it.

TNB: I think you are right. That is why you have this thing called Americana.

sammy_kershaw_branson_2011SK: I see Country stations that are poppin’ up, but, you know what? They’re going to have to adjust that format just a little bit because; they’re going to end up like the classic rock stations. You are going to hear the same songs every day. But, in classic rock, if you go back to listen to classic rock, there’s tens of thousands of hits of classic rock songs so why should we have to hear the same thing every day?  It’s the same thing with our classic country stations. Why do I hear the same country songs every day when there are tens of thousands of country songs that were smashes?!

TNB: That’s why I like WSM, in a positive vein; they will play some deep cuts now and then. Kind of mix it up.

SK: Yes.

TNB: I wish there were more WSM’s across the country that broke new artists that were out of the mainstream but also played a lot of classic cuts. So they would say “Oh, I remember that song.” It’s like hasn’t been played like you said.

SK: Uh – huh

TNB: Let talk about A Sammy Claus Christmas; about picking the songs, I mean you already did the one Christmas album. Did you pick songs that brought childhood memories or something?

courtesy - Sammy Kershaw Entertainment

courtesy – Sammy Kershaw Entertainment

SK: It was just something I wanted to do. I wanted it to sound more like something like a children’s Christmas album that they could sing along with. I know that I hear a lot of Christmas classics that there is so much stuff added into them, you know, I know everybody wants to be different; put their own mark on a Christmas song, but, sometimes you know you want to hear the simple way it was done a hundred years ago. I wanted kids to be able to experience what a real Christmas is. You know it’s changed a lot from when I was a boy. Also, when the older people, like myself, and a little bit younger and a little bit older, when they listen to it, I wanted it to be able to take them back when they were little kids to their memories when they were children. We spent a whole month trying to guess what was wrapped underneath the tree. Nowadays, it’s mostly gift cards and money. There’s no thought in that…and I’m guilty of it too. I give all my children money for Christmas, but, I understand they have families now and they could use money more than anything else. Especially in these times, the way they are now in this economy. But, I would love to see Christmas come back. One of my biggest dreams in life is to be the real Santa Claus. I know it sounds stupid and people say it’s crazy but tell me what the hell you want. I really don’t give a shit.  I don’t man. I would love to be the real Santa Claus so kids could feel what Christmas really is. And of course you got to keep Christ in Christmas, that’s it for me man. Like I said, I don’t give a shit what they think. They can say “Oh he’s crazy. He wants to be Santa Claus, what an idiot.” Well, you can call me what the hell you want, you think I give a shit? Not me. I’m happy man. I’m happy thinkin’ that I’d love to be Santa Claus. At least I have some dreams, some people don’t.  That’s’ a hell of a life.

TNB: Well, I think A Sammy Klaus Christmas was a great title. I’ll tell you the cut I really love was “That Spirit of Christmas” it reminded me almost of a Muscle Shoals – Dan Penn kind of thing. I loved it.

SK: Thank you man.

TNB: Were you thinking a little bit like that when you were doing the arrangement or anything?

SK: No, I remember Ray Charles’ arrangement. It has a choir and everything else on it but I didn’t want it to be that complicated. I wanted it to be more of a stripped down version of that song and I didn’t want the harmonies exactly where they had ‘em. I didn’t want that big choir sound in it. So, I went through line by line when I had the background vocals to sing. I went line by line and sought out where I wanted to put a background vocal.

TNB: I was ready to see the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section, like, David Hood on that cut, I was like, wow! This is cool. Obviously, everybody is talking about “Santa Claus is Back In Town.” You got that little Elvis and a little Delbert McClinton, tell me what you were thinking on that.

SK: Well, I’m a South Louisiana Boy, you know, we have all kinds of music there, you know, we have good country music and good southern rock and we have zydeco music, French music, swamp pop music we call it.  We got jazz, we got blues, and that’s kind of my deal anyway, all those different kinds of music, that’s how I came up with my sound to start with. Just has soulful stuff.

TNB: I’d almost say when I hear some of those cuts like you do. I think of that soul country back when Delbert McClinton was kind of that.  The Tanya Tucker thing you know. I could see that.

SK: Well, even George Jones is the King of Country Soul man. You know, and I will tell you Ronnie Van Zant, the late Ronnie Van Zant. He sang for Lynyrd Skynyrd, you know, and look man, to me he was a country soul singer in a rock and roll band.

TNB: You can start to talk about Eddie Hinton, Donnie Fritz, and some of those cats.

SK: Yeah man, I just like to feel what he’s feeling when he’s singing. I want to feel his art and his soul or her heart, her soul, you know. I want to feel that.

TNB: Are you going to do any of the Christmas songs live?

SK: I would think so. Yeah, I think I may do one this weekend. I don’t care what Joe or Aaron do, I may do one.

TNB: What one would you want to do?

SK: I’m going to talk to my band when we get on the road here and try to figure that one out, see what we can pull off acoustically.

TNB: As far as the album goes, you’ve got the distribution though Sony/RED. I guess you got it out there on Amazon and stuff.

SK: Yeah, Amazon and I Tunes, you can get it at WalMart.com. I mean of course, everything is out there on the internet now. There are not very many record stores still in business anymore.

TNB: I know around here, there is Grimey’s.

SK: But, you can get hard copies from, like I said, Amazon and Walmart.com or you can just download it from I Tunes.

TNB: Before we go, what’s your kind of memories of Christmas, you talk about what Christmas used to be. Are there any specific memories you want to share?

SK: Yeah, like I said Christmas, I remember when we used to have to guess for two or three weeks what was wrapped under that tree. Of course, we would get out of school for two weeks at Christmas time. You had Christmas and of course, New Years follows. We had a whole week for thanksgiving the month before. And when Christmas rolled around we had two weeks to hang out with our friends and all that stuff and, you know, our Christmas’s in Louisiana weren’t like a lot of the rest of the country. I remember that they were foggy and pretty long and muggy. You know we would go outside and play and have a lot of fun, like, all night long.  We would, all the kids in the neighborhood would get together. We wouldn’t go in the house until it was 10:30. We would hang around outside. We wouldn’t get into trouble. We did a few things, you know, we had fun. I’ll put it that way, we just had fun. We didn’t hurt nobody.  But, nowadays, I don’t see kids play outside anymore. It’s a sad thing man…sad.

TNB: Did you have a musical family? Did you hang out and play music?

SK: No, I’m the only one that ended up doing music in my family. I don’t know why or how it happened that way, but, I’m the only one who ended up doing music.

TNB: What kind of food, Louisiana food, any difference down there during the holidays?

santa_cajunSK: A lot of gumbo’s of course. And of course we do Fried Turkeys. We invented fried turkey down there in Cajun country you know. And of course a lot of rice dressing and candied yams, all that kind of stuff. But, it was Cajun. A lot of flavor and spice, not necessarily hot, there’s a difference between hot and spice. Spicy is a lot of flavor. Hot is just burn your mouth.

TNB: Well, Happy Holidays, anything else you want to talk about real quick?

SK: I think we’re done.

TNB: Good luck with the rest of the year. You have dates going into the middle of summer. Good luck!

SK: You need to keep on rockin’!

– Brad Hardisty, Nashville, TN     thenashvillebridge@hotmail.com

Courtesy – John Richards Music

The Nashville Bridge sat down with John Richards at Fido in Hillsboro Village just before the one night only viewing of Led Zeppelin’s Celebration Day at The Belcourt to celebrate John’s forthcoming release My Jazz II.

A lifelong resident of Nashville, John Richards is a guitarist’s guitarist having made the transition from Rock and Roll to Country sideman to accomplished archtop wizardry. The former President of The Nashville Musicians Union, Harold Bradley says, “Exciting would be a good way to describe John Richards. His technique appears to be born of necessity to fulfill his creative imagination…along with his musical riffs, his voice doubles the musical lines…he plays a variety of music from “Cherokee” to “Night Life” and I recommend you listen to John Richards.”

Courtesy – John Richards Music

John Richards is a Nashville native and lifelong musician who was a child protégé of his father, his musical hero. John started his musical journey on the stage of the Ernest Tubb Midnight Jamboree in Nashville and has toured with and backed on radio, television and for live audiences: Tanya Tucker, Johnny Bush, Carl Perkins, R.W. Blackwood, Billy Ealker, Ferlin Husky, Bobby Bare, Barbara Mandrell, Mac Wiseman, Bill Anderson and many more.

He has been compared to Django Reinhart, George Benson, Lenny Breau and Chet Atkins while also winning a PBS Award for his part in the Ken Burns Jazz Series.

John was recently awarded the prestigious “Nashville Jazz and Blues Award for 2012 Guitarist of the Year” from the elite Marion James Blues Society.

My Jazz II was recorded at the famous Gene Breeden’s Studio and Produced by the well known Lloyd Townsend and Imaginary Records. The CD will be released this week.  The CD Release Party will be held at World Music Nashville, Friday November 30th at 7PM

Brad Hardisty / The Nashville Bridge: Why My Jazz II?

John Richards: It’s called My Jazz II as opposed to my Jazz 1 which was my first CD and the reason why it’s called my Jazz II is because the first one never got pushed anyway. It never had any PR.

TNB: When was Jazz 1 released?

JR: That was like 10 years ago or maybe more.

TNB: So this was a whole different period of time.

Vassar Clements

JR: Yes, but, I’ve always played Jazz so, you know it’s the reason why I carried over some of those older cuts; because they’re invaluable, for instance Vassar Clements playing on it. It was Vassar’s last session.

TNB: Did you write some cuts? Do some covers?

John Richards and Victor Wooten at Bass Camp

Richard Smith

JR: On the new CD there are some covers, but, mostly because Vassar Clements played on it and Victor Wooten played on some of the cuts too. Victor is an old friend of mine. Plus, some surprise guests as well. Richard Smith is from England, he’s playing on an impromptu version of …I was on Tom Brash’s guitar actually. I was just sittin’ there with it and we launched into “Cherokee” so we just went with it, just two players, trading bass lines and playing behind each other.

TNB: Victor can play about anything.  He plays with Bela Fleck. What’s he doing on your cut?

JR:  Victor is playing on my instrumental. It’s called “Twilight Moon.”   I have been fortunate. Victor came and played on that for me and I’ve since been at his Bass Camp and we jammed up there and played some shows and it’s like we are getting to know each other even more. It is really neat. He’s an incredibly nice man and if you wanted to know, we really come from the same head in a lot of ways.

TNB: You are both from Nashville.

JR: The Wootens; they were like army brats, they traveled all over the place. They were in California,but, I think, originally,  they are from North Carolina. I was born and raised here.

TNB:  Did you write anything on this from your own personal life experiences?

Moe Denham

JR: Well, “Pookie Is A Dude” has a lot to do with my life. A dear friend of mine kept on coercing me. He wanted me to sing about his cat. I finally gave in. He said,”Hey man you gotta write a song about my cat.” I said what’s your cat’s name and he said “Pookie!” I was like “Pookie?” ”Yeah you need to call him that, like, Pookie’s a dude” I was like “Pookie’s a dude?”  So, I gave in and wrote this song and it’s a fun thing. Also, you got the great Moe Denham playing the Hammond Organ.  He’s played with a lot of great jazz players. It’s a full cast man.

TNB: Is it all over the map as far as jazz goes?

JR: It’s everything from original stuff  and stadards, but,all of them are my arrangements. There is even a Beatles song.

TNB: What Beatles song?

JR: “Norwegian Wood,” it’s pretty cool. It was done some with a trio and some with Vassar. Some with just you know I like the trio or sometimes four or five pieces.

TNB: Did you have a main guitar that you used on the sessions?

Courtesy – John Richards Music

JR: Pretty much it was my Epiphone Joe Pass Emperor. I just plug it in and go. I don’t have a bunch of pedals.

TNB: How did you get started playing guitar in Nashville?

JR: I always had an interest in music. My Dad and my Uncle used to have these jam sessions three or four times a year.  My Uncle lived in Florida and he would come into Nashville and the families would get together and my grandmother and all the women would cook up this great food and we cooked up a bunch of this great music and every year when they would do one of these things I would be wanting to play and I’d want to get right in the middle of it, but, I didn’t have a decent enough guitar until I was about eleven. It was a decent flat type. I was like strumming along with them and my uncle turned to my Dad and whispered, “You’ve been showin’ him some chords, haven’t you?” Dad said, “No, I haven’t been showin’ him anything.”  My Uncle says, “Well, he’s playing the right changes for what we are doing.” So, my Mom saw that I really loved it and everything and told Dad, “Ok. He wants it. Now, you know he doesn’t want to go play baseball.” Dad didn’t want me to get involved in the business unless he saw that it is what I really wanted.  And I’ve always appreciated him letting me find my way. He was a great guy and a great mentor for me. He was a jazz lover too.  I mean, he knew people like Hank Garland, Grady Martin and he ran a shoe shop. He would call me to the back where he had his little radio going all day long and he’d be like “John!  C’mon here and catch this lick.” I learned a lot of licks that way. Jerry Reed, Grady Martin licks. He had me back there as fast as he could to have me learn that way. I mostly got ear training, but, it served me pretty well.

TNB: What was your first professional gig?

JR: Probably, with a combo after I had been playing three months. We had a group called The U.F.O.’s and we were doing Ventures music and “Louie, Louie,” all the songs of the day. We opened Madison Square Shopping Center, right in front of the marquee for the movie theater. That was my first big gig.

TNB: So, did you get into Rock and Roll for a while, or did you get into Country?

JR: My trail started with Roger Miller who was a doing that “bluh, bluh, duh, duh.”  He would play a little lick at the same time. I was always looking for a little lick because everything was always so new to me. I was open to hear what I could hear and learn. That Roger Miller lick grabbed me and I started doing that little lick and it wasn’t very long after that when I heard Jerry Reed. I was a teenager when I started hearing Jerry Reed and Dad started doing the same thing, he said “Come here! Check this out. Check out this guitar player.”

TNB: Jerry did a lot of nylon string guitar stuff.

JR: There is a big story with all of that. Because, I got really voracious into Jerry Reed stuff, but, I didn’t know that he tuned for a lot of stuff that he played. I didn’t know if he was overdubbing or what, so, I learned how to play verbatim in standard tuning. I would be in the same key. One day I had heard, I always had my ear to the ground, about some new music shops and somebody I knew told me about this new music shop that opened up. They had all these handmade guitars and stuff that were way beyond glorious. These were like the finest handmade classical guitars and flamenco guitars made. The ones you only hear about and I was sitting there and I was getting to play these things. They kept bringing them back, bringing them down. They would have them way up on the wall, like Ramirez; beautiful handmade guitars. I used to love the work on flamenco guitars. They had beautiful knobs.  They weren’t even knobs. They were works of art and pearl sometimes, I mean just gorgeous. They had all this gold work that went up on the side and around the sound hole. Jerry Reed got me hooked into playing classical guitar.

TNB: So you learned how to do that style?

photo – Brad Hardisty

JR: Yeah, I was playing one guitar in particular and this tall gentleman comes by and I noticed he was kind of coming by now and then. I was just sitting there probably playing for like an hour. Finally, he came by and said, “Man you sound like Glen Campbell!” I was like doing Jose Feliciano, “Light my Fire” and all that stuff.  And he said,” Yeah, you sound like Jose Feliciano too.” I said, “Thank you sir, but, my real idol is Jerry Reed.” He said, “Well yeah? Hit me a lick!” I went into a lot of it and I was doing it in standard tuning and he just cracked up and he said, “You know, Jerry is a friend of mine.” I was like “Jerry’s a friend of yours, huh.” He was like, “I’m going to call him and tell him about you.” That’s when I found out for the first time that I doubted someone’s word, because, that was like me being Elvis for some teenage girl or something. He got on the phone for like a fifteen minute conversation with this man so I played a little bit louder just in case it was Jerry. I wanted him to hear what I was doing somewhat. Then, he gets off the phone after just having a “bang-up” conversation. He said “It’s settled, Jerry wants to meet you.” I was like, “Jerry wants to meet me? That’s terrific.” Then he says, “Yeah and he’s going to call ya.” I said,”He’s going to call me.” I kept saying this in my mind… okay. He convinced me enough that when I got home from school, I would sit by the phone. In those days there were no coda phones. If you didn’t catch the phone, you just missed the call, period! There was no way to know who called you ever. So anyway, this one particular day my Mom was going down to Madison Square Shopping Center, going to Shoney’s which was the highlight of my… I mean Shoney’s was it in those days as a kid. If she mentioned Shoney’s my ears lit up. But, I said, :”Mom you know I normally would go with you, but, I think I better stay here and wait for a call from Jerry.”

TNB: How old were you?

photo – Brad Hardisty

JR: I was fourteen. Anyway, I didn’t want to do anything that would keep me from being able to race to that phone. At the time, that was back when they had these long, long chords so you could put it in any room in the house, but, you had to have a really, really long chord. And it went all the way down the hallway to my parent’s door where their bedroom was. I could just race down the hall and I was like, “Oh shoot! I got to go to the bathroom!” I was like ready then the phone rings so I go running down there to grab the phone and you know how when you have been around someone for so long you  kind of pick up their mannerism and there speech? I had never heard this voice in my life. He said, “John?” I said “Jerry?”  He said, “No this isn’t Jerry, but, this is Jerry’s manager and Jerry wants to speak to you.” So then he puts Jerry Reed on the phone and Jerry said, “Well son, I hear you sound like me.” I said, “Well, I try to Jerry.” Jerry said, “Well hit me a lick! Do you have something on tape where I can hear it?”  I said “Well, I just happen to have a little reel to reel.” I had recorded “Oh What A Woman” or “Guitar Man” or something. Jerry said, “That will do. Let me hear that!” So, I put it on and it sounded like Jerry Reed on a 78 because my voice was like three times higher and anyway I played this thing and I heard him on the other line and he was just cracking up! He was like, “Son, I gotta meet you. You gotta come down to my office.” Jerry’s office was at Columbia Records. It was called Vector Music. That was his publishing company. I got into Jerry so much that I went down there, I had just bought a guitar that was like a three quarter size Decca that I bought with paper sales, because, I used to be a paper boy when I was a kid and I wore these kind of hats when I was a kid. That’s why I brought it back. That is another story. Anyway, I brought this guitar and I didn’t have a case for it. I had on sneakers, blue jeans, A Hooker Header yellow racing jacket with big red stripes with embroidery that said, “I love my Hooker Headers.” Also, a fishing hat like Jerry wore. The guitar was thrown over my shoulder and his manager came to the door and said, “You gotta be John.” I said, “Yes sir! That’s me!” He said, “Well, Jerry’s there so go on in.” It was really an amazing thing because something happened later that would make me never forget meeting him that day. I will never forget he had on this turtleneck with a very low collar and he had sleeves rolled so they kind of “belled” out. It was kind of a light blue sweater and then he had on electric blue pants. He was putting when I came in he had his set up in there. He said, “Well son, come on in here.”  We sat down. He said, “Well, play me something. Let me hear ya.” So, I started playing one of his tunes and he said, “Well, son, that was really good! I like that, but, this is the way I actually play it and he tuned down my little Decca and played his tune on it and then he would give it back to me and he would say, “That s the way I play that.”  I was like, “Oh! You tune for those things.”  “I tune for a lot of the stuff. “ We spent, like, I mean it seemed like forever, like, three hours together doing that back and forth, me playing him a song and them him showing me how to do it right. Before I left that day, they gave me practically all of Jerry’s albums.  The last one that he gave me had the same exact outfit that he had on the day I met him, so, I will never forget it. And he signed it, “Keep cookin’ Jerry Reed.” The name of the album was Cookin’.

TNB: That was the outfit he was wearing when you met him?

JR: Yeah, so, I never, never, ever forget what he had on that day.

TNB: So, from then on you were hooked.

JR: Oh yeah! I got voracious on Jerry Reed! I used to play at Ernest Tubb Record Shop and if I wasn’t doin’ some kind of Country rebellion then I was like, just playing Jerry’s stuff. He influenced me so much. Now, earlier, I mentioned Roger Miller, so, when Jerry Reed started the scatting, he used to scat, but, he wouldn’t he be doin’ it while he was playin’ his licks. I learned to do that from Jerry Reed and then it came in handy when I got into George Benson, because, I was already scattin’.

TNB: George Benson was doing the Wes Montgomery thing.

JR: Except, Wes Montgomery didn’t sing or scat.

TNB: He didn’t, but, style wise, he had a lot of Wes Montgomery.

JR: Oh yeah, Wes influenced a lot of people.  Wes was just a monster jazz guitar guy. The octave thing was great, but, his bebop was just amazing. He was great; a great player.

– Brad Hardisty, Nashville, TN     thenashvillebridge@hotmail.com

George Jones Final Show at Bridgestone Arena

Outback Concerts in association with Country Music Hall of Fame member George Jones announce the final Nashville show as part of The Grand Tour to be held at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, TN on Friday, November 22, 2013.

Tickets go on sale tomorrow, November 16, 2012.

Special guest Tanya Tucker will be on hand for the Nashville concert amongst other friends of The Possum, yet to be announced.

The Grand Tour will have surprises throughout the shows – you never know who may show up!  The Possum has lots of friends so it is going to be the most exciting thing to see who shows up during the final show. You should come too – and we can be surprised together!” said Jones.

George Jones, often referred to as the “the greatest living country singer” will mark the end of an era with 2013’s farewell tour titled “The Grand Tour”. The tour is expected to make approximately 60 stops next year. “I Don’t Need Your Rockin’ Chair”, “Who’s Gonna Fill Their Shoes”, “White Lightning” and “He Stopped Loving Her Today” will surely be part of each night’s set list, along with plenty of guests and surprises.

Tickets for the Nashville show go on-sale Friday, November 16th at 10am at all Ticketmaster locations.

Fans of ‘The Possum’ can see him at his upcoming concerts listed below or at www.georgejones.com.

George Jones on Tour (2012-2013)
11/09 – Branson, MO – The Mansion Theatre
11/10 – Morton, MN – Jackpot Junction Casino
11/16 – Peoria, IL – Peoria Civic Center
11/17 – Hiawassee, GA – Anderson Music Hall
11/23 – Winnie, TX – Nutty Jerry’s Winnie Arena
11/24 – Bossier City, LA – Horseshoe Casino
12/01 – Elizabeth, IN – Horseshoe Casino
12/15 – Jackson, TN – Carl Perkins Civic Center
02/02 – Tunica, MS – Sam’s Town
02/07 – Lakeland, FL – Youkey Theater
02/22 – Greenville, TX – Greenville Memorial Auditorium
02/23 – Forrest City, AR – East Arkansas Community College
03/15 – Joliet, IL – Realto Square Theater
03/16 – Muncie, IN – Emens Auditorium
03/22 – Chattanooga, TN – Memorial Auditorium
04/05 – Fairfax, VA – Patriot Center
04/06 – Knoxville, TN – Knoxville Coliseum
04/19 – Atlanta, GA – Fox Theater
04/20 – Salem, VA – Salem Civic Center
04/27 – Huntsville, AL – Mark C. Smith Concert Hall
05/17 – Charlottesville, VA – John Paul Jones Arena
05/18 – Spartanburg, SC – Memorial Auditorium
06/01 – North Tonawanda, NY – Riviera Theater
06/02 – Lancaster, PA – American Music Theater
11/09 – Grant, OK – Choctaw Event Center

George Jones is the #2 best-charting country artist of all time, with a staggering list of hit singles in every decade since the ’50s.  The Beaumont, Texas native also has 143 Top 40 hits to his name, has received two Grammy Awards, was a 2008 Kennedy Center Honor recipient, is a Country Music Hall of Fame inductee, was presented with a GRAMMY(r) Lifetime Achievement Award this year and holds a National Medal of Arts.  At 80, Jones continues to be an active country music superstar, headlining dozens of concerts each year.

– Brad Hardisty, Nashville, TN     thenashvillebridge@hotmail.com

Bridgestone Arena, photo – Brad Hardisty

First shots of the new rising sun, CMA morning in Nashville where the day will be invaded by Country Music fans from all over the world looking for show hosts Carrie Underwood and Brad Paisley as well as big radio stars Keith Urban, Lady Antebellum and Little Big Town.

GMA Stage after Reba, CMA 2012, 9AM, photo – Brad Hardisty

Today started off with the announcement that Taylor Swift’s new album, Red, is on pace for the biggest first week sales in a decade with 1.208 million copies moved.

Ryman, CMA 2012, 9AM – photo – Brad Hardisty

Early winners were announced on Good Morning America, with Kenny Chesney and Tim McGraw winning Musical Event of The Year for ”Feel Like A Rock Star.”  Although that may have been the mainstream duet, the real reach was Snoop Dogg’s collaboration with Willie Nelson, Kris Kristofferson and Jamey Johnson called “Roll Me Up and Smoke Me When I Die” that was up for an award in the same category.

Tootsies, CMA 2012 – 9AM, photo – Brad Hardisty

Toby Keith and director Michael Salomon won the Music Video of the Year category for their viral video smash “Red Solo Cup.”

Tear down at Bridgestone, CMA 2012, photo – Brad Hardisty

Reba McEntire performed bright and early just an hour ago from in front of tonight’s awards venue, The Bridgestone Arena which was simulcast on ABC’s Good Morning America.

Legends Corner, CMA 2012, early morning, photo – Brad Hardisty

After the quick set and early award announcements, the stage outside the arena was quickly tore down with roadies moving road cases and setting up for the next free set.

Lower Broad, CMA 2012 early morning, photo – Brad Hardisty

Nashville is a town that almost never sleeps with live music down Broadway almost 24 hours a day.

Just across the street from Bridgestone, there were Chevy trucks with wraps celebrating the show out in front of Tootsie’s while right around the side of Legends Corner, Big & Rich was bigger than life with a special mural for the show celebrating their return.

The day has just begun.

– Brad Hardisty, Nashville, TN     thenashvillebridge@hotmail.com

Nashville, TN – Dolly Parton – Iconic singer, songwriter, musician, actress and philanthropist – announced today that she will no longer be associated with the previously planned water park in Nashville.

“Gaylord makes decisions that they feel are good for their company and their stockholders and I have to make decisions based on what is best for me and the Dollywood Company,” said Parton. “Governor Haslam, Mayor Dean, and all the folks in government have been great to work with. I really appreciate their support through this process.”

“I think everyone knows I love Nashville and I hope the work we’ve already done will spark more family entertainment in Nashville,” Parton added.

For those that are long time Nashville residence, the Opryland theme park which was featured on television and the movie, Nashville, has been sorely missed and many have felt that this planned water park would be the start of a Renaissance nearby to the original park.

– Brad Hardisty, Nashville, TN     thenashvillebridge@hotmail.com

2010, Corb Lund, Hayes Carll, Lucinda Willianms, Hayes’ parents.

September used to be back to school month, now that school starts early, September is not only when the CMA’s hit Nashville, but, when the world comes for Americana, Bluegrass and where Next Big Nashville morphed into Soundland and moved to October.

While Nashville may be known for the CMA’s , Eric Church and Taylor Swift, it is also known for what Rolling Stone called the “coolest music festival in the world”, The Americana Music Festival hits the city for the ultimate pub crawl from September 12th-15th.

Dan Baird with Brad, 2010, Cannery Ballroom, Stones Tribute

Past years have seen everybody from Don Was to Robert Plant to Nashville’s Own, Justin Townes Earle put on some great showcases.  Last years’ awards show mashed up Gregg Allman, Robert Plant with The Avett Brothers, The Civil Wars and Mumford and Sons (sorry, the name reminds me of Sanford and Son). In fact, it seemed like a hybrid MTV awards show where music mattered and all sugar pop was left at the end caps in Wal Mart.

This year proves to be no exception, some notable sets will be Memphis night at The Rutledge featuring sets by Jim Lauderdale and the Mississippi All-Stars, okay, yes, I’ll say it again, Jim Lauderdale and The Mississippi All-Stars also a late set featuring an all-star jam playing the music of Big Star.

For those with a traditional view of what is “Americana”, Corb Lund will be at Mercy Lounge this Wednesday followed by a tribute to the late Levon Helm. In fact the line-up seems to be all inclusive with The Wallflowers, Mindy Smith, Chris Scruggs, Rodney Crowell among others playing all over the place for several nights.

As far as Americana goes, the easiest party route is to hang between Mercy Lounge and The Cannery Ballroom with an occasional run to The Basement for some harder to find sets.

Don Was, photo – Brad Hardisty

The problem is, this year, there are some great line-ups at The Rutledge and the Station Inn that will make that shuttle route a little difficult and may necessitate borrowing somebody’s 20-speed bike to get around each night.

Peelander-Z at Exit/In, NBN 2010 – photo – Brad Hardisty

The awards show at the end of the event, always proves to be a magical evening at The Ryman. This year should be no different. I am rooting for Alabama Shakes in the Emerging Artist category as well as Jason Isbell (Alabama represent!) & The 400 Unit with Album of the Year, Here We Rest.

The Dillards, IBMA 2010, photo – Brad Hardisty

Not to be outdone, IBMA’s World of Bluegrass Week runs from 24th-30th at, for convenience, The Nashville Convention Center and Renaissance Hotel. The IBMA Convention is not just about showcases, but, people are encouraged to carry around their guitars, fiddles, mandolins  and join in the jam sessions that run almost till the sun comes up every night.

You could say Ricky Skaggs is our local Bluegrass patron Saint, with yearly residencies at The Ryman and a new album, Music to My Ears coming out this month, but, there are many new young artists playing traditional bluegrass as well as pulling in some modern ideas and pre-war non-bluegrass styles.

This is the real rebellion. While the music industry is finding a million ways to make computers sing and dance and auto-tune any Disney character into stardom, both the Americana Music Festival and the IBMA World of Bluegrass celebrate real musicianship, communal collaboration and a reason for a Luthier to keep honing his skills in search of the perfect tone wood.

This recipe continues to build both communities with younger generations every year.

After all, how many times can the music business reinvent the 70’s and the 80’s?

Mike Farris hanging at Mercy Lounge, Americana 2010, photo – Brad Hardisty

So, while commercial Country is now going to be shown every week in the night time soap, Nashville, basically re-spinning the movie Country Strong, “Americana,” which can claim anything from pre-war anthems to Red Dirt scene country and Bluegrass, New Grass and all its modern heirs are really the new cool. These two celebrations are really the underground cool.

As far as Soundland? What happened? Well, it’s now on October 6th and after a peak year three years ago that featured major music business players talking about the next generation of music delivery and several days of new music, it is now one day down by the river with bands that already play Lollapalooza and other big festivals.

Wanda Jackson signing autographs at Mercy Lounge after Jack White produced album showcase, Americana 2010.

There are only a few locals, when Nashville could really do a Next Big Nashville with such a burgeoning Indie Rock and other type Music Scene, we get Soundland with just a couple of token Nashvillians, PUJOL and Nikki Lane.  I guess we are going for national respect and now start-ups like Secret Stages in Birmingham are filling in the gap. Can I just say…huh?

– Brad Hardisty, Nashviille, TN     thenashvillebridge@hotmail.com

Friday night, Due West will hit the stage of The Grand Ole Opry for the first time. Due West is built like a brick house from the ground up, all three, Tim Gates, Brad Hull and Matt Lopez are accomplished musicians, songwriters, vocalists and performers.

 Due West have been paying their dues over the last few years, from playing on three stools in an intimate venue to rocking some of the biggest stages between Nashville and the Rocky Mountain West.

all photos courtesy Black River Entertainment

Currently, their single, “Things You Can’t Do In A Car” is #43 on the Mediabase charts.

 For Due West, it looks like the time is now.

 You could start with songwriting skills that quickly earned all three Publishing deals and help define their fresh, unique sound. You could start with Producer Garth Fundis, whose credits include Keith Whitley, Don Williams, Trisha Yearwood and Sugarland. Anyone who has heard them sing will tell you that the place to start with Due West is with their vocals, collectively a three-lane road to magic.

 It happened the first time they ever sang together when old friends Matt Lopez and Brad Hull met Tim Gates at a party. The three started harmonizing and the other attendees—Music Row stars, newcomers, and friends—kept asking how long they’d been a group. It’s been happening ever since as they’ve toured the country, visiting radio stations and playing for appreciative audiences along the way.

 “We’ve been told that when we sing harmony, it’s something special, “says Brad, “and we’ve learned to believe it.”

Tim Gates

“It just seems like anytime we play live,” adds Tim, “we usually end up with some long-term fans.”

 That phenomenon is about to get much bigger as Due West puts the finishing touches on new material, being released on Black River Entertainment in 2012, that is already garnering industry buzz.

 “The energy is definitely there,” says Matt. “We’re at a new label with new music. This is all about new beginnings.” They’re especially excited about the chance to work with legendary producer Garth Fundis and engineers Chad Carlson and Chuck Ainlay. Carlson and Ainlay engineered all of Taylor Swift’s work and some of Ainlay’s most recent credits include producing and engineering Miranda Lambert’s Four The Record and engineering Lionel Richie’s Tuskegee.

 Producer Garth Fundis says of the time spent in the studio, “This is one of the most fun and creative musical experiences I’ve had in a recording studio,” he says. “And we’ve only just begun.”

 The Nashville Bridge caught up with Due West just a few days before their turn on the Grand Ole Opry Stage to find out a few things about the Nashville tri-powered roof raisers!

 What should we know about Due West?

Matt Lopez

Matt: Due West is a vocal trio.

Tim: We love what we do, and have a good time doing it.

Brad:  Due West is a group of 3 guys who came from 3 different small towns in the Western U.S., but met in Nashville and became instant brothers from a musical standpoint.  We LOVE vocal harmony and we’ve talked about how amazing it is that when we “lock in” on a chord, we can not only hear it but we can feel it… We hope that the harmony we sing will pay homage to the great vocal groups of the past and pave a way for harmony to be a part of the future of country music.

Favorite concert stop so far? What happened?

Matt: The Gallivan Center in Salt Lake City was my favorite so far. It was a large super-energetic crowd, and a nice big stage to run around on!

Tim:  “The Crystal Palace” (The home of Buck Owens) in Bakersfield California.  Not only was it our first time playing there, but it was our first full band show this year after a long run of radio visits. It was a huge honor to play on that stage. 

Brad Hull

Brad:  We recently played a promotional show at a Kentucky Ford dealership in front of a few hundred radio station listeners.  The promotion would be giving away a 1 year truck lease to the grand prize winner and we were there to play our song “Things You Can’t Do In a Car” from the beds of 3 brand new pick-ups as the entertainment part of the promotion.  The gig was fun, but the coolest moment was when an unsuspecting crowd member won the grand prize.  Something in her eyes seemed to let us know how much of a blessing this prize was to her and how much it was needed in her life.  Obviously, I think anybody wouldn’t mind winning something like that, but we could tell that this was more special than that.  I looked at Matt and Tim as the M.C. called this woman’s name and there couldn’t have been 2 bigger smiles in the whole place!  I looked over at our tour manager and he had big tears in his eyes.  It’s cool to see our music change people’s lives, even if it’s indirectly, that’s the reward.

Biggest musical influences?

Matt: The Beatles, Diamond Rio & Boyz II Men

Tim:  Keith Whitley, Steve Wariner, George Strait and Randy Travis

Brad:  My musical influences span over a few different genres and really come from any musical experience that moves me, but I would say that George Strait and Brian McKnight would be two artists that I’ve really latched onto and drawn influence from. 

If you could only pick three albums out of your collection, what would they be?

Matt: James Taylor – Greatest Hits, Michael Jackson – History, Mark Nesler – I’m Just That Way

Tim: Bellamy Brothers – Rebels Without A Clue/ Steve Wariner- Life’s Highway/ Keith Whitley- Don’t Close Your Eyes

Brad:  George Strait – #7, Brad Paisley – Part Two, Dierks Bentley – Modern Day Drifter

Which guitar or piece of gear you can’t live without?

Matt: My Larivee D10-E acoustic guitar.

Tim: Definitely my iPhone.   

Brad:  A good tuner.  I can’t STAND to listen to out-of-tune guitars!  I think that makes me a little paranoid and keeps me tuning constantly.

Favorite song you have written so far?

Matt: “Love’s Lookin’ Good On You” – recorded by Lady Antebellum.

Tim: “Day Over Beautiful”- its a song that I wrote about my wife. 

Brad:  “So Long, My Friend.”  It may never be heard by the masses but I can never play that song without feeling the emotion I felt when I wrote it, I think because it came from a true, personal place.

Favorite place to eat in Nashville?

Matt: Chuy’s Mexican restaurant.

Tim:  Sushiyobi

Brad:  Sushiyobi.  Matt and Tim told me for YEARS that I would love sushi if I’d just try it, but it was my wife who finally got me to try it.  Of all the sushi restaurants I’ve been to across the U.S., Sushiyobi here in Nashville is still my fave!

What are your thoughts about playing the Grand Ole Opry for the first time?

Matt: Because it’s such an amazing honor and privilege, I’m trying to play it way down in my head; so that I don’t get freaked out and keel over dead on the stage!

Tim:  Just like my first kiss, or the first time I sat behind the wheel of a car, I get butterflies.    It’s gonna be a great experience!! 

Brad:  It is a dream come true for me.  I love the history and tradition of the Opry and I honor that.  I can’t wait to step inside of the “circle” and soak in that moment.  I have a lot of friends from my home town in Arizona who, without me even saying what a big deal it is, knew instantly that the opportunity to play the Opry is a HUGE deal!  They will all be there on Friday night to cheer us on.  I cannot wait!

– Brad Hardisty, Nashville, TN     thenashvillebridge@hotmail.com

Chips Moman at Country Music Hall of Fame, all photos – Brad Hardisty

Chips Moman was at The Ford Theater in The Country Music Hall of Fame as part of the “Celebrate the King” series on Saturday, August 19th and spent a little over an hour talking about over thirty years worth of work in the music industry. If there were a list of the top 25 people that are responsible for American music today as we know it, Chips would be there.

Chips, who grew up in La Grange, Georgia, got a ukulele when he was three and a guitar when he was four, hitchhiked to Memphis to stay with his Aunt when he was just fourteen. When asked why he decided to go to Memphis, Chips just said, “I had never been there before.”

Scotty Moore and Brad Hardisty at Chips Moman Interview

Chips, who rarely does such interviews, drew a five star crowd of musicians that worked with him, especially in the Memphis years. Original guitarist for Elvis, Scotty Moore as well, the members of The Memphis Boys, sessions cats from the American Sound Studio years featuring guitarist, Reggie Young. Also, Gary Talley from The Box Tops.

James Burton, the other prominent guitarist in Elvis Presley’s career was also there.

Chips, who grew up listening to Les Paul & Mary Ford on the radio as a young boy, was also asked when he first heard Black Music. Chips just said, “I guess it was while I was picking cotton when I was a boy,” which brought a little laughter. It was hard to get a straight answer when one of the architects of the Memphis Sound was just going to play off your last statement.

Johnny Burnette & The Rock and Roll Trio

Chips Moman started playing guitar on some Sun Sessions for Warren Smith. In those early days, he played guitar in road bands for Gene Vincent and The Burnette Brothers.

Chips left Memphis for a while and headed out to California and worked at Gold Star studios as a session player while learning the studio experience where Phil Spector would develop the “Wall of Sound” production techniques.

With that experience, Chips was ready to work with somebody to start an R&B label when he got back to Memphis. Chips had talked Jim Stewart into buying a tape machine and went to scope out a place for a studio with Paul Ritchie and it was really under Chips insistence that they purchased the Theater on McLemore Avenue in Memphis that would serve as the recording studio for Satellite and Stax releases.

Defining the Stax Sound,Chips writes “Last Night”

In fact Chips wrote the first big hit, “Last Night” by The Markeys that was on Satellite Records and helped to establish the Memphis Sound with the driving beat, horns and locked in guitar, bass and drums.

Chips was a true visionary able to play guitar, compose music, run a label and act as Producer for well over 100 Billboard hits during the sixties and seventies.

A little inside story, Chips owned a little British sports car where Booker T. & The MG’s got their name from.

When asked why he left Stax, the simple answer was that he wasn’t getting paid.

 

The first hit record out of American Sound Studio.

What happened next was the founding of his own studio, American Sound Studio, where not only did Chips continue composing and Producing, but, other great American Producers such as Jerry Wexler and Tom Dowd worked to create some magic including the classic album, Dusty in Memphis by Dusty Springfield.

Elvis with The Memphis Boys at American

If you ever wondered how Elvis Presley ended up recording in Memphis, Marty Lacker, Elvis’ confidante who ran the day to day operations of the Memphis Mafia put that one together and delivered one of his finest albums in 1969, the Chips Moman Produced, From Elvis in Memphis, which featured some of Elvis’ greatest late career recordings, “Suspicious Minds,” “In The Ghetto” and “Kentucky Rain.”

After the Martin Luther King Jr. assassination, the vibe had changed in Memphis and so did the music business. Chips began spending more time in Nashville and Muscle Shoals, Alabama.  Chips co-wrote “Do Right Woman, Do Right Man” for Aretha Franklin whom he said was one his favorite singers at that time. Chips played guitar on that track along with tracks by Wilson Pickett.

Produced by Chips Moman

Although, Chips would have liked to see things get back the way they were in Memphis, they never did turn around and later on, Chips ended up producing a lot of great recordings by Willie Nelson, Gary Stewart, Tammy Wynette, Ronnie Milsap, and The Highwaymen.

Chips discussing Waylon Jennings

Chips penned, “ Luckenbach, Texas (Back To The Basics Of Love)” for Waylon Jennings after hearing him talk about the place.

Chips earned a Grammy for writing the B.J. Thomas hit, “(Hey Won’t You Play) Another Done Somebody Wrong Song.”

Chips moved seamlessly from musician to songwriter to producer to studio owner in the triumvirate domain that was Memphis, Muscle Shoals and Nashville speaking in R&B, Pop and Country like it was water out of the same stream.

On the current state of Memphis…”It aint Nashville.”  Without being critical of Memphis itself, that statement was enough that not much else needs to be said. Chips went back in the 80’s to try to turn it around, but, although there are still some quality music coming out of studios in Memphis, the infrastructure that was there from the 60’s through to the early 70’s may never happen again.

Chips finally settled back down in La Grange, Texas where he raises horses. Chips said, “My Walking Horses are running and my Running Horses are walking.”

An afternoon with one of the greats – Chips Moman

With such a well respected lifespan in the music business there were certainly many milestones rather than one single event in the life of Chips Moman.

– Brad Hardisty, Nashville, TN     thenashvillebridge@hotmail.com